Back When We Were Grownups: A Novel

by Anne Tyler
Back When We Were Grownups: A Novel  
published 2001 by Knopf
binding Hardcover
isbn 0375412530   (isbn13: 9780375412530)
pages 288
description The first sentence of Anne Tyler's 15th novel sounds like something out of a fairy tale: "Once upon a time, there was a woman who discovered she ...more
date added
02-07-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1706)



Kathaileen
bookshelves: novels
Read in May, 2003
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Cynthia
Read in January, 2004
Probably one of the most memorable openings, "Once upon a time, there was a woman who discovered she had turned into the wrong person," I've read in a long time. Yet I didn't feel the novel lived up to the full potential of this opening sentence. I kept expecting Rebecca to go through some life changes, to be happier in the end. A new job, interest, travel, friends, love, whatever...instead she just concentrates on love--her first boyfriend Will. But the novel doesn't even continue in ...more
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Johnsergeant
bookshelves: audiblecom, audiobook
Read in June, 2001
Downloaded from Audible.com

Narrator: Blair Brown
Publisher: Random House AudioBooks, 2001
Length: 9 hours

Publisher's Summary
"Once upon a time, there was a woman who discovered that she had turned into the wrong person." So Anne Tyler opens this irresistible novel.

The woman is Rebecca Davitch, a 53-year-old grandmother. Is she an imposter in her own life? she asks herself. Is it indeed her own life? Or is it someone else's?

On the surface, Beck, as she is known, is outgoing, joy...more
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ANGE (pronounced Ahhh-nj)
03/21/08

Read in March, 2008
I can see how some would think this book doesnt live up to its potential- but i think thats the whole point and they are missing the point,as well as Anne Tyler's genius. Anne Tyler purposefully captures the lives of people who seemingly may not live up to their potential- alot of her themes are based on how in life things hardly ever turn out how we think they should- and that this is not necessarily bad or good its just the way it is...I think the beauty of this book is that Rebecca doesnt go ...more
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Megan
01/29/08

Read in January, 2008
I've known for a while now that my life will turn out to be nothing like what I thought (and currently think) it will be. Being in my early twenties betrays me as merely knowing this in theory, and I'm sure several more levels of heady realization will hit me as I age. But reading this book was a valuable experience because it made me think about the fact that at some point, I will look at my life and think: "I didn't choose this," and possibly resent it. Rebecca was thrust into a li...more
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ducky
Read in March, 2008
Didn't like it as much as her other book "Digging to America". Her writing is very much about delving into the minute details of different personalities. Enjoy the journey rather than the resolution of the plot.

Spoiler Alert, stop reading here! Didn't learn much from this book except that you are who you are based on what you do, what you say and how you act. You are not the person that you simply "think" you are. That is, you might think you are a quiet, reserved p...more
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Kristine
Read in April, 2007
recommends it for: middle-aged women who hate themselves
why did i finish this? why do i do that to myself - finish books that have no chance of improving? i bought this because it was marked down to like $5 and i have heard that anne tyler is a beautiful writer and i like the cover (trite, but i do). i didn't like the first 20 pages, so what compelled me to finish is beyond me, but i hated the characters, the characters' names (all cutesy nicknames like poppy, no no, bitsy, the non-chinese min foo, jeep, patch, etc), the protagonist, and how borin...more
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Marguerite
Read in January, 2006
Back when ... I wasn't such a grownup, I read a lot of Anne Tyler and I liked the quirky, stoop-front view she delivered. Her characters were people with whom I had a nodding acquaintance, mostly at 7-Elevens, where they scratched lottery tickets at the counter and made coffee when the clerks were swamped or taking a smoke break. Then, she started to get on my nerves, for delivering pretty much the same experience in book after book. So, I picked up this volume gingerly. I liked the story well e...more
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Kristin
Read in August, 2007
This is a beautiful book about a large crazy family that a woman doesn't feel a part of, but is. I don't know if I fell for it especially because I'm all the way here in Berlin so the idea of a messy family constantly stopping in to ask favors and for advice is welcome when a bit lonely and missing my own family or if it was the dream the main character has of being on a train with a beautiful son, the type that is scholarly and kind and a little unsociable and, or if it was my identification w...more
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Rebecca
Read in May, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Shauna
03/28/08

Man, I'm kind of ashamed to be popping back up on the Goodreads after a hiatus with this book, which I chose among others free from a friend who moved back to Australia last fall. I think I had Annie Dillard in my head instead of Anne Tyler. Still haven't read Annie Dillard, but I'm guessing it's a big difference. Biiiiig difference.

