Obama, Oy Vey: The Wit and Wisdom of My 107-Year-Old Mother

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Aging, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science
Cover of the book Obama, Oy Vey: The Wit and Wisdom of My 107-Year-Old Mother by Steven Zwerling, Steven Zwerling
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Steven Zwerling ISBN: 9781310971020
Publisher: Steven Zwerling Publication: March 5, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Steven Zwerling
ISBN: 9781310971020
Publisher: Steven Zwerling
Publication: March 5, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Author Steven Zwerling’s mother is 107, remembers Women’s Suffrage, supports same-sex marriage, thinks Chris Christie is popular because he’s fat and still believes no one’s exempt from following the Golden Rule. Zwerling chronicles conversations with his feisty mother and her equally plucky friends in his new short story collection Obama, Oy Vey: The Wit and Wisdom of My 107-Year-Old Mother.
The idea for Obama, Oy Vey emerged when Steven Zwerling’s mother was approaching 100 and his wife, Rona, asked, “How much longer can she live?” Since then Rona and Steven have spent every winter with her and her dear friends, the ladies of the Forest Trace retirement community.
Yes, they have their aches and pains, but they remain feisty and funny as they reflect on what is happening in the world that swirls around them—the state of political life; what is happening in the Middle East; and their concerns about the prospects for the current generation.
They reflect on their past where they marched as Suffragettes, helped organize unions, and endured less than perfect marriages. Now that they are on their own, they no longer feel the need to inhibit themselves and so are eager to tell the truth, including complaining about how their grandchildren are too busy to call or visit.
These ladies, these “girls” as Mother Zwerling thinks about herself and her friends, with wit and spunk and wisdom, with all their “issues,” will remind you it is they as much as their departed husbands who are the “greatest generation.”
They will make you smile and laugh and at times shed a few tears. But above all, though well past what should have been their actuarial allocation of years, they are full of life.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Author Steven Zwerling’s mother is 107, remembers Women’s Suffrage, supports same-sex marriage, thinks Chris Christie is popular because he’s fat and still believes no one’s exempt from following the Golden Rule. Zwerling chronicles conversations with his feisty mother and her equally plucky friends in his new short story collection Obama, Oy Vey: The Wit and Wisdom of My 107-Year-Old Mother.
The idea for Obama, Oy Vey emerged when Steven Zwerling’s mother was approaching 100 and his wife, Rona, asked, “How much longer can she live?” Since then Rona and Steven have spent every winter with her and her dear friends, the ladies of the Forest Trace retirement community.
Yes, they have their aches and pains, but they remain feisty and funny as they reflect on what is happening in the world that swirls around them—the state of political life; what is happening in the Middle East; and their concerns about the prospects for the current generation.
They reflect on their past where they marched as Suffragettes, helped organize unions, and endured less than perfect marriages. Now that they are on their own, they no longer feel the need to inhibit themselves and so are eager to tell the truth, including complaining about how their grandchildren are too busy to call or visit.
These ladies, these “girls” as Mother Zwerling thinks about herself and her friends, with wit and spunk and wisdom, with all their “issues,” will remind you it is they as much as their departed husbands who are the “greatest generation.”
They will make you smile and laugh and at times shed a few tears. But above all, though well past what should have been their actuarial allocation of years, they are full of life.

More books from Political Science

Cover of the book Summary of The Motherhood Manifesto: What America's Moms Want - And What To Do About It - Joan Blades and Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Settler by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book The Progressive Revolution by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Born Again by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Are power indices a valid measure to quantify changes in influence in the EU's Council of Ministers, following the re-weighting of votes in the Treaty of Nice? by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Nigeria's Journalistic Militantism by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book The Wheel of Law by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book A Treatise on Political Economy by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Considerazioni sul 1848 by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Russia's Youth and its Culture by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Die protestantische Ethik und der Geist des Kapitalismus by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book 50 Jahre Fußball-Bundesliga by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book #DoNotDisturb by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book National Defense Intelligence College Paper: Courting a Reluctant Ally - An Evaluation of U.S./UK Naval Intelligence Cooperation, 1935-1941, Franklin Roosevelt, OSS, Commander Ian Fleming by Steven Zwerling
Cover of the book Latin American Politics by Steven Zwerling
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy