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The History of Great Things

di Elizabeth Crane

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612429,627 (3.5)Nessuno
Lois is a daughter of the Depression Midwest who came to New York to transform herself into an opera star. Her daughter, Elizabeth, is an aspiring writer who came of age in the 1970s and '80s in the forbidding shadow of her often-absent, always larger-than-life mother. When Elizabeth chronicles the events of her mother's life, Lois in turn recounts her daughter's story. By pulling back the curtain on lifelong secrets and defending their own behavior, they ultimately come to understand each other.… (altro)
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3.5 Have never read anything like this before. A mother and daughter try to make sense of their lives, together and apart by telling stories about the other. Some are made up, things to explain incidents that may or may not have happened. I kept picturing my own daughters, what I would say if I told a story about some happenings in their lives, or what they would say about mine. Anyway, some of the made up stories are amusing, some sad, but all things that play out in people's lives at different times, on different days. Of course, some truisms also emerge as does understanding, sympathy and forgiveness. A quasi memoir I think, since the author is the Betsy in the story and her mother, Lois. Quite good and original.

ARC from publisher. ( )
  Beamis12 | Apr 15, 2016 |
The History of Great Things by Elizabeth Crane is a quasi-autobiographical novel that features a dual narrative between a mother and daughter. In this recommended novel a mother and daughter narrate each other's lives using real stories or various alternate stories. This would be a good choice for those who enjoy experimental literature.

Lois Crane is the mother; Betsy (Elizabeth) Crane is the daughter. This chronicles the strained and complicated relationship between mother and daughter. As one tells the other's story, the two also argue/editorialize what the writer of that part is doing or how it could be done better. Some stories the mother and daughter share are real, based on facts. Others involve speculation and made up episodes as they reinvent each other's lives to fill in blank spaces.

Lois Crane leaves her husband to pursue her career as an opera singer in NYC (as did Elizabeth Crane's mother, Lois). She left young Betsy for her father to raise until she divorced him and insisted that Betsy needed to be with her mother, a decision she regretted almost immediately. Betsy Crane stumbles after college, taking dead end jobs and becoming an alcoholic. She does insist that she always wanted to be a writer, and eventually sobers up and does so.

Crane does a good job in the narrative expression of her character's inner voices - this is a daughter and her deceased mother writing each other's life story, after all. She doesn't shy away from the complications in a mother/daughter relationship, and deals with grief and forgiveness. I found the beginning of The History of Great Things interesting and it held my attention, however, that interest started to wane as the novel progressed. The voice of the mother and daughter are not always as distinct as their individual stories, therefore occasional back tracking is required to establish whose voice is whose during their commentaries/inner dialogue. The ending becomes even more confusing with several, alternate endings. While I appreciate the creativity and the experimentation this novel represents, in many ways it might have been better had Crane went with a memoir.

Disclosure: My Kindle edition was courtesy of HarperCollins for review purposes.

http://shetreadssoftly.blogspot.com/2016/03/the-history-of-great-things.html ( )
  SheTreadsSoftly | Mar 30, 2016 |
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Lois is a daughter of the Depression Midwest who came to New York to transform herself into an opera star. Her daughter, Elizabeth, is an aspiring writer who came of age in the 1970s and '80s in the forbidding shadow of her often-absent, always larger-than-life mother. When Elizabeth chronicles the events of her mother's life, Lois in turn recounts her daughter's story. By pulling back the curtain on lifelong secrets and defending their own behavior, they ultimately come to understand each other.

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