Beschreibung
Produktdetails
Format
ePUB
Kopierschutz
Ja
Family Sharing
Ja
Text-to-Speech
Ja
Erscheinungsdatum
09.10.2018
Verlag
Distributed by eBookpartnershipSeitenzahl
320 (Printausgabe)
Dateigröße
578 KB
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9781839786204
The blood ties that have kept Jo and her brother Dave together are challenged when an inheritance fans the flames of underlying tensions. Upon discovering her mother's diary, the details of their family's troubled past are brought into sharp relief and painful memories are reawakened. Narrated with moments of light and dark, JM Monaco weaves together past and present, creating a complex family portrait of pain and denial in this remarkable debut novel. Perfect for fans of Anne Tyler and Sylvia Brownrigg, this is a novel that will stay with you long after you stop turning the pages.Reviews'What a heartbreaker! A deeply assured, soulful and savage portrayal of family life and secrets. This books gets under your skin - and stays there' - Emma Jane Unsworth'How We Remember drew me in with its vividly drawn characters right from the beginning. Unsettling, honest and thought-provoking' - Joanne Burn'Monaco evokes a time and place in a manner that is wholly engaging; she tells an engrossing story about the truth about coming to terms with the past, and the feel of this stays after the final page' - Ruth Figgest
Kundinnen und Kunden meinen
J.M. Monaco – How We Remember
Miss.mesmerized am 16.12.2018
Bewertungsnummer: 1156185
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)
When her mother is about to die, Joanna returns home in the US after years of living in London. What she was not prepared for are the memories that come back to her and that are closely linked to her childhood and teenage years: the plans to run away from home together with her brother, the times when her uncle approached and molested her, her way out of middle-class life, the beginning of her academic career and the realisation that she will never fit in and that she is simply not good enough to marry a son of a well-off family even though she excels at an Ivy-League University. A week of mourning and memories that not all are welcome to Jo and her family.
What I liked about the book was how easily one could sympathise and bond with Jo and thus follow her thoughts. The springing back and forward between the events around the mother’s death and funeral and her memories helped to keep the story lively and authentic; some words or people just trigger memories that you can neither prevent from coming to the surface nor control in the extent that they hit you.
The novel addresses several interesting topics that are worth pondering about: what keeps a family together and why do some women over and over again forgive all their husbands’ wrongdoings? Is there some kind of escape from your family, can you ever really cut the links that were established by birth? Coming from a certain class, working hard and doing everything right, what keeps you still from really belonging and being considered an adequate match? A lot of food for thought, especially when you share the protagonist’s background and visions of life. A quiet novel that is perfect for calmer days.