Fighter Pilot’s Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties and the Cold War tells the story of Mary Lawlor’s dramatic, roving life as a warrior’s child. A family biography and a young woman’s vision of the Cold War, Fighter Pilot’s Daughter narrates the more than many transfers the family made from Miami to California to Germany as the Cold War demanded. Each chapter describes the workings of this traveling household in a different place and time. The book’s climax takes us to Paris in May ’68, where Mary—until recently a dutiful military daughter—has joined the legendary student demonstrations against among other things, the Vietnam War. Meanwhile her father is flying missions out of Saigon for that very same war. Though they are on opposite sides of the political divide, a surprising reconciliation comes years later.
⤷Read sample here.
⤷Fighter Pilot’s Daughter is available at Amazon.
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╰┈➤Book Details
- Genre: Memoir
- Sub-genre: Women in History / Military Leaders Biography
- Language:English
- Pages: 323
- Paperback ISBN: 978-1442222007
- Kindle ISBN: 978-1442222014
- Publisher: Rowman and Littlefield
- Format: Hardcover, Paperback, Kindle, Audiobook
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╰┈➤Here’s What Readers Have To Say!
“Mary
Lawlor’s memoir, Fighter Pilot’s Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties
and the Cold War, is terrifically written. The experience of living in a
military family is beautifully brought to life. This memoir shows the
pressures on families in the sixties, the fears of the Cold War, and
also the love that families had that helped them get through those
times, with many ups and downs. It’s a story that all of us who are old
enough can relate to, whether we were involved or not. The book is so
well written. Mary Lawlor shares a story that needs to be written, and
she tells it very well.” ―The Jordan Rich Show
“Mary
Lawlor, in her brilliantly realized memoir, articulates what accountants
would call a soft cost, the cost that dependents of career military
personnel pay, which is the feeling of never belonging to the specific
piece of real estate called home. . . . [T]he real story is Lawlor and
her father, who is ensconced despite their ongoing conflict in Lawlor’s
pantheon of Catholic saints and Irish presidents, a perfect metaphor for
coming of age at a time when rebelling was all about rebelling against
the paternalistic society of Cold War America.” ―Stars and Stripes
Mary Lawlor is author of a memoir, Fighter Pilot’s Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties and the Cold War (Bloomsbury 2015) and two books of cultural criticism, Recalling the Wild: Naturalism and the Closing of the American West (Rutgers UP 2000) and Public Native America (Rutgers UP 2006). She studied at the American University in Paris, the University of Maryland, and New York University. She divides her time between Easton, Pennsylvania and Gaucin, Spain. Her novel, The Translators, is set in 12th century Spain and fictionalizes the experiences of Robert of Ketton, first translator of the Koran into Latin. She hopes to see it out next year. In the meantime, she has started a second novel, The Women’s Hospital, set in 18th century Spain and inspired by the life story of an Irish woman whose family moved to Cádiz, escaping English oppression in their own country.
╰┈➤ You can visit her website at https://www.marylawlor.net/.
Connect with her on social media at:
╰┈➤ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mary.lawlor.186/






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