For You Mom, Finally
Product Description
Bestselling author Ruth Reichl examines her mother’s life-and gives voice to the unarticulated truths of a generation of exceptional women
A former New York Times restaurant critic, editor in chief of Gourmet, and the author of three bestselling memoirs, Ruth Reichl is a beloved cultural figure in the food world and beyond. For You, Mom. Finally. is her openhearted investigation of the life of a woman she realizes she never really knew-her mother. Through letters and diaries-and a new afterword relating the wisdom she’s gained after sharing her story-Reichl confronts the transition her mother made from a hopeful young woman to an increasingly unhappy older one and recognizes the huge sacrifices made to ensure that her daughter’s life would not be as disappointing as her own…. More >>
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This is not a new Ruth Reichl book – the cover states “previously published as Not Becoming My Mother”. There is a new afterward to the original book “relating the wisdom she’s gained after sharing her story”.
An ongoing conversation takes place within the community of memoir writers around topics such as privacy of others, respect, compassion, and truth. Ruth Reichl tackles these issues head-on in this book. She begins by explaining the chagrin she felt after reading her first memoir volume, “Tender at the Bone,” when she realized the full extent to which she had used her mother’s foibles for dramatic and comic effect. Even though her mother had been dead for years before that book was published, Ruth still felt a strong sense that she had betrayed her. This deeply moving new volume is offered in atonement. It may provide guidance for memoirists who are struggling with these concerns.
In the compact space of 120 small pages, Ruth takes us along on her personal journey of discovery as she explores a box of old letters and diary-like notes scribbled on random scraps of paper. This is a heroic journey on her part, as she was reluctant to start, uncertain that she wanted to know what she might find. Over the course of the journey, she finds compassion and deep understanding of the pain her mother felt at the strictures of life in her generation, compounded by a bipolar disorder that was never effectively controlled. In a very real sense, this story depicts the frustration of an entire generation of women who lived at an intersection of history when modern conveniences had replaced many of the chores women had traditionally done around the home without providing them adequate opportunity to direct their energies into new domains.
Ruth is humbled as she realizes the sacrifices her mother made with regard to her relationship with her beloved daughter in order to ensure that Ruth would have a better, happier life than her own. She is chagrined to realize that her mother’s efforts had been so successful that she had never noticed. By including her own reactions and memories evoked by reading her mother’s notes, she ensured that this book is truly memoir, and not simply a biography of her mother.
These matters of the heart are beautifully conveyed with the eloquence and flair readers of her first three volumes of memoir have come to expect. As a writer and teacher of memoir myself, I always read with sticky flags on hand to mark key points, deft descriptions, and other memorable elements. This book looks like a porcupine with an unprecedented proportion of pages sporting green tabs along the edge.
Daughters of any age should treasure this book, especially those with living mothers. Perhaps Ruth’s regret at not having made the effort to understand her mother’s true nature better while she was still living will inspire many younger women to make the effort to learn more about their mothers while there is still time.
First this IS!! a previously published book, unless you see the book cover in person , you cannot distinguish the small print at the bottom of the cover “Previously published as Not Becoming My Mother”. There is a 7 page after word where Ruth Reichl explains about writing the book and some of her experiences on book tours with it. There are also questions for book groups.
She does state with truth that “everybody who opens these pages discovers a different book”.
I personally would not recommend this as a Mother’s Day gift, especially with the thoughts that every day she wakes up grateful not to be her mother or any of the women of her generation. She has never known so many unhappy people as those of her mother’s generation. She does admit her mother was probably mentally ill…just one of millions of drugged Americans.
I wish working women would recognize that it is possible for there to be some happy stay at home mothers, this thought never seems to occur to Reichl. Personally I have known a few. There is a lot of anger and disappointment in the writing contained in the 107 pages; but there is also much room for thought.