Title: Fighter Pilot’s
Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties and the Cold War
Author: Mary Lawlor
Publisher: Rowman and Littlefield
Pages: 336
Genre: Memoir
Format: Hardcover/Kindle
Author: Mary Lawlor
Publisher: Rowman and Littlefield
Pages: 336
Genre: Memoir
Format: Hardcover/Kindle
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The First Page:
The pilot’s house where I grew up
was mostly a women’s world. There were five of us. We had the place to
ourselves most of the time. My mother made the big decisions—where we went to
school, which bank to keep our money in. She had to decide these things often
because we moved every couple of years. The house is thus a figure of speech, a
way of thinking about a long series of small, cement dwellings we occupied as
one fictional home.
It
was my father, however, who turned the wheel, his job that rotat- ed us to so
many different places. He was an aviator, first in the Ma- rines, later in the
Army. When he came home from his extended ab- sences—missions, they were
called—the rooms shrank around him. There wasn’t enough air. We didn’t breathe
as freely as we did when he was gone, not because he was mean or demanding but
because we worshipped him. Like satellites my sisters and I orbited him at a
dis- tance, waiting for the chance to come closer, to show him things we’d
made, accept gifts, hear his stories. My mother wasn’t at the center of things
anymore. She hovered, maneuvered, arranged, corrected. She was first lady, the
dame in waiting. He was the center point of our circle, a flier, a winged
sentry who spent most of his time far up over our heads. When he was home, the
house was definitely his.
About the Author
Mary
Lawlor grew up in an Army family during the Cold War. Her father was a
decorated fighter pilot who fought in the Pacific during World War II, flew
missions in Korea,
and did two combat tours in Vietnam.
His family followed him from base to base and country to country during his
years of service. Every two or three years, Mary, her three sisters, and her
mother packed up their household and moved. By the time she graduated from high
school, she had attended fourteen different schools. These displacements, plus
her father?s frequent absences and brief, dramatic returns, were part of the
fabric of her childhood, as were the rituals of base life and the adventures of
life abroad.
As
Mary came of age, tensions between the patriotic, Catholic culture of her
upbringing and the values of the sixties counterculture set family life on
fire. While attending the American
College in Paris,
she became involved in the famous student uprisings of May 1968. Facing
her father, then posted in Vietnam,
across a deep political divide, she fought as he had taught her to for a way of
life completely different from his and her mother’s.
Years
of turbulence followed. After working in Germany,
Spain and Japan,
Mary went on to graduate school at NYU, earned a Ph.D. and became a professor
of literature and American Studies at Muhlenberg
College. She has published
three books, Recalling the Wild (Rutgers UP, 2000), Public Native America
(Rutgers UP, 2006), and most recently Fighter Pilot’s Daughter: Growing Up
in the Sixties and the Cold War (Rowman and Littlefield, September 2013).
She
and her husband spend part of each year on a small farm in the mountains of
southern Spain.
Her
latest book is the memoir, Fighter
Pilot’s Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties and the Cold War.
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