But this is turning out to be a guilty pleasure. Woman has complicated family, is widowed, life begins anew in middle age. It's seeming more and more like I...more
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Anna
09/30/07

bookshelves: advisory2007-2008
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: no one, really
I did not like this book. It's about an older woman named Rebecca, who one day realizes that perhaps the life she has been living wasn't the one she was meant to lead. First of all, the author doesn't explain how Rebecca has this sudden realization, which is confusing.

The author also didn't explain why her stepchildren had such strange names (Patch, Min-Foo), or why they act so obnoxiously towards her (at least, this was what I thought). All of this makes for a confusing, and uninteresting ...more
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Coco
06/06/08

bookshelves: advisory2007-2008
Read in June, 2008
This book was very good. It was kind of slow and a bit boring in the beginning because I feel as though it was a book for grownups. I feel, clearly reflected by the title, that it would relate better to adults as well. After all, it was one of the New York Times best sellers. Anyway. This was the longest book based off of "what if" anyone will ever read. It is about a woman who reflects back on her life, thinking about the choices she made and how her life would have been different if ...more
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Stacey
10/30/07

Read in January, 2005
Ehhh, this book was okay. I've never read Anne Tyler - I kind of classify her with the authors that churn out a book a week and have a gaggle of devoted fans. And everytime I decide to give one of those authors a try, I'm disappointed.

I just didn't really care for any of the characters, the story didn't hold my interest all that much, I didn't feel the need to stay up late to keep reading. Fifty-something widow, unhappy with her life. Should she seek out her college-sweetheart? Why ar...more
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Jing
10/02/07

bookshelves: advisory
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for: people consious of relationships with others
This book was about a woman named Rebecca. Although she led a simple life and was contend, it kind of showed how her life would be different if she looked back and make different decisions. In it she had experienced many events: good and bad. It told how she dealt with it and eventually how she reflect on it at the end of the book

I guess the book was ok because it was very boring at first. But then in the end, it because somewhat interesting thing and I taken into account that it ...more
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Mark
08/20/07

bookshelves: fiction
Read in June, 2003
I have only read about three of Anne's books, but in each case, I ended up feeling that she had delved deeply into my heart with lessons about life, loss, love, courage and joy, while making it seem almost effortless. This novel is no exception. The story of a woman who fears she has lost her true self, only to discover that she has been living the life she deserved all along, is just wonderful.
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Heather
Read in February, 2008
I didn't really like this one...not because it was bad, but because I just didn't really feel a connection with the epiphany the main character was having. Basically its a woman who gets to her 50s and suddenly realizes that she isn't the person she thought she would be. It's an interesting concept, but just not one I was particularly attracted to. The writing was good, but the author's use of "pet names" for all the characters was rather distracting and made it difficult at first t...more
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Natalie
Read in July, 2008
recommended to Natalie by: Fairfax County Public Library
Wow! "Back When We Were Grownups" was riveting from a psychological and lifespan development perspective. The main character Rebecca has reached middle age and thinks she has become the wrong person. She married a significantly older man with 3 of his own daughters after having known him a short time, leaving a long time boyfriend in the dust. The questions, the memories... are intriguing. Anne Tyler takes you on a journey through the memories and metacognition of the main character as...more
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Jill
03/29/08

Read in March, 2008
Rebecca Davitch, 53 year old widow, married John, 13-years older, when she was just 20 and acquired the responsbility of raising his 3 daughters plus one of their own. Now she questions whether she has lost her own identity in the life she has lived all these years with the Davitches.

This novel is a fine example of Anne Tyler's ability to create an absorbing world peopled with ordinary characters with all their flaws and gifts. By the time the story is complete, I was reluctant to leave the...more
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Shirlyn
Read in April, 2008
didn't hate, but just plain boring, I listend to it on tape as I worked in the garden so just kept with it, would never have finished it if reading it. Not one exciting or climatic part to the whole book. I expect a bit more from books I guess than just a retospective look back on a unevently life of a 50 year old woman that feels she didn't become who she thought she would have been at this age. I felt actually sad at the end that she wasn't even going to change what she had become and just ...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.36 (1496 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.16 (32 ratings)
number of reviews: 145






other editions

Back When We Were Grownups (Mass Market Paperback)
Back When We Were Grown-Ups (Paperback)
Back When We Were Grownups (Paperback)