| Description:
 
 Much to its author's chagrin, The Golden Notebook instantly  became a staple of the feminist movement when it was published in 1962. Doris Lessing's novel deconstructs the life of Anna Wulf, a sometime-Communist and a  deeply leftist writer living in postwar London with her small daughter. Anna  is  battling writer's block, and, it often seems, the  damaging chaos of life itself. The elements that made the book remarkable when it first appeared--extremely candid sexual and psychological descriptions of its characters and a fractured, postmodern structure--are no longer shocking. Nevertheless, The Golden Notebook has retained a great deal of power, chiefly due to its often brutal honesty  and the sheer variation and sweep of its prose.
   This largely autobiographical work comprises Anna's four notebooks: "a  black notebook which is to do with Anna Wulf the writer; a red notebook  concerned with politics; a yellow notebook, in which I make stories out  of my experience; and a blue notebook which tries to be a diary."  In a brilliant act of verisimilitude, Lessing alternates between these notebooks instead of presenting each one whole, also weaving  in a novel called Free Women, which views Anna's life from the  omniscient narrator's point of view. As the novel draws to a close, Anna,  in the midst of a breakdown, abandons her dependence on  compartmentalization and writes the single golden notebook of the title.   In tracking Anna's psychological movements--her recollections of her  years in Africa, her relationship with her best friend, Molly, her  travails with men, her disillusionment with the Party, the  tidal pull of motherhood--Lessing pinpoints the pulse of a generation of  women who were waiting to see what their postwar hopes would bring  them. What arrived was unprecedented freedom, but with that freedom came  unprecedented confusion. Lessing herself said in a 1994 interview: "I say  fiction is better than telling the truth. Because the point about life is  that it's a mess, isn't it? It hasn't got any shape except for you're  born and you die."    The Golden Notebook suffers from certain weaknesses, among them giving rather simplistic, overblown illustrations to the  phrase "a good man is hard to find" in the form of an endless parade of  weak, selfish men. But it still has the capacity to fill emotional voids with  the great rushes of feeling it details. Perhaps this is because it  embodies one of Anna's own revelations: "I've been forced to acknowledge  that the flashes of genuine art are all out of deep, suddenly stark,  undisguiseable private emotion. Even in translation there is no mistaking  these lightning flashes of genuine personal feeling." It seems that  Lessing, like Anna when she decides to abandon her notebooks for the  single, golden one, attempted to put all of herself in one book. --Melanie Rehak
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