This funny and sensitive book brings to life an underrepresented
character – the alienated upper-middle-class housewife, passing from
youth to old age in the post WWII America of the 1950's. Her views on the inevitability of racial prejudice speaks to the structural racism highlighted in protests in the streets today.
Right from the get go Mrs Bridge is slightly at odds with her situation.
She is a bit at odds with her family of origin, not quite getting that her role is to marry and raise children. She rises to that occasion, but is disappointed when her
wealthy, hard-working husband, Walter, doesn't appear to feel any great
passion towards her; her early hope that the long hours he spends at the
office are temporary are soon dashed. She tries her best,
always concerned about the eyes that are upon her, never wanting to
make trouble for anyone else, ensuring her children are cared for and
that she puts up neither too many nor too few Christmas decorations, for
fear of being judged. In everything she does, though, there is just a
tinge of disenfranchisement; a feeling of absence. It is a strangely engaging book about a distant woman.
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