Seriously, Mom, You Didn’t Know?

Seriously, Mom, You Didn’t Know? by Marguerite Quantaine is a thought-provoking collection published by Cantine & Kilpatrick Publications on May 4, 2019. This 236-page book is presented in English and explores the intricate relationships among mothers, daughters, sisters, aunts, and friends of women who love women. Through a series of relatable narratives, the author delves into the emotional landscapes that differentiate the experiences of women from those shaped by patriarchal ideologies.
Readers will find a candid examination of the bittersweet joys and challenges faced by women in a society that often overlooks their unique perspectives. The forty-nine narratives offer insights into the dignity of a culture that is at risk of vanishing due to assimilation into an age of artificial equality. Themes of love, identity, and the complexities of familial relationships are woven throughout, inviting reflection on the enduring bonds between women and the societal pressures they navigate.
Official synopsis Publisher
Mothers, daughters, sisters, aunts, nieces, lovers, and friends of women who love women will find themselves immersed in these identifiable narratives that unwittingly measure the true nature of each reader’s heart. With uncompromising bursts of bittersweet joy this candid, effervescent chronicle reveals how the thoughts and emotional conquests of women differ instinctively from those of their mothers and the male dominant ideologies of a patriarch society. Through lyrically warmed words engendering levity and benevolence these forty-nine relatable narratives shed insight on the simple dignity of an endangered female culture vanishing-by-assimilation into an age of artificial equality.-SNIPPETS: -There’s never been a colored, a Jew, a Democrat, a Yankee, a queer, or a woman as Mayor of this town and there never will be! Page 167 – Entire worlds exist of just two people in love. Page 78 – Life is a silver lining for those of us willing to scrape the surface of adversity. Page 198 – So let’s stop telling kids that bullies are a schoolroom problem graduation solves, or law enforcement can control, or Congress can legislate against. Page 35 – Sometimes life is a sleepwalk in which we see everything clearly and deny it. Page 147 – I never danced on a grave, but I did steal something from the dead, once. Page 143 – Our existence evolves through exchanges, most of it involving how we choose to spend our time in pursuit of people, places, or things on which we place the greatest value. Page 15 – Eighty days after Bobby Kennedy kissed me, he was killed. Page 111 – I wonder if any other daughter remembers the first time she made her mother cry. Page 183 – There was this dog we loved and lost on Christmas morning, 1951. It changed everything. Page 95 – Back then, those of us in love with another woman conducted our lives without a need for labels or social acceptance. Page 13 – I want every woman to fall in love with the person who has fallen in love with her. Page 63 – There sat a black cat yowling through quivering whiskers. Page 47 – Because I didn’t know that Ann had been told I was queer, and I didn’t know Ann told all our mutual friends her mother said I was queer, and I didn’t know her mother told the parents of mutual friends I was queer, and I didn’t know certain teachers were warned of the same. Page 68 – But I don’t think he understands that most of us don’t want to be enslaved by the duplicities of straight society. Page 176 –
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