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Geraldine

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David Watmough's Geraldine celebrates a groundbreaking female scientist, seen in her later years. After a hard-fought successful career as a bio-chemist and professor, the sharp-mouthed Geraldine struggles to keep her dignity and independence as her family casts her in the role of doddering old woman. Alone in a Vancouver highrise, Geraldine hits the bottle, reflecting upon her childhood in Victoria and her determination to become a scientist despite the attitudes of the day. If she has become hard, it is because she needed to be in order to succeed in the patriarchal world of medical science. Now she battles her physician son, who considers his mother an embarrassment. With few peers left to remember her former stature, Geraldine takes an interest in her grandson, a young gay man. A rewarding relationship develops between the aging feminst and the confused youth. David Watmough's tribute to the feminists of the twentieth century is written with humour, warmth and style. The reader rejoices at Geraldine's accomplishments and suffers her anguish and humiliation as old age robs her of the respect she struggled to achieve.

146 pages, Paperback

First published November 15, 2007

About the author

David Watmough

30 books3 followers
David Watmough was born in Essex, England, and grew up in Cornwall, where his family had farmed for centuries. In 1945 he was imprisoned in a jail in Portsmouth [for homosexuality] when in the navy during World War II. A prison chaplain helped him get into university after he was released from jail; he attended King's College at the University of London, majoring in theology.

When he was 21 he left university to live in Paris, where he wrote his first book, A Church Renascent, and met his longtime partner, ex-Californian Floyd St. Clair.

Watmough worked as a freelance writer for the BBC in England, then freelanced for the New York Times before landing a job at the San Francisco Examiner. He worked there for two or three years, while St. Clair was finishing his PhD.

Watmough gained his Canadian citizenship in 1963. After a stint with the CBC, he was hired by The Vancouver Sun newspaper to write about drama and art. He left The Sun and newspaper criticism in the mid-1960s when he received a Canada Council grant to write a play. He began writing “monodramas”, which he performed onstage; this led to work in Britain, Canada, the U.S. and West Germany.

Richard Olafson of Ekstasis Editions received a Talonbooks copy of Watmough’s monodramas when Olafson moved to B.C. He is still Watmough’s publisher, three decades later.

As he grew more connected to Vancouver's cultural scene, Watmough also grew concerned & involved with writers' opportunities there, & became the first President of the BC Federation of Writers. He remained one of its most illustrious lifetime members, encouraging new members & helping the burgeoning scene develop.

Watmough lived in Vancouver for 40 years with St. Clair, a beloved University of British Columbia French professor and opera critic, until St. Clair's death in 2009. The couple became well-known fixtures among Vancouver's "literati", throwing countless legendary dinner parties for Vancouver’s writers and artists.

In 2004 David & Floyd moved from their well-known Kitsilano home & active social hub to a house they'd purchased in Boundary Bay. The move isolated them somewhat from their former social circles.

Watmough published his autobiography, Myself Through Others: Memoirs in 2008. A few days before his birthday in August 2011, he received a copy of his new novel, To Each An Albatross. It’s his 21st book, and the fifth he’s published in the last five years.

After the death of his beloved partner Floyd St. Clair in 2009 Watmough moved back to Vancouver, becoming what he famously called an "inmate" of Crofton Manor seniors residence in Kerrisdale. There, he began writing a voluminous number of poems in the Sonnet form, which he frequently shared with the many friends he made there.

Watmough died @ Crofton Manor @ 11 am on August 4th 2017 - 2 days before the untimely death of Marguerite Chesterman, wife of Watmough's former good friend & CBC producer Robert Chesterman, in her longtime family home just down the road - unbeknownst to the Chesterman family at the time.

[More detailed info can be found @ this link: https://bcbooklook.com/2017/08/14/dav...]

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24 reviews2 followers
June 23, 2018
This book successfully puts you in the head of this old feminist scientist, but there isn't much to the plot. It's more of a novella than a novel. Some interesting parts but they weren't explored.
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