True North is the inspirational Canadian Chapter of Jill Ker Conway's life story, which began with her much love, bestselling memoir, The Road from Coorain. Beginning with her departure from Australia, Jill Ker Conway tells of her romance with Harvard House Master John Conway, of coming to grips with his manic-depressive disorder, and of their move to Canada in 1964 where she became the first female vice-president at the University of Toronto. In this vibrant memoir, we watch as a most private woman makes of herself a public persona in Canada.
Jill Ker Conway Orden de los libros (cronológico)
Las contribuciones literarias de Jill Ker Conway están principalmente arraigadas en sus narrativas autobiográficas introspectivas. Explora magistralmente temas de identidad, transformación personal y el viaje del autodescubrimiento. Su escritura ofrece una mirada profunda a los desafíos y oportunidades que enfrentaron las mujeres al navegar los cambios sociales. El trabajo de Conway proporciona una lente única a través de la cual comprender el crecimiento individual dentro de un contexto histórico más amplio.


Jill Ker Conway narrates her remarkable journey into adulthood, marked by vast distances and contrasting worlds. Growing up in the Australian outback, she was seven before encountering another girl and began helping herd sheep at eight, as World War II left her family without able-bodied men. Conway vividly describes the beautiful yet harsh landscape of Coorain, where her parents worked tirelessly to create a nurturing home amidst adversity. After her father’s sudden death when she was ten, her mother struggled with depression, leaving Jill to navigate the challenges of suburban Sydney in the 1950s, where she faced a crowded school life. As she transitioned to university, Jill embraced new ideas while grappling with the responsibility of caring for her mother, leading her to moments of escapism through drink. Despite these struggles, she gradually found her emotional and intellectual strength, embarking on a transformative love affair that helped her discover her true self. Ultimately, she moved to America, where she became a historian and the first female president of Smith College. Her journey from Coorain is a powerful exploration of how deep-rooted commitments to place and dreams can both liberate and confine, portraying childhood as a blend of Eden and anguish, and adulthood as a quest for freedom.