Single State of the Union: Single Women Speak Out on Life, Love, and the Pursuit of Happiness
By (Author) Diane Mapes
Edited by Diane Mapes
Seal Press
Seal Press
26th February 2007
United States
General
Non Fiction
306.7082
Paperback
288
Width 208mm, Height 140mm, Spine 22mm
376g
Are single women happy individualists Neurotic man-hunters Crazed cat ladies Are they confused, or content Bitter, or better off No one seems to know. The popular media gives us shoe shopaholics, ditzy desperados, wannabe brides forever making cow eyes at The Bachelor. But what do single women have to say about their own lives With sass, humor, and style, Single State of the Union paints a provocative, playful, and complex portrait of today's single woman, taking on such topics as: o sex and the single girl o single motherhood o buying a house without a spouse o faux boyfriends o cohabitation hesitation o single women in the media Written by an impressive roster of single (and some formerly single) women, this collection portrays single women as individuals whose lives extend well beyond Match. com and Manolo Blahniks. So listen up, Carrie. Attention, Bridget. It's time for the rest of us to be heard. "
I was happy being single, but not happy alone. I needed someone to love and I was ready. But not ready enough for another dog. To his credit, Jim later said. "I knew my days were numbered when you got the rat." -- Rachel Toor
In a world where everyone was in a rush to get the picket fence and 2.673 kids, I stood out a like an unmown, dandelion-riddled lawn with a rusted-out muscle car on cinderblocks smack dab in the middle. Because I've never gotten engaged or hitched within three weeks of meeting someone, friends called me immature, commitment-phobic, a late bloomer, a player, a childhood-divorce casualty, or sometimes "a total freaking guy." -- Michelle Goodman
It's not the concept of marriage I have a problem with. I'd like to get married, too. A couple times. It's the actual wedding that pisses me off." -- Chelsea Handler
The empty side of the bed does not fart in its sleep. -- Laurie Notaro
Diane Mapes is the author of How to Date in a Post-Dating World (Sasquatch, 2006), a funny journalistic take on the traditional dating manual. Her satire and reported essays on dating, singles' rights, television, travel, freak magnets, naked sushi, swingers, and more have appeared in Bust, Christian Science Monitor, Health, Los Angeles Times, MSNBC.com, Seattle Magazine, Seattle Times, and the Washington Post. Happily single, she lives in Seattle.