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Loading... The Hero of This Bookby Elizabeth McCracken
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I found this to be a perfect short read. The narrator (almost the author but with differences as she states in an aside) visits London from America, remembering her last trip to London with her mother. She loved her mother and she is described as a remarkable, but not faultless, woman. She is also selling her parent's house. The novel is sensitive and witty and a warm memory of her mother. At the end she has the following conversation with her mother, that sums up why she is writing this novel and the combination of melancholy and wit in the book. 'Why are you writing about me? Because otherwise you'd evanesce, and that I cannot bear. Me, evanesce? Not one of my talents.' It is about an American in London, about disability, about memories and about family love. It is tender and exquisite, rather than sentimental and gushing. The words are beautifully crafted, the author occasionally present and keeps the reader engaged. I expected this book to take a turn that never materialized. Some lines were brilliant. A few made me laugh out loud. But in the end, it was only a quick read that I doubt will stick with me. That being said, bring it to the beach. The paperback is light enough to carry, the text easy to understand, and you will no doubt admire McCracken's wit. A book that is curiously hard to describe or pigeon hole. The author - American - is playing the tourist in London, re-exploring the haunts she and her recently deceased mother enjoyed together. She moves seamlessly, but never inappropriately between her London adventures, her mother's life as a woman with life-affecting health issues, and the need to sell the unwieldy and neglected house that was her parents' last home. Her father also died not too long ago, but he plays no more than a bit part in this story. Mc Cracken's mother was wilful and opinionated, witty and optimistic - and great fun, despite her very real mobility difficulties. McCracken herself vacillates between protecting her mother's privacy and wanting to cherish her memories. She wants to write a book that's like 'David Copperfield except Jewish, and disabled, and female, and an American wiseacre, but there’s too much I don’t know and I can’t bear to make up.' This is a funny, unsentimental and vivid book which is impossible to characterise - or to put down. I read this after hearing Ann Patchett recommend it. However, I didn't love it as much as she did. The book is about a writer grieving the death of her mother, and how difficult it is to deal with the loss and her grief. She had visited London with her mother, a larger-than-life personality, and now that her mother died, she goes back to London to wander the streets alone. She remembers various things they did and tries to work through her sorrow. She is also trying to deal with sale and disposal of her mother's house, which she really can't deal with, and lets it go without truly dealing with it. This book reads like a memoir, although it is a novel. no reviews | add a review
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"Ten months after her mother's death, the narrator of The Hero of This Book takes a trip to London. The city was a favorite of her mother's, and as the narrator wanders the streets, she finds herself reflecting on her mother's life and their relationship. Thoughts of the past meld with questions of the future: Back in New England, the family home is now up for sale, its considerable contents already winnowed. The narrator, a writer, recalls all that made her complicated mother extraordinary--her brilliant wit, her generosity, her unbelievable obstinacy, her sheer will in seizing life despite physical difficulties--and finds herself wondering how her mother had endured. Even though she wants to respect her mother's nearly pathological sense of privacy, the woman must come to terms with whether making a chronicle of this remarkable life constitutes an act of love or betrayal. The Hero of This Book is a searing examination of grief and renewal, and of a deeply felt relationship between a child and her parents. What begins as a question of filial devotion ultimately becomes a lesson in what it means to write. At once comic and heartbreaking, with prose that delights at every turn, this is a novel of such piercing love and tenderness that we are reminded that art is what remains when all else falls away"--Dust jacket flap. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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If you read for language and character, you're going to enjoy this book immensely. ( )