Wednesday, March 11, 2020

THE ART OF MENDING by Elizabeth Berg

Finished Tu 3/10/2020

This is a hardback that Janny loaned to me.  I like Berg's books- The literary equivalent of comfort food.

From the book's page on Amazon:

"Laura Bartone anticipates her annual family reunion in Minnesota with a mixture of excitement and wariness. Yet this year’s gathering will prove to be much more trying than either she or her siblings imagined. As soon as she arrives, Laura realizes that something is not right with her sister. Forever wrapped up in events of long ago, Caroline is the family’s restless black sheep. When Caroline confronts Laura and their brother, Steve, with devastating allegations about their mother, the three have a difficult time reconciling their varying experiences in the same house. But a sudden misfortune will lead them all to face the past, their own culpability, and their common need for love and forgiveness."


From Kirkus review:

"A seemingly perfect family deliberately hides unpalatable truths that come to light only decades later.

As usual in her characteristic fast-paced prose, Berg (Say When, 2003, etc.) explores a timely subject—here, an abusive mother whose actions went long-undetected—as she introduces 50-ish narrator and professional quilter Laura Bartone. Laura has two siblings, Steve and Caroline, and is planning, with husband Pete and their two children, to join them and their elderly parents for the annual family reunion. Just before the Bartones set off, Laura is phoned by Caroline, who asks that the three of them get together without their spouses to discuss issues that are bothering her. As a child, Laura was a bossy and sometimes cruel tease, often hurting Caroline, who was sensitive and subject to dark moods and fits of weeping. Caroline also, Laura recalls, was constantly trying to please their beautiful but emotionally cold mother. The siblings meet as planned, and Caroline announces that she’s depressed, is seeing a therapist, and is about to divorce husband Bill. She suspects the depression is caused by events in her childhood, and she asks Steve and Laura whether they can remember anything about their mother’s treatment of her as a child, particularly anything abusive. Laura and Steve are shocked, thinking that Caroline must be mistaken or overreacting. But then Laura and Steve begin remembering incidents from their own childhood, and Laura learns that Caroline was hospitalized one summer when she and Steve were away at camp, after her mother had attacked Caroline with a knife. Their mother was also abused by her mother and lost a much loved baby before Caroline was born. As the three siblings try to cope with these revelations, their father suddenly dies, but not before he alludes to secrets long kept hidden.

A less-well-developed plot than usual, but, as always, readable."


Deals with 'real or imagined' past events by adult siblings. A sister asks her sister if she remembers certain issues.

Was mom really taking out her sadness on Caroline because she had lost a baby in childbirth?

I don't think the book really tells whether mom attacked Caroline or was it the other way around?

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