Housewife Superstar!
Advice (and Much More) from a Nonagenarian Domestic Goddess
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
The life, advice, and many marriages of a ninety-something Tasmanian domestic goddess, the real-life humor inspiration for television's Dame Edna
Marjorie Bligh is the ninety-five-year-old Martha Stewart you didn't know you were missing. Does your goldfish have constipation? Feed it Epsom salts. Have you run out of blush? Cut a beet in half and slap it on your cheeks. Are there possums in your ceiling? Housewife Superstar will tell you how to get them out. Famous for never wasting a thing, Marjorie crochets her bedspreads from plastic bags and used panty hose, and protects the plants in her garden with bras. In 1958, upon entering the food and craft contests at her town show, she won in seventy-eight categories; the next year she won in seventy-two but was denied the trophy by jealous rivals.
Once divorced and twice widowed, Marjorie is, according to her colossal fan Barry Humphries (of TV comedy Dame Edna fame), "no slouch in the matrimonial department." Her first husband, Cliff, was loving but turned brutal. Her second marriage, to preacher and schoolteacher Adrian, was punctuated by endless love notes, breakfasts in bed, and territorial fights with his adult daughters. She snagged her third husband, Eric—a bus driver—with promises of fruitcake and flirtatious glances in his rearview mirror. Marjorie designed two homes and a museum devoted to her creations, worked for half a century as a journalist and columnist, and raised two sons, all while building a devoted following. Danielle Wood's Housewife Superstar is an illuminating look at a treasure.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The Tasmanian Mrs. Beeton, Marjorie Bligh, now in her mid-90s, finds a new generation of admirers via this fondly doting biography by compatriot novelist Wood. Thrice-married author of several cookbooks and household primers since the mid-1960s, Bligh, n e Pearsall, then Blackwell, then Cooper, first gained fame in the early '50s with her award-winning recipes in the local agricultural competitions of Campbell Town, where she lived with her first husband, Cliff Blackwell, and their two sons, in a dream home they constructed. A devoted housewife, Marjorie was also, not surprisingly, a fierce competitor and tireless domestic impresario, working as a stringer for the newspapers and putting together her first book, Marjorie Blackwell at Home, just as she was finding true love with a schoolteacher and preacher named Adrian Cooper. After his devastating death and her later remarriage to truck driver Eric Bligh, the industrious, indomitable Marjorie nonetheless came out with new editions to her book, featuring folksy cooking, knitting, gardening, animal husbandry, and cleaning tips, with a forward-looking emphasis on recycling and thriftiness that appealed to contemporary readers. Subsequent works included A-Z of Gardening and her autobiography, Life Is for Living.