Marsha Hunt (1) (1946–)
Author of Joy
For other authors named Marsha Hunt, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Image credit: By Original Photo created by Dermod. Derivative Wrok created by Hugh Pickens - Flickr Photo titled "mum marsha and dad" at http://www.flickr.com/photos/dermod/47747726/, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4138966
Works by Marsha Hunt
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Hunt, Marsha A.
- Birthdate
- 1946-04-15
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Oakland High School
University of California, Berkeley - Occupations
- model
singer
actor
novelist
teacher - Organizations
- National Theatre
Royal Shakespeare Company - Relationships
- Ratledge, Mike (spouse)
Bolan, Marc (former partner)
Jagger, Mick (former partner) - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
- Places of residence
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
London, England, UK
Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
California, USA
Dublin, Ireland
France
Members
Reviews
I picked this up (for a whole 50 cent in the charity store) because of the title. The cover pic made me hesitate for a few as its not really typical of the type or era of books I normally read, but really, it's a cool title.
The book doesn't quite live up to it, though. The characters are pretty stock, and the plot - it's the story of a woman who basically takes no control over her own life, and how much of that is down to her character and how much (as the book would like to argue) to the show more era and culture and family she was raised in might be debatable; but the bottom line is she's passive to the point not just of self-destruction but of self-dissolution. About the only thing that saves it from being depressing as hell is that you know from the beginning she eventually ends up - not happy, exactly. But content?
Despite spending much of the novel wanting to slap Irene and tell her to grow up already, there was just enough there to keep me reading through to the end (and wanting to slap her through to the end, too). Part of that's my inability to stop reading a book once I've started; and I can't say there's much to be learnt from this book, or much entertainment in it; but I'm not sorry I read it, either.
And I still like the title. show less
The book doesn't quite live up to it, though. The characters are pretty stock, and the plot - it's the story of a woman who basically takes no control over her own life, and how much of that is down to her character and how much (as the book would like to argue) to the show more era and culture and family she was raised in might be debatable; but the bottom line is she's passive to the point not just of self-destruction but of self-dissolution. About the only thing that saves it from being depressing as hell is that you know from the beginning she eventually ends up - not happy, exactly. But content?
Despite spending much of the novel wanting to slap Irene and tell her to grow up already, there was just enough there to keep me reading through to the end (and wanting to slap her through to the end, too). Part of that's my inability to stop reading a book once I've started; and I can't say there's much to be learnt from this book, or much entertainment in it; but I'm not sorry I read it, either.
And I still like the title. show less
A slightly disjointed look at one woman's fight with breast cancer, complicated slightly with MRSA but still she fights with zeal and inspiration. A courageous look at her ups and downs. There are chunks missing and I haven't seen the doccumentary that interweaves it's presence into the story but it sounds interesting. The cover shows her in her iconic naked pose in 1968 and 2005, still looking gorgeous.
Lists
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 7
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 189
- Popularity
- #115,305
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 27
- Languages
- 1












