The Lost Mother

Abridged
Author: Mary McGarry Morris
Narrator: Judith Ivey
Genres: Fiction
Publisher: Highbridge Audio
Date: February 2005
Length: 7 hours, 45 minutes
Ratings:
  • Book Rating: 2.5/5
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Since the publication of her astonishing debut, Vanished, Mary McGarry Morris has been compared with John Steinbeck and Carson McCullers and widely praised as "a superb storyteller" (The Washington Post) and "one of our finest American writers" (The Miami Herald). Now, in her sixth novel, Morris has achieved new heights with her riveting chronicle of the Talcotts, a family in rural Vermont during the Great Depression.
Abandoned by his beautiful wife, Irene, Henry and their two young children, Thomas and Margaret, spend that summer in a tent on the edge of Black Pond. Henry, an itinerant butcher, struggles to provide for them, but often must leave them alone as he travels the county in search of work. And while Henry loves his children deeply, he is devastated by their mother’s desertion. He has not told them why she left or if she’ll return. When Mrs. Phyllis Farley, a prosperous neighbor, begins to woo the children as companions for her strange, housebound son, Henry must weigh an unusual proposition, the consequences of which may cost him everything. Powerfully imagined and intensely felt, The Lost Mother is a haunting masterwork and McGarry Morris’s strongest novel to date.

Reviews (2)

The Lost Mother

Written by Anonymous from Costa Mes, CA on February 4th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 1/5

The payoff just wasn't here for me. I kept with it, and listened to all six disks, but it was so unremittingly bleak. I didn't like the reader's voice and accents, either - she reminded me too much of Bette Davis in "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane" and that distracted me.

The Lost Mother

Written by Anonymous on February 1st, 2008

  • Book Rating: 3/5

the lives of these kids was heart-breaking. had to keep listening in the hope that something good would happen for them. an intense look into life during the great depression.