Showing posts with label Care-giving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Care-giving. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Forgotten on Sunday

 

An emotionally engrossing novel that exposes the ways losses sustained by two French women, born generations apart, come to define their lives. 

An unlikely friendship is forged between two women, born generations, apart in Forgotten on Sunday, a profound, emotionally complex novel written by Valérie Perrin and translated from the French by Hildegard Serle.

 

For years, 21-year-old Justine Neige has lived in Milly, a small French village, while happily working as a nursing assistant at the Hydrangeas, the local retirement home. There, Justine is most intrigued by Hélène, an enigmatic, 96-year-old nicknamed “The Beach Lady.” Drawn to Hélène and her stories, Justine willingly collects and record her remembrances in a notebook at the behest of Hélène’s grandson. In doing so, Justine uncovers details of Hélène’s long, fascinating life that include romantic passions; a bistro job where she catered to the poet Baudelaire; and the harrowing atrocities of World War II. These incredibly moving stories of love, loss, and forgiveness awaken Justine’s desires: “I feel nostalgic, nostalgic for what I’ve not yet lived.” These feelings deepen when anonymous, mysterious phone calls are made from the Hydrangeas that falsely notify relatives that their loved ones have died. The contacts have either forgotten or refused to keep in touch with the geriatrics; the calls finally force folks to visit.  As a police investigation ensues, Justine probes the history of her own family—and questions are suddenly raised regarding the long-ago, tragic car, accident that claimed her parents’ lives.

 

Perrin (Freshwater for Flowers) skillfully juggles the storylines of Justine and Hélène, heightening the drama of each with unexpected revelations. Delicate plot points--infused with elements of historical fiction juxtaposed against contemporary themes--will keep readers, charmed and deeply engrossed. 

 

Forgotten on a Sunday by Valérie Perrin (translated from the French by Hildegarde Serle)

Europa Editions, $28, hardcover, 304 p., 9798889660187

Publishing Date: June 4, 2024

To order this book on INDIEBOUND/Bookshop.Org, link HERE

 

 

NOTE: This review is a reprint and is being posted with the permission of Shelf Awareness. To read this review as originally published on Shelf Awareness (June 14, 2024), link HERE 

 

To read a longer form of this review as published on Shelf Awareness for the Book Trade (April 4, 2024), link HERE

Wednesday, February 1, 2023

The Frederick Sisters Are Living the Dream

A quirky, bittersweet story about three middle-aged sisters faced with caregiving issues that force them to re-evaluate their places in the world.

 

Exasperating family dramas take center stage in The Frederick Sisters Are Living the Dream, a dynamic, episodic first novel by Jeannie Zusy.

 

Three middle-aged sisters are bonded by family history: Betsy (aka ‘Bets’) the oldest, is a single, independent, free spirit who runs a successful surfing school in California. Ginny, the middle sister, lives in Maryland. The 56-year-old, sugar-craving diabetic--and retired high-school janitor--reads and writes at a third-grade level.  However, her intellectual disability doesn’t hinder her from conniving to get what she wants. And Maggie, the youngest--a successful storyboard artist for TV commercials--is a dutiful, New York State mother of two, young-adult sons who is separated from her husband.

 

When Ginny is hospitalized after over-indulging in too much sugary Jell-O, Maggie sets off to her rescue. The girls’ parents are deceased, but they left ample finances to provide for Ginny’s care and well-being. When Maggie relocates Ginny--under duress--to a nursing home in Westchester County, New York, her good intentions are met with opposition. Older sister Betsy wants absolutely no part of--or say in--Ginny’s caretaking. And Ginny refuses to live amongst “old people.” Along the way, Maggie is caught in the middle, forced to juggle familial demands as she struggles to manage her own mid-life crisis, as well Ginny’s and Betsy’s—all three women are at personal crossroads.

 

Zusy’s funny, bittersweet story is rife with big scenes where Maggie’s witty, first-person narrative point-of-view adds levity to serious, tender themes about family, sisterhood, commitment, caregiving and love.

 

The Frederick Sisters Are Living the Dream by Jeannie Zusy

Atria Books, $27.00 hardcover, 320 pages, 9781982185381

Publishing Date: September 20, 2022

To order this book on INDIEBOUND, link HERE

 

NOTE: This review is a reprint and is being posted with the permission of Shelf Awareness. To read this review on Shelf Awareness: Reader's Edition (September 23, 2022), link HERE