Split
A Counterculture Childhood| By: | Lisa Michaels |
| Publisher: | HarperCollins |
| Print ISBN: | 9780395957882 |
| eText ISBN: | 9780547959344 |
| Edition: | 0 |
| Copyright: | 1998 |
| Format: | Page Fidelity |
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In Split, Lisa Michaels offers a strikingly textured portrait of her days of communes and road trips, of antiwar protests and rallies --- and of what came after, for her parents and herself --- as the radicalism of the 1960s and '70s gave way to conservative times. As a young child, Michaels visited her father in prison, where he was serving a two-year sentence for his part in an antiwar protest. In the early '70s, she toured the country with her mother and stepfather in a customized mail truck, complete with oriental rugs and a wood stove, until the family settled in a small northern California town. Her father later moved to the Bay Area, where he worked in auto plants and served as a labor organizer. By the age of eight Michaels was a veteran leaflet-folder, and she consecrated her father's second marriage in a Berkeley park by reading from Quotations from Chairman Mao. Not surprisingly, Michaels grew up craving conformity --- giving her mother makeovers and arranging their secondhand furniture in inspired ways --- but she also came to share the values her parents held dear: independence, frankness, and unsparing self-examination. In the buttoned-up world of UCLA during the Reagan years, she went through a hippie revival phase, wearing batik dresses and Chairman Mao pins, a throwback amid the campus's Greek revivalists and young Republicans. Against that traditional backdrop her parents' longtime activism took on new meaning, and at twenty-two, much in the spirit of her upbringing, Michaels embarked on a trip through Asia. Observant, luminous, and wry, Split captures both the vulnerability and heady freedom of a counterculture childhood. It is a powerful blend of social reflection and personal reminiscence, a memoir that paints a clear-eyed and unforgettable picture of the ways in which the legacy of the '60s impacted one remarkable family. This is the story of a girl caught between two worlds—the radical protest lines of her parents and the quiet conformity she desperately craved. A Counterculture Childhood: From visiting her father in a prison where he was serving time for an antiwar protest, to touring the country in a converted mail truck, this is an upbringing like no other. The Legacy of the 1960s: Experience the heady days of communes, rallies, and radical politics as the idealism of the '60s collides with the conservative Reagan years. A Daughter's Story: A luminous, wry, and clear-eyed portrait of a young girl craving normalcy—giving her mother makeovers while consecrating a marriage with readings from Chairman Mao. Finding Your Own Way: Ultimately a powerful story of forgiveness and self-discovery, exploring how one woman reconciled her parents’ fierce values with her own search for identity.