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Other Men's Daughters

von Richard Stern

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1344204,110 (3.8)2
"A beautifully written novel that should be read by everyone who cares about the human condition." --The Philadelphia Inquirer Harvard physiologist Robert Merriwether has four whip-smart children, an attractive and intelligent wife, and a successful, stimulating career. True, he and Sarah have not slept together in years, and when he decides to stay behind in Cambridge for the summer while the rest of the family vacations in Maine, his newfound freedom is deeply unsettling. But that does not mean that Merriwether wants to change his life or feels unloved. To a man of science, desire is nothing more than a biological reaction. And Merriwether's personal philosophy is that once you're in your forties, real love is nothing but lust and nostalgia. Then Cynthia Ryder walks into his life. Twenty years old, she is beautiful, intelligent, witty, and kind. And, to Merriwether's great surprise, she wants to be with him. Initially, he evades her advances, sure that hers is just a passing fancy. But as he gets to know her better, Merriwether realizes that Cynthia is more mature than he first suspected and that the joy he feels when they are together has been missing from his life for a long, long time. When the summer ends and their need for each other does not fade, Merriwether realizes that he is being given a chance at true love. The question is, will he be brave enough to take it? Considered by many critics to be Richard Stern's finest novel, Other Men's Daughters is a tender, honest, witty, and life-affirming portrait of a love as transcendent as it is unlikely.… (mehr)
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Book group question: Why is this titled what it is?
  Capybara_99 | Jul 24, 2022 |
Novela muy interesante sobre la relación de un profesor universitario que, aún estando casado y con hijos, se enamora de una estudiante, y las consecuencias de tal amor. ( )
  jmsr2020 | Dec 17, 2020 |


"Miss Ryder was golden-haired but almost Indian dark, slimly full, tall, slightly prognathous, brown-eyed. Her hair waterfalled to the top thoracic vertebra, her tanned flesh issued from a laundered yellow corolla. A human sunflower." - Richard Stern, Other Men's Daughters

Other Men’s Daughters - American author Richard Stern’s 1973 novel of forty-year-old family man and Harvard professor Robert Merriweather’s transformation brought about by his relationship with a twenty-year-old beauty by the name of Cynthia Ryder. For instance, here's the author’s description of Merriweather’s wife catching a whiff of the change: “For months now, Sarah specialized in her husband’s moves. She classified his gestures, checked his bills, noted his new suit, his brighter ties, the extra shag in his hair. He spent more time in the lab than he had for fifteen years. There is a new ease in his speech and dress, yet he has long since stopped asking her what she had even longer refused him.”

In a way, this is a timeless tale of modern life: older university professor stuck in a stale marriage discovers new dimensions of love and intimacy with bright, vivacious younger woman. Robert Merriweather shares a good deal in common with another professor from a much beloved classic: William Stoner in John Williams’ Stoner, a novel set at the University of Missouri in the early 1930s. And, of course, the respective dramas of William Stoner and Robert Merriweather have been repeated scores of times across college campuses ever since.

In yet another sense Richard Stern’s novel captures the unique social and cultural shift that occurred in the United States in the 1960s. So much so, Philip Roth notes in his Introduction to this New York Review Books edition: “Other Men’s Daughters illuminates a decisive turning point in American mores. The novel reminds us of where we were, morally speaking, when the vast assault upon convention, propriety, and entrenched belief began to challenge authority, high and low, and of the wreckage that caused, the theatrics it fostered, the hope and euphoria and intemperance it quickened.”

In Saul Bellow’s Herzog, the entire novel is told wholly from main character Herzog’s point of view - his memories, his thoughts, his perceptions, the letters he writes; a novel that’s a hair’s breath away from Herzog relating the story himself in the first-person. Very different from Richard Stern’s third person narrator, where unfolding events are reported a great deal more objectively and occasionally shift from Robert Merriweather to focus on the reflections and feelings of others: Cynthia Ryder, Merriweather’s wife Sarah, a former Harvard colleague, Cynthia’s father who happens to be a wealthy lawyer from North Carolina. All with great precision and economy.

To share a small sample, here is Sarah, irate and furious, fuming over her role as Robert’s short, chubby, unattractive, stay-at-home wife: “He would be off, the secret prowler. While she kept the home fires burning. And he blamed her. As if her body could be purchased by three daily meals, and this leaky hutch which she alone kept up. (He couldn’t hammer a nail.) As if he really cared to make love to her. Frigid? No, no more than any woman with a husband who saw her as an interior broom.” Is it any wonder literary critic Anatole Broyard reviewing the novel for the New York Times said Sarah loves her hatred with a sexual intensity?

And in case anybody is wondering about Cynthia Ryder being the young innocent seduced by a smooth talking older man, here is the North Carolina lovely on her teenage love life prior to meeting Merriweather: “Boys were there to be used, to be loved, to be lost in, to be surmounted. Virginity was the first obstacle. Between that and marriage was the Era of Exploration: boys-men were to be explored, tested. For Cynthia, the spring of Sixty-Nine had been a sexual pageant. Behind Jamie’s back (her steady boyfriend at the time), she’d slept at least once with eight boys.”

As readers we share the various (and somewhat predictable) scenes of Robert Merriweather going through the travails of his divorce – the showdown with Sarah, the distasteful meeting with Sarah’s lawyer, picking over the details of the divorce settlement, the last family Thanksgiving and Christmas with Sarah and their two sons and two daughters in the New England house that has been in Merriweather’s family for generations. Richard Stern's writing brings out the touching humanness without sliding into emotions overly sentimental or cloying.

Such a penetrating, well-written novel, thus I will conclude with a quote from one of America’s foremost literary masters, Thomas Berger: “For years I have admired the elegant fiction of Richard Stern for its impeccable language, its gracious erudition, and, above all, it’s brilliant wit. In Other Men’s Daughters, to me his most moving novel, these qualities serve the cause of mercy.”


American author Richard Stern (1928-2013) ( )
  Glenn_Russell | Nov 13, 2018 |
Yet another novel about a middle-aged, white guy's mid-life crisis. Great writing, though. ( )
  encephalical | Apr 27, 2018 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Richard SternHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Roth, PhillipEinführungCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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"A beautifully written novel that should be read by everyone who cares about the human condition." --The Philadelphia Inquirer Harvard physiologist Robert Merriwether has four whip-smart children, an attractive and intelligent wife, and a successful, stimulating career. True, he and Sarah have not slept together in years, and when he decides to stay behind in Cambridge for the summer while the rest of the family vacations in Maine, his newfound freedom is deeply unsettling. But that does not mean that Merriwether wants to change his life or feels unloved. To a man of science, desire is nothing more than a biological reaction. And Merriwether's personal philosophy is that once you're in your forties, real love is nothing but lust and nostalgia. Then Cynthia Ryder walks into his life. Twenty years old, she is beautiful, intelligent, witty, and kind. And, to Merriwether's great surprise, she wants to be with him. Initially, he evades her advances, sure that hers is just a passing fancy. But as he gets to know her better, Merriwether realizes that Cynthia is more mature than he first suspected and that the joy he feels when they are together has been missing from his life for a long, long time. When the summer ends and their need for each other does not fade, Merriwether realizes that he is being given a chance at true love. The question is, will he be brave enough to take it? Considered by many critics to be Richard Stern's finest novel, Other Men's Daughters is a tender, honest, witty, and life-affirming portrait of a love as transcendent as it is unlikely.

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