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Preferred library: Salmo Public Library?

Mothers and other strangers  Cover Image Book Book

Mothers and other strangers / by Gina Sorell.

Sorell, Gina, (author.).

Summary:

"My father proposed to my mother at gunpoint when she was nineteen, and knowing that she was already pregnant with a dead man's child, she accepted." Thus begins this riveting story of a woman's quest to understand her recently deceased mother, a glamorous, cruel narcissist who left her only child, Elsie, an inheritance of debts and mysteries. While coping with threats that she suspects are coming from the cult-like spiritual program her mother belonged to, Elsie works to unravel the message her dying mother left for her, a quest that ultimately takes her to the South African family homestead she never knew existed.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781938849893 (paperback)
  • ISBN: 1938849892 (paperback)
  • Physical Description: 317 pages ; 21 cm
  • Publisher: Altadena, California : Prospect Park Books, 2017.
Subject: Mothers and daughters > Fiction.
Mothers > Death > Fiction.
Family secrets > Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Canada > Fiction.
South Africa > Fiction.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sitka.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Terrace Public Library SOR (Text) 35151001046036 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2017 April #2
    Sorell's debut novel may at first appear to be literary suspense, but it's much more the tale of a fractured mother-daughter relationship and its fallout. Elsie's mother, Rachel, has succumbed to cancer Elsie was unaware of. Elsie inherits her mother's apartment, which she soon finds has been ransacked. In trying to find out why she was targeted, Elsie discovers further secrets that force her to revisit her dysfunctional childhood in an attempt to find out the truth about her own past and her mother's. Rachel belonged to a shady, cultlike spiritual group for years and was never much of a mother, putting her own needs and those of the Seekers before Elsie, who has never recovered. More than half of the book is told through flashbacks, which dilutes the suspense of Elsie's current-day search, while tales of Elsie's history—her dancing career, depression, and ex-husband—fall flat. The relationship between Elsie and Rachel is the real gem here, though it takes some digging to get there. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.
  • ForeWord Magazine Reviews : ForeWord Magazine Reviews 2017 - July/August

    All her life, Elsie Robins has had mysterious dreams of South Africa, a fire, and the death of her beloved nanny. Suddenly, the dreams are worse than ever although she's thousands of miles and several decades past those early days. While she's never been able to explain "what it felt like to be incomplete, to long for something and someone you hardly knew, and yet were wise enough to know that its absence defined you," Elsie must decide if she's brave enough to face the void inside her—a void looks suspiciously like the past—in Gina Sorell's Mothers and Other Strangers.

    Out of the blue, Elsie is notified that her mother, Rachel Robins, has died of cancer. Shocked but not surprised she's been left in the dark, Elsie returns home to Canada to wrap up her mother's affairs. As Elsie sorts through Rachel's apartment, she confronts the fact that her mother "had been telling lies her whole life, doling out pieces of the truth to different people, but never enough so they'd have the whole picture." Even so, Elsie holds out hope for some clue about who Rachel really was. When a neighbor gives Elsie her mother's last bequest—a photograph and a box containing the very clues Elsie's been looking for—it seems that her wish is granted. However, the box only offers more questions, leaving Elsie to decide whether or not she wants to seek answers.

    Like many people, Elsie Robins is getting over a relationship, but it's her relationship with her mother that's failed. Sorrel's haunting exploration of that failure is the saddest love story in the world, filled with all the yearning and unrequited love of a feral child trying to attach to a narcissistic parent. Mothers and Other Strangers gets at the raw truth of survivorship, showing that even when the past is buried, it never truly dies.

    © 2017 Foreword Magazine, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • ForeWord Special Section Reviews : ForeWord Special Section Reviews

    All her life, Elsie Robins has had mysterious dreams of South Africa, a fire, and the death of her beloved nanny. Suddenly, the dreams are worse than ever although she's thousands of miles and several decades past those early days. While she's never been able to explain "what it felt like to be incomplete, to long for something and someone you hardly knew, and yet were wise enough to know that its absence defined you," Elsie must decide if she's brave enough to face the void inside her—a void looks suspiciously like the past—in Gina Sorell's Mothers and Other Strangers.

    Out of the blue, Elsie is notified that her mother, Rachel Robins, has died of cancer. Shocked but not surprised she's been left in the dark, Elsie returns home to Canada to wrap up her mother's affairs. As Elsie sorts through Rachel's apartment, she confronts the fact that her mother "had been telling lies her whole life, doling out pieces of the truth to different people, but never enough so they'd have the whole picture." Even so, Elsie holds out hope for some clue about who Rachel really was. When a neighbor gives Elsie her mother's last bequest—a photograph and a box containing the very clues Elsie's been looking for—it seems that her wish is granted. However, the box only offers more questions, leaving Elsie to decide whether or not she wants to seek answers.

    Like many people, Elsie Robins is getting over a relationship, but it's her relationship with her mother that's failed. Sorrel's haunting exploration of that failure is the saddest love story in the world, filled with all the yearning and unrequited love of a feral child trying to attach to a narcissistic parent. Mothers and Other Strangers gets at the raw truth of survivorship, showing that even when the past is buried, it never truly dies.

    © 2017 Foreword Magazine, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2017 March #1
    In her debut novel, Sorell explores the complex fallout of a troubled mother-daughter relationship.Elsie has long struggled with her emotionally distant mother, Rachel, a secretive and vain woman who often seemed to see her own daughter as competition. But when Rachel dies and Elsie begins sifting through the apartment she left behind, the 39-year-old is confronted by how much she didn't know about her mother. From their early days in South Africa to Rachel's relationship with a New Age cult in Paris, Elsie works to put together the pieces and gain a sense of who her mother was even as she continues to deal with the fallout her mother's lack of care took on her. Sorell slowly reveals the extent to which the independent-minded Elsie has been shaped by her mother, complicating the book's initial straightforward narrative. Although the pacing accelerates rapidly near the end and the book's mystery struggles to deliver a rewarding payoff, most of the novel is a fascinating look a t a unique and fractured parent-child relationship. An engaging and tense (though uneven) exploration of the scars our childhoods can leave behind. Copyright Kirkus 2017 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2017 March #4

    Sorell's debut novel explores a fractured mother-daughter relationship as the daughter seeks answers following her mother's death. Elsie, a dancer, was estranged from her mother, Rachel, for years. She returns to Toronto from Los Angeles following Rachel's death. Rachel had told Elsie that her real father died when they were living in South Africa and that she married his brother, Howard, who never knew that he didn't father Elsie. As Elsie seeks to piece together the puzzle that was her mother's life, she reflects on how she admired her mother's uniqueness but despised her for devoting all her energy to her religious organization, the Seekers, and their founder, Philippe. Elsie recalls immersing herself in dance and becoming a prominent member of a touring dance company, always hoping for her mother's approval but never seeming to obtain it. Elsie flies to Paris, determined to uncover the secrets of the Seekers and her mother. Mesmerizing and quietly revealing, Sorell's memorable novel expertly weaves Elsie's search for answers about her origins with her own journey of healing. (May)

    Copyright 2017 Publisher Weekly.
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