About this item
Highlights
- Winner, 2024 Quebec Writers' Federation Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction Winner, 2024 Quebec Writers' Federation Concordia University First Book Prize A daughter examines her complicated relationship with a charismatic, narcissistic mother who now lives with alcohol-related dementia.
- Author(s): Sabrina Reeves
- 344 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Women
Description
Book Synopsis
Winner, 2024 Quebec Writers' Federation Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction
Winner, 2024 Quebec Writers' Federation Concordia University First Book Prize
A daughter examines her complicated relationship with a charismatic, narcissistic mother who now lives with alcohol-related dementia.
When Cassie Wolfe brings her mother, Nina, to the Albuquerque Presbyterian Hospital to be detoxed, the doctors ask her to write a profile of the patient. But how can she fit Nina into a Word document? The last two years have left Cassie stunned, unable to reconcile the shell of a woman lying in the hospital bed with the force of nature that was her mother.
Cassie's memories of Nina span decades and landscapes, from a farmhouse in Massachusetts to the streets of New York and the mountains of New Mexico. Nina was a charismatic iconoclast--an architect and builder who could wield a circular saw as easily as discuss politics art. But as Cassie comes to realize, Nina's brilliant constructions were only possible when she walled off whole sides of herself. Hiding is not unique to Nina--Cassie knows AA is full of just such intelligent, hilarious, powerful women. And when her critical gaze turns to her own life and how she's raising her two daughters, she sees her mother's influence everywhere. In the end, Nina's devastating descent threatens to pull the family under, and Cassie's constant action is propelled by grief until she realizes that all that remains is to let it go.
Review Quotes
"Reeves accomplishes the painful task of summarizing a loved one's life with magnificent details and delicate insights." -- Montreal Review of Books
"By turns uplifting, profound, angry, [Reeves] is never disengaged, never boring ... [She] paints images with her words, and her scenes just as frequently soar." -- Toronto Star
"For anyone who has had experience with familial alcoholism, this story will resonate at many levels." -- Waterloo Public Library Check This Out
"This beautifully written mother-daughter story is a profound and compelling read." -- Waterloo Region Record