In Dalhousie instructor Rebecca Babcock's debut novel, mother-daughter narrators Liz and Katie tentatively navigate their strained relationship over the years, from childhood to college, across seas, always with a smothering inability to communicate. Babcock gives us glimpses of familial decisions that come to represent the landmarks of heartbreak in the two women's lives; a more-loved sibling's suicide, the beginnings of an affair, the quiet loss of love. Through it all they move forward, suffering the silences of life together. Every Second Weekend, adapted in part from Babcock's one-woman show of the same name, houses ghosts of the stage. The dialogue is sharp with no word wasted and the characters, despite being at times frustrating and unlikeable, feel real---like family you have the obligation to love, if not understand. A quick read that lingers, Babcock's mother-daughter duo will remind you to balance expectations with acceptance of those you love...and, oh, to call your mother.
BOOK REVIEWS »
posted by CORINNE ABRAHAM, May 9/13
By Alice Walsh (Tuckamore) comments 0
BOOK REVIEWS »
posted by WHITNEY MORAN, May 9/13
By Katie Boland (Brindle & Glass) comments 0
BOOK REVIEWS »
posted by WHITNEY MORAN, May 9/13
By Kate Atkinson (Doubleday) comments 0
BOOK REVIEWS »
posted by ZOE MIGICOVSKY, May 9/13
By Allan Cooper and Harry Thurston (Gaspereau) comments 0
BOOK REVIEWS »
posted by TIINA JOHNS, May 2/13
By Chris Ware (Pantheon) comments 0
BOOK REVIEWS »
posted by WHITNEY MORAN, May 2/13
By Grace McCleen (HarperCollins) comments 0