Showing posts with label Psychological Drama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psychological Drama. Show all posts

Review: Mother, Mother


You aren't one of those Pinterest mothers, are you? You know the kind I mean, the ones who throw the perfect color-coordinated birthday parties for thirty six year olds while simultaneously serving as PTA president, whipping up paleo meals served promptly - and with appropriate garnish - at five each evening, and still fit two hours at the gym with makeup that apparently never comes off? I hope not. Because motherhood perfection like that gives me the heebie-jeebies.

okay, so I hate Pinterest, but I am so trying this for Little Kid's next birthday party....whatev
Enter Koren Zailckas' new novel, Mother, Mother. You might remember Zailckas from her previous best-selling non-fiction work Smashed. This time she has dipped her pen in the fiction fountain and come up with some serious whackadoodle. For me, it was love at first sight.

What we have here is one serious Pinterest mom.  Okay, so she doesn't exactly spend her time pinning, at least not in these pages, but she might as well be.  To the outside world, Josephine Hurst is the perfect mother. Everything she does is utterly perfect. And she's not ashamed of that perfection.

Except....(and this is the part I revel in)....

except she is so not perfect.  The woman is whackadoodle. (Okay, okay, so the official psychological world would label it Borderline Personality Disorder slash Narcissism, but I'm allowed to say whackadoodle because I like the word. Try it, it just rolls off the tongue.) This smugness I feel as I find out that ever-so-perfect Josephine is a whack job turns out to be somewhat mitigated as the damage she is inflicting upon her family begins to unfold.  Teenage children, a husband who may - or may not - be adding to the family problems all begin to boil over, cumulating some very dire consequences for everyone involved.

Needless to say, the tension remains taut throughout the novel. Alternating points of view between two of Josephine's children, the pace moves quickly and events change the reader's opinion often. Others might call this novel a page-turner, but I'll just call it a damned good read.

Title: Mother, Mother: A Novel
Author: Koren Zailckas
Publisher: Crown
Date: September 17, 2013
Pages: 384
Source:  Publisher

Rating:  4.5 Stars....we loves us some whackadoodle

Quick, grab a pen and paper....

We'll wait till you've got something to write with.


*drumming fingers*


Got it?  Okay, now write this down:



The novel is called The Human Bobby and it's written by Gabe Rotter.

This is the one book A Reader's Respite wants you to read because....WOW.  Just wow.  Wow. 


Bobby Flopowski has it all.  He pulled himself up out of his poor Brooklyn childhood and became a successful, wealthy pediatrician in Los Angeles.  He marries well and for love.  They have a child.  They have it all. 

Until one fateful day, everything changes.

And Bobby ends up with nothing.  No job, no house, no wife and no child.  How does this happen?

We can't tell you more than that.  There may be twists, there may not.  A Reader's Respite doesn't want to spoil the stunning effect of reading this novel.  What we can tell you is that we idly opened the book to the first page, mistakenly thinking this was just another literary fiction novel.  Literally we did not put the book down until we turned the last page two hours later.  Despite a passel of toddlers beating on each other with trucks and dolls.  Despite Mr. RR yakking at us (we don't know about what).  Despite a refrigerator repair man dismantling our broken fridge.

Just read it.

We'll wait here patiently until you return here and tell us, "WOW!"




The Small Print

Title:  The Human Bobby
Author:  Gabe Rotter
Genre:  Literary Fiction with a big dose of Psychological Drama
289 pages
ISBN:  978-1-4391-6811-0
Source:  Newman PR
Grade:  A+

Side Note to Megan:  This is one big serving of humble pie.  This book will most assuredly rank high up in our Year's Best of the Best.  ;)