Onions in the Stew
by Betty MacDonald

Onions in the Stew Book Cover
Onions in the Stew Cover

Synopsis

You know how sometimes friendship blossoms in the first few moments of meeting?

“Something clicked,” we say.

Well, that’s what discovering Betty MacDonald was like for I happened to read a couple of pages of one of her books and — click — knew right away that here was a vivacious writer whose friendly, funny, and fiery company I was really going to enjoy.

Although MacDonald’s first and most popular book, The Egg and I, has remained in print since its original publication, her three other volumes have been unavailable for decades.

The Plague and I recounts MacDonald’s experiences in a Seattle sanitarium, where the author spent almost a year (1938-39) battling tuberculosis.

The White Plague was no laughing matter, but MacDonald nonetheless makes a sprightly tale of her brush with something deadly.

Anybody Can Do Anything is a high-spirited, hilarious celebration of how “the warmth and loyalty and laughter of a big family” brightened their weathering of The Great Depression.

In Onions in the Stew, MacDonald is in unbuttonedly frolicsome form as she describes how, with husband and daughters, she set to work making a life on a rough-and-tumble island in Puget Sound, a ferry-ride from Seattle.

Publication

Year 1955
Edition Copyright 1955
Pages 102
Language English
ISBN-13 9780871293831
ISBN-10 0871293838

Onions in the Stew is a play written by Betty MacDonald and published by Dramatic Publishing (1955).

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