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    <name><![CDATA[Ellen]]></name>
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  <id type="integer">650653</id>
  <isbn>0684857324</isbn>
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  <text_reviews_count type="integer">11</text_reviews_count>
  <title>
    <![CDATA[1185 Park Avenue: A Memoir]]>
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  <average_rating>3.49</average_rating>
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    <![CDATA[&quot;He married her because she was rich&quot; is the author's bleak assessment of her handsome, unfaithful father's relationship with her unhappy, insecure mother. Anne Roiphe describes with equally brutal candor a childhood largely spent with the governess until she was old enough to mix her mother's drinks, light cigarettes, and listen to complaints about her father. In this grim environment, Roiphe and her sickly younger brother did not band together so much as coexist in mutual misery. She seems to find redemption in the trio of deaths that close the book. Her parents died from cancer; her father disinherited his children in favor of his second wife. Her brother, a doctor infected with AIDS from cutting himself in his lab, ordered a funeral without any words: &quot;The God who would do this to him deserved only silence.&quot; So why read this angst fest? Because Roiphe is just as honest about her own efforts to escape her gilded cage on New York's Upper East Side, and because she captures the social and historical particulars of wealthy Jewish American life from the 1930s on in the same richly textured detail she brought to feminist classics like <em>Up the Sandbox</em>. &quot;I am a writer, and burning bridges behind me is part of the cost of the work,&quot; she comments. She burns them with sorrowful panache in this chilling, engrossing memoir. <em>--Wendy Smith</em> ]]>
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        <name><![CDATA[Anne Roiphe]]></name>
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    <average_rating>3.50</average_rating>
    <ratings_count>290</ratings_count>
    <text_reviews_count>84</text_reviews_count>
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  </authors>  <published>1999</published>
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  <date_added>Tue Nov 10 10:19:17 -0800 2009</date_added>
  <date_updated>Tue Nov 10 10:19:17 -0800 2009</date_updated>
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