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Mistresss Daughter
 
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Mistresss Daughter (Paperback)

by A Homes (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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From Publishers Weekly

Jane Adams turns her considerable talents to Homes's memoir about meeting her biological parents when she was in her early 30s. Adams captures the narrator and all the members of both the adoptive and biological families. Her rendition of Homes is so smart and urbane yet wary that listeners might assume that Homes herself is telling her own story. Ellen Ballman, the biological mother, is portrayed as Auntie Mame gone bad-her boisterous voice quickly descends from that of a woman overcome with joy at hearing her daughter to whiny demands to be taken care of. Perhaps Ellen is a bit too shrill-almost anyone would hang up after hearing this voice on the other end of a phone. Adams portrays Norman Hecht, also referred to as "the Father," with a voice as large as his considerable fortune; he cons his daughter into taking a DNA test, then refuses to give her the results. Even Adams can't make the second half of the book exciting, as she reads page after page of questions planned for a deposition. Simultaneous release with the Viking hardcover (Reviews, Jan. 15).
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From AudioFile

A.M. Homes always knew she was adopted. When she was 31, her biological mother initiated contact with her, the daughter she gave away. Jane Adams gives an extraordinary performance, bringing to life the almost clinical objectivity Homes employs throughout the first two-thirds of this memoir as she reassesses her identity after her biological mother turns her life upside down. The final third of the book spirals downward into rage over her father's broken promise to invite her into his family. Adams puts all that anger into her performance. After 22 minutes of asking questions without answers in a voice that becomes more and more hate-filled, Adams leaves the listener exhausted and full of pity for all the players in this sad story. N.E.M © AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Homes is great, this book less so, Oct 14 2007
I absolutely enjoy most of Homes' writing. She's on my list of top ten reads by living authors. Thus I looked forward to The Mistress's Daughter. It's a book both autobiographical and not autobiographical telling the story of Homes' discovery of her biological mother and father, embellished, evidently, when necessary. The book is divided into two parts. In the first we get the narrative of her learning that her biological mother has contacted the lawyer and it trying to get in touch with the author. This part reads well, a bit on the schmaltzy side for Homes, but we let it slide because the subject is so close to her. There are moments of insight and tenderness, of conflicting emotions. We don't really feel that her history has been probed with any depth but the writing flows easily so we keep going. I read the first part in a single morning.

The second part of the book documents her genealogical searching. It's tough, non narrative, a collection of notes really, that Homes attempts to string together. She says it's all about narrative but it's not really and the sections that make up part two are pretty tedious and frankly boring. Every unhappy family may be unhappy in it's own way, but only relatives really care about their own genealogy. In addition the writing itself gets way too interrogatory. I didn't count but there must be hundreds of questions in this second part that really show little depth or humor or anything beyond the obvious.

I suppose it's not very PC to knock someone's digging into their own troubled and painful past. I'm not saying they don't deserve the opportunity. But in the final analysis, the entirety is more the stuff of diary entries that should have remained between those mini-locked pages. Half good, half not so good. See what you think.
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