BooksForKidsBlog

Monday, August 06, 2007

The Nanny: The Perfect Stranger: The Truth about Mothers and Nannies by Lucy Kaylin

The very word nanny conjures up less than reassuring images, what with overdressed tv sitcom nannies, scary horror movie nannies, and take-charge reality show nannies who whip whole dysfunctional families into shape on a weekly basis. Lucy Kaylin, editor of Marie Claire describes them all in her new book The Perfect Stranger: The Truth about Mothers and Nannies. Kaylin recounts her own ambiguity about handing her newborn over to surrogate care:

"I said, 'No stranger can watch my baby....' Then about two weeks later, I was like, okay, we've got to start interviewing people."

Out of her own experience, Kaylin was led to interview working mothers and nanny/babysitters and found much ambivalence on both sides about the process of giving over children to another person's keeping for a significant part of the child's life. Yet she suggests that the mother-nanny relationship is often as important as the nanny-child relationship. Kaylin takes a clear-eyed look through the magnifying glass (and sometimes through the video cam) at the bad and the beautiful of the relationship between mothers and the women who take their place daily in the raising of their children.

Kaylin's book is less a how-to on hiring and keeping good caretakers than it is a respectful but reporterly look at the feelings and assessments of professional nannies and the women they work for. Finding and keeping that "perfect stranger," that Mary Poppins, apparently is not always an easy or comfortable process for either woman, but it is the most important job a working mother may ever have. Kaylin's book is, as one reviewer has said, "a valuable resource to any mother facing the challenge of hiring, well, herself."

A book with similar scope is Jessica Auerbach's And Nanny Makes Three: Mothers and Nannies Tell the Truth About Work, Love, Money, and Each Other, which features interviews with parents and caretakers, anecdotes, and some analysis of the difficulties and potential problems and exploitations between the two in dealing with the push and pull of daily life. Other books include Susan Carleon's The Nanny Book: The Smart Parent's Guide to Hiring, Firing, and Every Sticky Situation In Between, a guidebook to the whole process, from hiring to grocery shopping to handling the flirtatious sitter; and Searching for Mary Poppins: Women Write about the Intense Relationship between Mothers and Nannies a collection of twenty-four women's essays on hiring, working with, and keeping their children's caretakers.

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5 Comments:

  • "Finding and keeping that "perfect stranger," that Mary Poppins, apparently is not always an easy or comfortable process for either woman, but it is the most important job a working mother may ever have." I would swear that my mother thought that the most important job a mother, working or otherwise may ever have, had something to do with that which made her a mother: children.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 7:09 PM  

  • ....' Then about two weeks later, I was like, okay, we've got to start interviewing people."

    Two weeks? I hope her kid doesn't read that when she's older. How bizarre, not to mention unmotherly.

    By Blogger Dad, at 7:18 PM  

  • How about this, sell the second car, delay buying the plasma tv, cook meals at home instead of eating out all the time, buy a house you can afford, make ends meet with the highest of the two salaries coming into the household and one of the parents stay home with the children. It can be either Dad or Mom but it'll assuredly be 100 times better than any hired help.

    It's a revolutionary concept, I know, putting the welfare of the child before your adolescent, egotistical self-gratification so is actually having the nerve to suggest the responsibility of raising a small human being is more important than getting that new pair of shoes but babies are not trendy accessories you can get tired of and pawn off on the help. Damn, I don't even do that with my lawn !

    But it's probably just me . . .

    Papa

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 12:44 PM  

  • Dear Papa,
    Nope, it's not just you. There are a lot of people who put their children ahead of their own professional success.

    I did the same until my youngest started to public school and I had to make their living.

    And I still mow the grass!

    We should remember, though, that some do not have the luxury of chosing which income to get along on. Of course, they don't usually hire nannies, either.

    For those who choose to hire nannies, though, making a good choice is better than making a poor one.

    By Blogger GTC, at 5:38 PM  

  • I haven't read the book, but funny to see this when I've been dealing with nanny angst today. If I could convey to parents to please go over rules of safety, behavior, guidelines for discipline and what their expectations are for a nanny in public- - - the rest of the world would appreciate it.

    I see unattended children, poor and harsh discipline techniques, nannies out in (libraries) public places socializing and not paying a whit of attention to kids, HOW TO INTERACT with the kids, etc. Seriously, lots of problems are caused by parents just assuming that the alternate caregiver will act and react as they should.

    I'm not giving a plus or minus here as every family situation is different. But I wish more people would think about setting firm guidelines for their nannies and communicating with them frequently. Good review! Shannon

    By Blogger Going Crunchy, at 9:24 PM  

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