Look Both Ways
By Katharine Coles
Walter Link and Miriam Wollaeger, a young geologist couple in 1920s Wisconsin, set
out to find oil to supply the surging U.S. demand. This exciting work will allow them
to build their lives in South and Central America, Indonesia, and Cuba. But from the
first posting in Columbia, they quickly discover that no women are working in the
field in these places. While Walter faces the hardships and thrills of exploration
in the jungles and mountains, and eventually becomes chief geologist for Standard
Oil, Miriam is left behind in the colonial capitals during Walter's often lengthy
times away. She defines herself through the limited means left to a woman within their
small societies: playing bridge or polo by day and dancing into the wee hours with
early KLM pilots, diplomats, and the footloose sons of moneyed Americans and the European
aristocracies. She also raises three children, has intimate involvements, learns the
local languages, and takes up teaching. But she is not satisfied. And finally she
does something about it.
Following in her grandparents' footsteps, author Katharine Coles looks backward and forward, through documents and imagination. She looks at their journeys and hers, and mingling their words with her own, examines the delicate balances that must exist in a successful marriage and a feminist life.