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On the Way to Woodstock

On the Way to Woodstock

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On the Way to Woodstock
Review: Anyone who grew up in small town Midwest in the 60s and 70s will love this book! If the reader thinks that the Midwest was isolated from the problems of this country during that time, they are dead wrong! The experiences of the 2 young women prove that change was happening everywhere. The writing style of the book is very straight-forward; you won't be thrown off by writing that is more artful than interesting. The story unfolds layer by layer as the past is revealed by diary entries and by the conversations of 2 of the characters. As each layer comes off, the reader is pulled deeper into the story until the reader cannot put the book down! The book is a gem--an affirmation of every Baby Boomer's life and experiences during this turbulent time. Don't miss it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A heartfelt read not to be put down
Review: Collaboratively written by Elizabeth Warren and Sheri Davenport, On The Way To Woodstock is a compelling novel about two college friends who survived the tumult of the 60s and 70s. Years later, one has reached the end of her life, leaving behind a daughter who searches for answers about herself. Reflecting the struggles of the anti-Vietnam War movement and the women's movement, On The Way To Woodstock is an entertaining story that transcends generations and a moving. A heartfelt read not to be put down.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I loved this book!
Review: I loved this book! I believe there is much truth in the characters -- a lot of people who lived through the 60s and 70s went through what the characters go through. It made me reflect on my past and all the friends I've forgotten or lost contact with over the years. The book reminds us that true friends will always be there for you and save you if needed. Thanks for the great read and the trip down memory lane! I will share it with others.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Compelling and thought-provoking
Review: It has become chic to apply words like "turbulent" and "rebellious" to the late 1960's, and the Woodstock Music Festival has become iconic as a benchmark of the time.

Elizabeth Warren and Sheri Davenport return to that era with this complex coming-of-age story of two young women who meet as college roommates and go one to share many of the kinds of events that earmark the Sixties. It is a story of friendship, secrets and the struggle for identity no one truly escapes, although often it is far-too-long postponed.

Life is wearing Jess Martin down. The only thing remotely resembling love in her life is her affair with her married boss, and she has just flubbed a major account. Then, a young woman bearing a haunting resemblance to the woman who was Jess's best friend and constant gadfly appears on her doorstep and drags Jess into a part of the past she would just as soon not have to recall.

ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK is an emotionally rich journey through the heart and mind of a woman who has always sought safety in convention, even when she outwardly seemed to rebel. The authors have created characters as diverse and complicated as any who tuned in, turned on and dropped out. Their depiction of the friendship between Jess and Holly, two young women both searching for the same thing yet completely opposite in their method of pursuit, has a verity that will resonate with anyone who ever had a best friend they loved and hated and couldn't imagine living without until they had no choice.

Equally compelling is their portrait of Zoe, the illegitimate daughter Holly gave up for adoption who invades Jess's life demanding to know as much as she can about her real mother because she herself is pregnant. Her unremitting insistence on information forces Jess to take a hard look at the meaning of her life and the patterns that have dominated it, and in the process both women come to grips with who they are and how they fit into their worlds.

Those who lived through the late 1960's will no doubt experience a sense of deja vu, so clearly are the sights and sounds of those years presented. ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK isn't just for them, however. It is a first-rate look into the interwoven lives of three women from two generations that will enthrall anyone who has ever looked into his or her mirror and found a stranger looking back.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Compelling and thought-provoking
Review: It has become chic to apply words like "turbulent" and "rebellious" to the late 1960's, and the Woodstock Music Festival has become iconic as a benchmark of the time.

Elizabeth Warren and Sheri Davenport return to that era with this complex coming-of-age story of two young women who meet as college roommates and go one to share many of the kinds of events that earmark the Sixties. It is a story of friendship, secrets and the struggle for identity no one truly escapes, although often it is far-too-long postponed.

Life is wearing Jess Martin down. The only thing remotely resembling love in her life is her affair with her married boss, and she has just flubbed a major account. Then, a young woman bearing a haunting resemblance to the woman who was Jess's best friend and constant gadfly appears on her doorstep and drags Jess into a part of the past she would just as soon not have to recall.

ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK is an emotionally rich journey through the heart and mind of a woman who has always sought safety in convention, even when she outwardly seemed to rebel. The authors have created characters as diverse and complicated as any who tuned in, turned on and dropped out. Their depiction of the friendship between Jess and Holly, two young women both searching for the same thing yet completely opposite in their method of pursuit, has a verity that will resonate with anyone who ever had a best friend they loved and hated and couldn't imagine living without until they had no choice.

Equally compelling is their portrait of Zoe, the illegitimate daughter Holly gave up for adoption who invades Jess's life demanding to know as much as she can about her real mother because she herself is pregnant. Her unremitting insistence on information forces Jess to take a hard look at the meaning of her life and the patterns that have dominated it, and in the process both women come to grips with who they are and how they fit into their worlds.

