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Dharma Girl
 
 

Dharma Girl [Paperback]

Chelsea Cain
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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This memoir by 24-year-old Chelsea Cain, who grew up on a commune in the Iowa outback, recounts her nostalgia for her toddler years, when her parents picked berries, puffed pot, and plucked the banjo while the outside world seemed to be going straight to hell. Deciding that her caffeinated modern life is a vile repudiation of her parents' admirable values--and shaken by her mother's bout with cancer--the author leaves southern California for Iowa. Not to establish or join a commune but to rent an Iowa City apartment and begin graduate school at the University of Iowa, as we learn from her biography. Along the road to Iowa, there are plenty of wry observations on the modern world and reflections on the more idealized values of "the hippie movement." The sanest characters in this brief book are Cain's clear-eyed and chastened parents. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

When Cain, a 24-year-old student at UCLA, learned that her mother had developed cancer, the stucco walls of her prefab college house didn't seem enough to keep her body and soul together. She recalls a simpler time when, with the '60s raging in the background, she and her parents (now separated) lived on an Iowa commune. For Cain, getting back to her roots, and finding the elusive "Snowqueen"?an imaginary figure her mother told her about years before?was of paramount importance. And so off they went, mother and daughter, down the highways of the Northwest and Midwest, back to Iowa to see what they could find. The family history is fascinating, as are the descriptions of commune life, replete with home gardening, odd jobs and fear of the draft. The story of life on the road is neither Kerouac nor Thelma and Louise, but is a pleasant enough roll. Author Cain is her mother's daughter, so there's little generational conflict here. Get on board if you like pursuing nostalgia rather than forging ahead in the present. Cain would argue that she could not go forward without going back, and that's good enough reason for a road trip.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
June 1994. I am driving from Oregon to Iowa in my old tan Honda Accord to look for Snowbird. Read the first page
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3 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars dissolving the generation gap, Oct 3 2000
This review is from: Dharma Girl (Paperback)
This is a very moving account of a young girl who feels the need to reconnect with her roots. Cain was raised on a hippie commune in Iowa but as a college student in California feels estranged from her background. This spurs a decision to move back to Iowa to rediscover the little girl she was. It's a simple enough premise but it is very well written. Her mother's bout with melanoma is the impetus for the journey. Then there is the search for a former friend thought to be dead which adds texture to the tale. The road trip is a great American motif and Cain handles it in her own unique circumstances. This is a tale about self-rediscovery as Cain attempts to bridge a hippie past with the current gen X values. It is cliché at times but very personal and honest. There is a lot of universal soil in this book. It can be appreciated by anyone who enjoys an honest account of dealing with illness and loss of innocence.
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5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best books I've ever read, Feb 28 1999
This review is from: Dharma Girl (Paperback)
Chelsea Cain and I worked together a few years ago at the university newspaper in Iowa City. She was an excellent writer then, and Dharma Girl is wonderful as well. As a person, she is one of the nicest people I've ever met. I feel blessed to have had the opportunity to know her. I can't wait for her next effort.
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3.0 out of 5 stars a quick read; worth the paper it's printed on, April 13 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Dharma Girl (Paperback)
In Dharma Girl, Chelsea Cain is trying to appeal both to the Gen X reader who is searching for some meaning in her life and to the aging hippie, nostalgic for life on the commune and hoping that it all made a difference somehow. The book is a quick read which I really did enjoy, even though I do not fit into either of the two categories above. The most engaging aspect of the book is the tension over whether she will be able to locate one of the commune members with whom she had a special friendship
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