La boîte aux souvenirs
La boîte aux souvenirs
Publié par Le Livre de Poche, le 15 mai 2002
352 pages
Résumé
"Susannah was apparently perfect, as the dead so often become": Margaret Forster's The Memory Box opens with the challenge which runs right through this book. How do you get to know the dead? How can the dead make you get to know them? In this case, by leaving a box of strange, and disconnected, objects through which a daughter, Catherine, learns to trace the contours of her mother's life and the depths of her own loss in never having known her. Susannah, her mother, died when Catherine was six months old; she is brought up, happily, by her father and step-mother. Only on their deaths does she open the "memory box" and enter into the everyday complexity (there's no melodrama here) of her family life. Was Susannah perfect? And why did her loving husband marry so soon after her death? What has Catherine missed in never having known her? Critically acclaimed for, amongst others, Lady's Maid and Mothers' Boys, Forster brings a keen, and unsentimental, eye to her (at times remarkably painful) topic. She is, also, the biographer of Daphne du Maurier, and Forster has taken on her legacy of menace and romance (think of Rebecca) in this intelligent, and compelling, novel. --Vicky Lebeau
Plus de livres de Margaret Forster
Voir plusPenelope Et Ses Filles - Occasion
Hidden lives: a family memoir
Penelope et ses filles
Critiques
Ce livre n'a pas encore de critiques
Vous avez lu ce livre ? Dites à la communauté Lenndi ce que vous en avez pensé 😎