翻訳と辞書
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・ Back Track
・ Back Up (Dej Loaf song)
・ Back Up (Pitbull song)
・ Back Up (Snoop Dogg song)
・ Back Up Against the Wall
・ Back Up n da Chevy
・ Back Up Off Me!
・ Back Up Train
・ Back Up, Dancer
・ Back vowel
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・ Back When
・ Back When / Going All The Way
・ Back When I Knew It All
・ Back When I Knew It All (song)
Back When We Were Grownups
・ Back Where I Belong
・ Back Where I Come From
・ Back Where It's At
・ Back Where You Started
・ Back with a Bong
・ Back with a Heart
・ Back with a Vengeance
・ Back with Basie
・ Back with the Thugz
・ Back with the Thugz Part 2
・ Back with Two Beasts
・ Back Yard Burgers
・ Back Yard Recordings
・ Back Young-chul


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Back When We Were Grownups : ウィキペディア英語版
Back When We Were Grownups

''Back When We Were Grownups'' is a 2001 novel written by Anne Tyler in memory of her husband, who died in 1997.
==Plot==
Tyler's 15th novel, like most of her work, is set in Baltimore, Maryland. It opens with the sentence, "Once upon a time, there was a woman who discovered she had turned into the wrong person." The woman in question is Rebecca Davitch, a 53-year-old widow, mother, grandmother, and proprietor of a party and catering business run from her home called Open Arms. Up until age 20 Rebecca's life had been following a fairly predictable straight-line path towards both marriage to her high school sweetheart and a Ph.D. in history. Then Joe Davitch came along and she was “swept off my feet by a fully grown man, someone who...was already ''living'' his life.” Joe was a 33-year-old divorcee with 3 children whom Rebecca met at a friend’s party that happened to be at the Open Arms. One month later, Rebecca had quit college, had married Joe, and—as she quickly discovered—had married the Davitch family, with Joe’s 3 daughters, his mother, his brother Zeb, his huge old Baltimore house (Open Arms) and its business as a venue for celebrations of all sorts—weddings, graduations, christenings, anniversaries, etc. Before too long she also discovers that she has become the de facto manager of the Open Arms and the mother of Joe’s 3 girls and their own new baby daughter. When Joe himself dies after only 6 years of marriage and Joe’s uncle Poppy moves in, she finds herself with even more responsibility. Having cheerfully and exhaustingly raised four daughters, run the “celebrations business,” and helped her daughters through 6 marriages (+ 2 divorces) and 7 grandchildren, Rebecca is now taking a breath to ask, “What happened to the 20-year young woman who was a serious scholar, politically-involved idealist, engaged to be engaged….?” (this point in the novel, the reader may also be a little exhausted from having met 24 individuals (by name and by nickname) that are associated with the Davitch clan by marriage or blood, spanning four generations. )
At an engagement party for one of her stepdaughters, Rebecca finds herself questioning everything about her life, and decides to take steps to resurrect her former self. Her self-improvement project includes a visit to her hometown in Virginia, picking up old hobbies, reading books that she had read in college, and renewing her intellectual interests, without abandoning her many matriarchal and professional duties. She also eventually gets reacquainted with her old college/high school sweetheart. Will Allenby is a somewhat stodgy and constricted person (much as he was in college, way "back when they were grownups") and is now a divorced physics professor working at the same nearby college that they had both attended. While Rebecca is touched by certain remembrances and traits of Will, her fantasy of re-kindling their old affections is spoiled by his sad, staid, and inflexible demeanor. Rebecca eventually realizes that the path that she chose (or chose her) decades ago may have resulted in her "right person" after all.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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