Those who lived through the late 1960's will no doubt experience a sense of deja vu, so clearly are the sights and sounds of those years presented. ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK isn't just for them, however. It is a first-rate look into the interwoven lives of three women from two generations that will enthrall anyone who has ever looked into his or her mirror and found a stranger looking back.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Long-Awaited
Review: On the Way to Woodstock is a long-awaited book. It contains so much history of those beautiful, turbulent times. I was engulfed in memories but had to keep turning the pages because the story was one I couldn't put down.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Honest, funny, heartbreaking
Review: On the Way to Woodstock, by Elizabeth Warren and Sheri Davenport, is a bit of a wonder, as novels go. The tale of two friends, Jess Martin and Holly O'Neal, the novel begins when Jess is abruptly confronted by Zoe, Holly's daughter, who was given up for adoption at birth twenty-six years ago. Holly has been dead for several years, and Zoe, an angry, unapologetic young woman, is searching for clues into her birth mother's life. She tracks down the completely unprepared Jess and demands to be told about her mother. Together, Jess and Zoe begin going through the boxes of memorabilia that Holly left Jess upon her death. Through Holly's journals and Jess's memories, the story of a remarkable friendship is woven.
This is a very real relationship, laden with misunderstandings, secrets and most of all, an unshakeable love. The unsentimental picture the authors draw of the 60s and 70s reveals the sometimes ridiculous ideology of those times. Through the eyes of Jess and Holly, we experience drug experimentation, free love, abortion, women's rights, out-of-wedlock pregnancy, addiction, inter-race relationships, incest, rape and yes, there's more! Herein is perhaps the only flaw in this story: Is there anything these girls missed? But somehow the authors handle the abundance of issues with grace and credibility. Perhaps the most poignant of all these issues is Holly's lesbianism; despite the allegations of freedom and acceptance, Holly is afraid of her own sexuality. She is afraid even to tell Jess, and we see the damage wrought on their friendship as Holly struggles to keep her secret.
As we watch Hollly and Jess wrestle their lives, we also watch a friendship begin between the present-day Jess and Zoe. Zoe, who is idealistic and judgemental, is also big-hearted and honest and she reminds Jess heartbreakingly of her oldest and truest friend. Zoe's unflinching questions and demands make Jess reassess her own life. There is an urgency in this novel; we're given only one weekend with these characters. Zoe is desperate to learn and about her mother and faces some tough issues herself; Jess is in a crisis at work that involves her livelihood and her lover. The time frame makes for a gripping read.
Lyrical and graceful, On the Way to Woodstock is honest, funny, heartbreaking and so real. It's simply one of the best books I've read in a long time.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: It was all right
Review: P>The intriguing story of Jess and Holly's friendship kept me reading the 400+ page book when it could have easily been 200. I wanted to read stories from the entire 30-year friendship rather than focusing so much detail on the early years. Granted a story about two life-long women friends has been done millions of times before, but that's what this is.

Also, the developing friendship between Zoe and Jess is contrived at best. I liked Zoe and understood her quest to find out about her mother. But if the generation gap is everything the authors say it is, is a middle-aged women really going to spill her guts to a 20something stranger just because she's her best-friend's daughter? I enjoyed reading it, just found it a little unbelievable.

And why did it take two people to write this novel? Is it a barely-fictionalized tale of their own friendship?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Flashback to the days of hippies, drugs, and rock and roll
Review: Reviewed by Kristie Leigh Maguire, MyShelf.com


ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK is a unique flashback to the age of hippies, drugs and rock and roll as seen through the eyes of Jess Martin, one of the many Baby Boomers who lived through that time of tumultuous change in America's culture.

Woven throughout the book is the story of Zoe Ryerson, one of the many children of that free spirited generation of Baby Boomers who was given up for adoption at birth. Zoe is seeking her roots, trying to find the mother and father who gave her up. She is looking for answers and is determined to find them. She has discovered that Holly O'Neal, her birth mother, is dead. All she has to go on is the name of her mother's best friend from college days, Jess Martin.

When Zoe confronts Jess in her search for identity, their two worlds collide - Baby Boomer Generation meets Generation X. Neither understands the other. But in that emotionally charged weekend that Jess and Zoe spend together reliving the life of Holly O'Neal, both women are faced with disturbing questions about their own lives - questions to which they had subconsciously been seeking the answers to all their lives, questions that they finally have to deal with.

Elizabeth Warren and Sheri Davenport have created a compelling tale in ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK. It is a must read for both Baby Boomers and Generation X. It is an excellent way for one generation to try to understand the other.

***...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Flashback to the days of hippies, drugs, and rock and roll
Review: Reviewed by Kristie Leigh Maguire, MyShelf.com


ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK is a unique flashback to the age of hippies, drugs and rock and roll as seen through the eyes of Jess Martin, one of the many Baby Boomers who lived through that time of tumultuous change in America's culture.

Woven throughout the book is the story of Zoe Ryerson, one of the many children of that free spirited generation of Baby Boomers who was given up for adoption at birth. Zoe is seeking her roots, trying to find the mother and father who gave her up. She is looking for answers and is determined to find them. She has discovered that Holly O'Neal, her birth mother, is dead. All she has to go on is the name of her mother's best friend from college days, Jess Martin.

When Zoe confronts Jess in her search for identity, their two worlds collide - Baby Boomer Generation meets Generation X. Neither understands the other. But in that emotionally charged weekend that Jess and Zoe spend together reliving the life of Holly O'Neal, both women are faced with disturbing questions about their own lives - questions to which they had subconsciously been seeking the answers to all their lives, questions that they finally have to deal with.

Elizabeth Warren and Sheri Davenport have created a compelling tale in ON THE WAY TO WOODSTOCK. It is a must read for both Baby Boomers and Generation X. It is an excellent way for one generation to try to understand the other.

***...


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