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If You Knew Suzy: A Mother, a Daughter, a Reporter's Notebook Hardcover – April 20 2010
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“Katherine Rosman has a great gift for articulating the yearnings of daughterhood and the mysteries of motherhood.”
— Jeffrey Zaslow, coauthor of The Last Lecture
“Katherine Rosman’s voice rings with truth, pain, and hard-won humor as she reports from the heart in this bold, cathartic tale of a daughter’s search to find meaning in her mother’s death.... This book beats with a heart of its own.”
— Janice Y.K. Lee, author of The Piano Teacher
In lively, intimate prose, Wall Street Journal culture reporter Katherine Rosman reconnects with her late mother by reporting on the life she led outside of her roles as mom and wife.
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper
- Publication dateApril 20 2010
- Dimensions14.61 x 3.18 x 21.59 cm
- ISBN-10006173523X
- ISBN-13978-0061735233
Product description
Review
“In this brave, funny, deeply moving memoir, [Rosman] shows readers how, even after death, love endures.” — People (3 ½ out of 4 stars)
“Rosman’s bittersweet search for meaning is compelling and at times hilarious…. These stories are about Suzy but also about a daughter whose compassionate (not to mention labor-intensive) reporting is her way of coping. They memorialize a woman who, even if you didn’t’ know her, begs to be remembered.” — Elle
“More than mere memoir.... Rosman expertly counterbalances the bleak and grinding arc of her mother’s cancer with an inspiring tale of her quietly extraordinary life, and does so with irreverent humor, bracing honesty and the storytelling savvy of a veteran reporter.” — Christopher Walton, Detroit Free Press
“Katie Rosman has a great gift for articulating the yearnings of daughterhood and the mysteries of motherhood. Reading her moving tale of discovery, we can’t help but contemplate the things we have yet to learn about our own parents-and about ourselves.” — Jeffrey Zaslow, coauthor The Last Lecture
“Frank, funny, keenly reported, but also deeply moving, Rosman’s book journeys into that mysterious territory-the nature of family and the substance of love.” — Susan Orlean, author of The Orchid Thief and The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup
“After I picked up If You Knew Suzy, I couldn’t put it down. Katherine Rosman’s enthralling memoir presents a tender yet searching picture of a mother’s life, her death, and her lasting influence on her daughters.” — Gretchen Rubin, author of The Happiness Project
“Rosman’s voice rings with truth, pain, and hard-won humor. . . . [A] bold, cathartic tale of a daughter’s search to find meaning in her mother’s death. She tells of her mother’s virtues and flaws with unvarnished honesty ... This book beats with a heart of its own.” — Janice Lee, author of The Piano Teacher
“If Katherine Rosman’s detailed and heartfelt tribute to her mother doesn’t make you want to hug your own, I don’t know what will.” — Sloane Crosley, author of I Was Told There'd Be Cake and How Did You Get This Number?
“How marvelous to sit beside a daughter exploring her mother’s life. If You Knew Suzy is about the joys of a family balanced by the heartbreaking complexities of death. Rosman is a dogged reporter whose eye for wonderful detail is enriched by the love and empathy of a devoted child.” — Isabel Gillies, author of Happens Every Day: An All-Too-True Story
From the Back Cover
Faced with the loss of her mother, Suzy, to cancer at sixty, Wall Street Journal reporter Katherine Rosman longs to find answers to the questions that we all wrestle with after losing someone we love. So she does what she does best: she opens her notebook and starts investigating.
Thumbing through her late mother's address book, Rosman begins to discover a woman whose life was intricately connected to a host of characters her daughter hardly knew. Her reporting skills at the ready, she embarks on a cross-country odyssey, tracking down total strangers from whom she hopes to learn about a woman she once thought she couldn't know better. Venturing into the heart of some colorful communities, Rosman interviews friends and acquaintances of her mother's, as well as people whose relationships with her were more complex though no less potent—among them a former golf caddie, a legendary Pilates instructor, an eBay glass collector, and an immigrant doctor at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. As Rosman attempts to fill in the blank spaces that may explain her mother's motivations and philosophies in building a life and in facing death, she comes to understand this woman as she never imagined she could.
