Cassandra at the wedding.

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Dorothy Baker: Cassandra at the wedding. (1962, Houghton Mifflin)

226 pages

English language

Published April 6, 1962 by Houghton Mifflin.

OCLC Number:
287908

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Cassandra Edwards is a graduate student at Berkeley: gay, brilliant, nerve-wracked, miserable. At the beginning of this novel, she drives back to her family ranch in the foothills of the Sierras to attend the wedding of her identical twin, Judith, to a nice young doctor from Connecticut. Cassandra, however, is hell-bent on sabotaging the wedding.

Dorothy Baker's entrancing tragicomic novella follows an unpredictable course of events in which her heroine appears variously as conniving, self-aware, pitiful, frenzied, absurd, and heartbroken—at once utterly impossible and tremendously sympathetic. Cassandra reckons with her complicated feelings about the sister who she feels owes it to her to be her alter ego; with her father, a brandy-soaked retired professor of philosophy; and with the ghost of her dead mother, as she struggles to come to terms with the only life she has.

First published in 1962, Cassandra at the Wedding is a book of enduring …

3 editions

Subjects

  • Women graduate students -- Fiction.
  • Mothers -- Death -- Fiction.
  • Ranch life -- Fiction.
  • Lesbians -- Fiction.
  • Weddings -- Fiction.
  • Sisters -- Fiction.
  • Twins -- Fiction.
  • Sierra Nevada (Calif. and Nev.) -- Fiction.