Ebook {Epub PDF} Hippie Woman Wild: A Memoir of Life Love on an Oregon Commune by Carol Schlanger






















Carol Schlanger’s Hippie woman wild: a memoir of life love on an Oregon commune brought back my own memories of communal life in Wisconsin during those wonderful tumultuous times. Although written from a woman’s perspective I could identify with many of her challenges and ofttimes contradictory opinions as she came to terms with what she wanted out of life and love/5. Hippie Woman Wild: A Memoir of Life Love on an Oregon Commune [Schlanger, Carol, Winkler, Henry, Rudnicki, Stefan, Bloom, Claire] on www.doorway.ru *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Hippie Woman Wild: A Memoir of Life Love on an Oregon Commune/5(). This book is the closest you can come to the actual experience of communal living. It’s the story of Carol Schlanger’s move, in pursuit of her lover, from conventional city living – job, apartment, etc. – to the chaotic, group living, back-to-nature life in the woods of Oregon.


58 books based on 1 votes: Hippie Woman Wild: A Memoir of Life Love on an Oregon Commune by Carol Schlanger, Time's Up! A Memoir of the American Centur. If you've ever wanted to live on a commune for a couple of years and didn't get around to it, you will love Carol Schlanger's book Hippie Woman Wild. This book is the closest you can come to the actual experience of communal living. Hippie Woman Wild: A Memoir of Life Love on an Oregon Commune by Carol Schlanger book review. Click to read the full review of Hippie Woman Wild: A Memoir of Life Love on an Oregon Commune in New York Journal of Books. Review written by Susan Babbitt.


This book is the closest you can come to the actual experience of communal living. It’s the story of Carol Schlanger’s move, in pursuit of her lover, from conventional city living – job, apartment, etc. – to the chaotic, group living, back-to-nature life in the woods of Oregon. A not-so-nice Jewish girl, expelled from Yale Drama during the Vietnam protests, abandons her acting dream to follow the man she loves to an off-the-grid commune in Oregon. At 23, Carol Schlanger was an insecure upper middle class radical. Her parents spoiled her and she expected the universe to follow. It didn’t. "Carol Schlanger's wild ride of a memoir gallops hilariously through the early seventies commune experience that all of us old hippies meant to have. She has the perfect voice of her generation. Honest, rebellious, sensual, politically astute, she's invited us into history to live and love through her.

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