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The Wife is a novel by American writer Meg Wolitzer. On a plane, 35, feet in the air, Joan Castleman decides she is going to leave her husband.
They are on their way to Helsinki where Joe Castleman, a world-renowned novelist, is to receive a prestigious literary award. Joan describes her husband as "one of those men who own the world The story takes the reader back to the s, to Smith College and Greenwich Village , to the meeting of Joan and Joe, the development of their relationship, and all the decisions and life turns that brought them to this point, following Joe's success and compulsive cheating—culminating in the outing of a shocking secret at the root of it all.
Wolitzer has expressed that when she was young, she assumed that sexism would slowly peter out, and become a relic of the past by the time she was grown. As a writer, Wolitzer is especially aware of sexism in the publishing world and became interested in exploring this inequality in a book. She notes that she herself hasn't experienced this dynamic, but that her mother, Hilma Wolitzer , also a novelist, was termed a "housewife turns into novelist" when she published her first novel, a description that Wolitzer finds both condescending and interesting, as her mother described it: "it's as if she was Clark Kent going into a phone booth and sort of turning into a superhero".
She concludes, "if The Wife is a puzzle and an entertainment, it's also a near heartbreaking document of feminist realpolitik. If it's a story we've heard before, the tale is as resonant as ever in Wolitzer's hands.