![]() ![]() Sisterhood understitched the Baez household. The female contingent of the family submitted reluctantly to rooming-house life until theĮlder Joan's sister Tia, thirty-nine, joined them, freshly divorced for unimaginably adult reasons never to be discussed. Their older sister, Pauline, ten, kept to herself in her own small room, a converted closet, and their mother, thirty-six,įor whom Joan was named, tended to the house while listening to classical music on 78-rpm records a salesman picked out for her. Albertīaez, thirty-seven, worked in a cold war program to teach physics to military engineers in training. ![]() Joan, who was eight, and Mimi, who was four, shared a bedroom on the second floor of the Baez family's clapboard house in Menlo Park, California, near Stanford University, where their father, Dr. ![]() She came through the chimney and brought music and ice cream in her carpetbag, or it seemed that way to In the winter of 1949, when Joan and Mimi Baez were little girls, their aunt Tia moved in with them. The Lives and Times of Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez Fariña, and Richard Fariña ![]()
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