(10/29/2017)
Alison McGhee realistically conveys the discomfort of waiting for lucid moments to make a connection with a loved one with a loss of intellectual capacity. The pacing of this book mirrors this experience requiring some patience, patience which is rewarded in the thoughtful writing and in a realistic resolution.
After a distressing breakup with her high school love, Clara is pushed by her mother, Tamar, to go away to college. She flees brokenhearted and angry toward her headstrong and tight-lipped mother. As early onset dementia strikes her mother, Clara returns.
This should be a time for forgiveness and coming to terms with the past, but Clara has said things in anger that she cannot take back, and her mother remains obscured by past silence and current confusion. Slowly Clara attempts to peel away the past, address her anger, fears and desires.