'Urgent and vivid A serious, writerly, self-critical
account of what it means to feel that, despite love and
hope and good intentions, you have failed as a parent,
and that the child you bore (while still eerily,
painfully familiar) is lost to you. Which is not the
same thing as saying that it is the complete truth. Art
can only ever hope to present a version of the truth.
And this is what Julie Myerson has done' Daily Telegraph
'An aching, empty-nest memoir: a mother mourning for her
uncomplicated little children, now grown, whom she could
care for, write about without comeback, love - and
control'The Times Myerson's motivation is anything but
base. She could have disguised her material in a novel,
but she wanted to make sense of reality, to understand
the chaos that has taken over her family. She wanted to
help others, herself and her son Any family for whom
cannabis has been a wrecker, even if they would not
dream of exposing their situation in the same way
Myerson has, will be grateful to her for having done so.
She may have been rash, but she has also been
courageous.She has tried to write honestly about a
nightmarish situation and a subject that never seems to
get the attention it deserves' Observer 'Yelloly,
however ephemeral, fulfils a function - she is a lost
girl, one who cannot be revived, from a family ravaged
by that Victorian scourge, consumption. And Myerson's
real, parallel lament is for a child who falls victim to
our modern version of consumption - the slow ruination
of a much-loved child through drugs gripping' Financial
Times 'A campaigning book If the question is whether a
woman has a right to tell a story that is also,
actually, her own - a book reviewer can only say yes.
And add that anyone who reads it will struggle not to be
profoundly moved' Independent |
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