These three books also have one thing in common - the central protagonists are 'older' women*. This is amazing because 'older' women (in real life, as well as in literature) tend to be seen as dependent and often depicted as not have any sexuality - in fact that aspect is usually rendered invisible. I don't know entirely what to expect, but from the blurbs of these three novels, as well as the few reviews I've read, they seem to break away from these stereotypes of 'women of a certain age'.
There's the youngest of them all, fifty-five-year old widow, mother and grandmother Hajiya Binta Zubairu in Season of Crimson Blossoms who has an affair with a 25-year-old weed dealer, Reza, and now yearns for intimacy after the sexual repression of her marriage. Then Dr. Morayo Da Silva, on the cusp of seventy-five, in Like A Mule Bringing Ice Cream to the Sun. Dr. Da Silva is a Nigerian woman living in San Francisco, in good health and spirit. That is until she falls and her independence crumbles. The story is also said to have elements of the erotic yearnings of an older woman. Finally, Hortensia James and Marion Agostino - both over eighty-years-old, successful women with impressive careers, recently widowed, neighbours and sworn enemies.My Summer Reading List. What's yours?
Seriously, all three books sound like they will be amazing reads, and can we also take a second to acknowledge these writers for writing (and their publishers for publishing) what seem like positive stories about 'older' women. Can't wait to tuck in!*Side note: I'm using older (instead of old) and putting older in quotes, as while I do not think women in their early- to mid-50s are old, in the case of Season of Crimson Blossoms Hajiya Binta Zubairu - being a widow, mother and grandmother - would be considered old in the context in which the story is set.