About This Book
The narrative follows Sylvia Castleman through three phases—wife, mother, rebel—largely filtered through the perspective of Mary Abbott, a self-made friend whose politics and practical experience shape her view. It traces Sylvia’s shift from sheltered privilege into the strains of domestic life and parenthood, exposing how unequal power, social pretensions, and conventional expectations limit women's choices. Combining intimate domestic scenes with social critique, the story examines class, gender roles, and reformist ideas as Sylvia negotiates loyalty, responsibility, and the quest for personal autonomy within family and community.
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