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Grace and Mary

di Melvyn Bragg

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403622,175 (3.63)1
John visits his ageing mother Mary in her nursing home by the sea, and mourns the slow fading of her mind. Hoping to shore up her memory, he prompts her with songs, photographs and questions about the 1940s, when she was a young woman and he a child in a small Cumbrian town. But he finds that most of all it is her own mother she longs for - Grace, the mother she barely knew. John sets out to recreate their buried family history, delving into the secrets and silences of Mary's fractured childhood as he imagines the life of her spirited mother. Reaching from the late 19th century to the present, this becomes a deeply moving, reflective elegy on three generations linked by a chain of love, loss, and courage.… (altro)
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I wasn't sure about this novel at first. But once I got past the slightly flowery language, I actually quite enjoyed it. And although it has a sad theme, I didn't find it a sad book - in some ways it is accepting of the situation and that makes it bearable. ( )
  infjsarah | Feb 14, 2016 |
This e-book arrived by surprise (I had pre-ordered it and forgotten about it). I started to read and didn't expect this to be more than a short break, but I found it compelling and beautiful and couldn't put it down. The skilful interaction between the two intertwined stories - the current and the past - is controlled and yet not constrained. It is a story of love, and compassion. At the point I was feeling I should put the book down, the story would move from the present to the past or vice versa.

Melvyn Bragg spoke about his experiences in writing this book (most of his work has a strong autobiographical link) at Hay Festival 2103 and how each revision took the work away from his recollections and personal experience into the fictional account we have. It may have moved from his personal experience but the closeness we feel in this account does lend an authenticity and genuine feel for the problems when a loved one is beginning to be vague about memory. ( )
  C.R.Harris | Jan 14, 2014 |
Mary is in a care home. She has dementia and is visited by her son John as often as he can. Mary's mother was Grace, but she wasn't brought up by her and so the mother/daughter relationship was lost to them both. John tries to help Mary remember by recalling things from her past, and singing with her. The story flips between this and Grace's own story.

I found this to be a pleasant enough read, but overly descriptive. Thankfully, it was the sort of book where I didn't need to read every word to get the gist of the story otherwise I think I may have become too bogged down in it all, despite the short length. I enjoyed the reminiscences that the characters shared, and hearing about Grace's life, but it didn't have any emotion in it and was a little bit lacking for me overall. ( )
  nicx27 | Jun 30, 2013 |
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A grim subject for a novel, you may think, but Melvyn Bragg treats it so tenderly, sympathetically and imaginatively that Grace and Mary is rich in the consolation that art can offer....The pleasures of this elegant novel are many. ...The exploration of the twilight world of the aged and demented is tender, if unsparing. This is what we may all come to, and we may hope that there is someone as gentle and caring as Mary’s son, John, by our bedside. It’s a novel suffused with the idea and reality of the love between parent and child, beautifully realised without a trace of false sentiment.
 
Grace and Mary is that under-sung form of novel, a quiet book. As a writer of so-called quiet books myself, I am prejudiced in their favour...This is a novel which beautifully conveys how the past is a continuum that constantly feeds our consciousness of the present, altering its current and direction. It is starkly truthful about the perils of ageing. But it is also a convincing testimony to familial love, and its power to prompt the imagination in the service of a more generous understanding.

Because of the subject matter, I was touchily ready to find fault with this book. It is a gem. I was glad to find my fears unconfirmed.
 
Melvyn Bragg's latest novel is an insightful, moving tale of ageing and our helplessness in the face of dementia
 
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John visits his ageing mother Mary in her nursing home by the sea, and mourns the slow fading of her mind. Hoping to shore up her memory, he prompts her with songs, photographs and questions about the 1940s, when she was a young woman and he a child in a small Cumbrian town. But he finds that most of all it is her own mother she longs for - Grace, the mother she barely knew. John sets out to recreate their buried family history, delving into the secrets and silences of Mary's fractured childhood as he imagines the life of her spirited mother. Reaching from the late 19th century to the present, this becomes a deeply moving, reflective elegy on three generations linked by a chain of love, loss, and courage.

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