In the heartland of Kansas, old wounds, lost family, and self-discovery converge in this riveting exploration of identity and redemption. Set in the post-WWII era,
Middler follows Hazel Johnson Middler, a woman who, years ago, abandoned her marriage and children to carve out a solitary existence on her family's remote farm. When her nearly grown daughters arrive from California, it's Jean, the eldest, who gently coaxes Hazel back into the world, beginning with a single college class. What starts as a reluctant step into society becomes a journey of transformation, challenging Hazel to confront her past, reclaim her identity, and open herself to love again. Alongside Hazel's journey, there's Jim Nylund-both a new beginning and a challenge for Hazel, testing her ability to navigate a relationship that offers both love and the painful echoes of her past choices. Meanwhile, a parallel story unfolds as Jim's runaway daughter, Divonne, takes her own path to California. As Divonne grasps for the Middler family identity she longs for, Hazel and Jean confront the very legacy they've fought to escape, bringing the generations into a delicate, surprising reconciliation. Rich in themes of estrangement, reconciliation, and the resilience of the human spirit,
Middler is a moving, multi-generational tale of what it takes to find-and embrace-one's true self.
About the AuthorMarlene Lee holds a BA degree from Kansas Wesleyan University, an MA from the University of Kansas, and an MFA from Brooklyn College. When she's not reading, playing the piano, or talking to other writers, Marlene Lee holds down a table at a local coffeehouse in Columbia, Missouri, confronting blank pages during business hours and postponing the inevitable with another cup of coffee. Before writing full-time, she carted her stenotype machine from place to place (eventual settings for her fiction) in a moveable feast of court reporting: Brookings, Oregon; Seattle, Washington; Chico, California; San Francisco; and New York City. She now lives in Columbia, Missouri. Before her freelance court reporting career, she taught children's special education, high school English, Freshman and Sophomore college English, and vocational school classes in stenotype. Always and in-between, she was writing short stories and novels, accumulating publishable manuscripts before being actually published in 2013.
Book InformationISBN 9781622882854
Author Marlene LeeFormat Paperback
Page Count 200
Imprint Stephen F. Austin State University PressPublisher Stephen F. Austin State University Press