Blending humor, honesty, and old-fashioned reporting, Rosman grapples with the bittersweet reality that sometimes we can't truly know someone until after she is gone. At once comforting, candid, and very funny, If You Knew Suzy is a heartfelt memoir against which readers can consider themselves and the lives of all those they love.
About the Author
A staff reporter for the Wall Street Journal, Katherine Rosman has written about popular culture for The New Yorker, the New York Times, and Elle magazine. A native of Michigan, she lives in New York with her husband and two children.
Product details
- Publisher : Harper; 1st edition (April 20 2010)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 006173523X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0061735233
- Item weight : 408 g
- Dimensions : 14.61 x 3.18 x 21.59 cm
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Katherine Rosman was born in Detroit and raised in the city’s suburbs. She graduated from the University of Michigan in 1994. After college, she moved briefly to Washington, D.C. where she did an undistinguished turn as a receptionist at a law firm. From there she headed to New York City and got a job as a glorified Girl Friday at Elle magazine. No one fetched low-fat grande lattes with more aplomb.
After more than two years spent making sure “chic” and “from day to night” didn’t excessively appear in the magazine’s table of contents, she was hired to report for a start-up magazine whose mission was to go behind-the-scenes in the world of media, Brill’s Content.
By 2000, she was working as a freelance magazine and newspaper reporter and filed dispatches for publications including the New Yorker, the New York Times, The Nation, Elle and New York magazine.
Katie was hired by the Wall Street Journal in late 2004 and has been reporting on pop-culture for the paper since.
She is married and has two kids. She lives in New York.
Check out a more complete biography at katherinerosman.com.
Customer reviews
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Top reviews
Top review from Canada
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Rosman interviewed people whose names she found listed in her mother's rather confusing address book, as well as others who were found through those people she first interviewed. Rosman knew the "right" questions to ask and was able to delve into her mother's actions and beliefs. We learn so much about Suzy Rosin, most of it placed into an understandable context, but I was at times almost a little embarrassed because I felt I knew too much, too much personal information, about a woman who I had not known in life. I suppose that's one of the problems about writing a memoir. But Katherine Rosman's memoir about her mother is very well-written and interesting.
Top reviews from other countries
There were moments in the book that were painfully hard for me to read. It was fresh and almost too close as I recalled my father’s recent death and what I went through as I watched him suffer and how I imagined his experience. Another perspective always gives you just that. Another way to look at a situation. Your life. The people whom you care about.
This is one of those memoirs that I simply could not put down and at first, while you think it might just be about sadness, about dying and death, it is about living, with many life lessons to share.
Rosman’s investigative approach is nothing short of brilliant.
Das Buch ist ehrlich und kitschfrei geschrieben und in seiner Art sehr originell. Durch ihre vielen Verbindungen als Reporterin rollt sie das Leben ihrer Mutter aus den verschiedensten Perspektiven und Meilensteinen von deren Dasein auf und schafft ein lebendiges und mitreißendes, nie blind idealisierendes aber werttschätzendes Porträt einer Frau in ihrer Zeit.
That said, I devoured this book in one day. I found it an extremely compelling read often bringing tears to my eyes, but also making me laugh out loud more than once. There are a couple chapters that are skim-worthy, but mostly it was a very thought-provoking book.
The book was well written which simply says that Kathrine is a good author. She works for the Wall Street Journal and should possess those skills whithout having to publish a story about her deceased mother. It could be that I am biased to a degree having lost my own mother under distressing conditions as well and the book brought back some unresolved issues for me. Also, like Kate, I was pregnant when my mom died and it's an even more difficult thing for a woman to lose a mother while you are pregnant. It just is.
Aside from these things, I think Suzie was a priveleged, obsessive compulsive woman with excessive financial means and she lived a pretty boring life. I do hope however that Kate was able to work through all her unresolved issues.