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Glitter and Glue by Kelly Corrigan

Glitter and Glue

A Memoir

by Kelly Corrigan

  • Critics' Consensus (23):
  • Readers' Rating (28):
  • Published:
  • Feb 2014, 240 pages
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There are currently 28 reader reviews for Glitter and Glue
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Kathy S. (Danbury, CT)

Needs More Glue
I was expecting a much different book, with more stories about Kelly's relationship with her mother and how it had changed over the years. Her experience as a nanny in Australia dominated the book, and then when she returned to the States, Kelly is home only a short period of time before moving across the country to California. It is here that she falls in love, marries and raises her family. Although she claims she emulates her mother more and more as she embraces her own motherhood, there is not enough back story to support this. Fast read, enjoyable, could have been so much better.
Carolyn S. (Decatur, GA)

Homage to Motherhood
While acting as a nanny to a bereaved family in Australia, Kelly Corrigan recalls the many things her own Mother would have said and done in different situations that she faces in Glitter and Glue. The novel has a weak storyline and seems more like an essay about paying homage to motherhood.
Priscilla M. (Houston, TX)

A little more glue, perhaps?
There isn't a woman alive who does not have stories to tell about her relationship with her mother. I was prepared to sympathize with the author as she discovered through life experiences just how much of her mother she had internalized without knowing it. I know I have been amazed at the number of times I have opened my mouth to say something and out popped my mother.

The author, Kelly Corrigan, goes on an extended trip to Australia and finds herself needing a job to make ends meet. She takes a job as a nanny, and in the process of caring for three motherless children, finds herself relating more and more to the mother with whom she thought she had nothing in common. It was a an easy read, and I did enjoy it, but I found myself looking for a little more internal conflict along the way. I felt like the full realization of her relationship to her mother did not occur until she herself was a mother, much later after her time in Australia.
Gunta K. (Glens Falls, NY)

Stating the obvious
I did not fall in love with Kelly Corrigan's memoir. Her intense and clearly meant to be amusing criticisms of her mother and her parenting skills are unfair and show Kelly's immaturity. leaving the country to backpack overseas to experience "life" is irresponsible as her parents have invested in Kelly's college education and want the best for her. So the "best" turns out to be a job as a nanny in Australia. The one thing this job does do is created the realization in Kelly that she misses her family and needs her mother. This kind of blow by blow description of one's growing up may be quite satisfactory to the individual's immediate family but does nothing for anyone else. Once Kelly became quite ill she understood that the only person on this planet who could help her walk through this disaster was her mom.

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