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When
California-born war correspondent Saffron Roch discovers that she's pregnant
(read: knocked-up, newly jobless, and single at thirty-eight), she decides
to leave Sierra Leone and surgeon Oscar DeVries, the baby's cheating father,
who, despite his huge ego and surprisingly small member, had captured
her heart.
So,
Saffron turns in her back stage pass to the violent dissolution of third
world countries and returns home to Los Angeles, where she is about to
inherit a beach property worth a fortune. There she throws herself into
motherhood, joining a politically correct breast-feeding support group
at the Pump Station. In full-blown culture shock, and missing Africa,
Saffron comes face to face with a group of unlikely women friends, and
a room full of scud nipples that, on looks alone, could bring any rogue
nation to its knees.
Making
It Up As I Go Along is a dazzling debut novel that questions the
very meaning of motherhood, home, and family, while offering an unforgettable
look at a camaraderie of women who, across borders and generations, teach
Saffron a thing or two about what matters most in life. |
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