Deborah Batterman's new ebook, just published as a Kindle
Single, is intimate and inventive. The linked essays in Because My Name is Mother
are rich with telling details. Objects and everyday acts resonate until we can
see ourselves in the vivid moments the author creates. There's the photograph
of the author’s parents, “young and happy and vibrant, maybe even in love.”
There's the author’s attempt to keep her dying mother’s traditions alive, but
in her own way. The end of a grown daughter’s visit is touchingly rendered by
her mother’s homely act of making her bed.
About the collection, Deborah says,"There's a progression in the way these pieces hold together -- the first
two from the perspective of the daughter reflecting on her mother, the
last two from the perspective of the mother reflecting on her daughter.
Smack in the middle sits 'Cute?!#@Sixty,' a favorite in the way it
serves as a fulcrum on which both my mother and my daughter sit."
Deborah Batterman fills the senses with her
poignant, funny observations of family and modern life, drawing the reader in,
revealing layers of existence with the nuanced phrase, the apt symbol. Whether photographs
or fabulous shoes, the refrains make this a collection to savor. “There are
some things you just never want to come to an end” the author says in “Sweet
Indulgences.” For me, reading Because My
Name is Mother is one of them.
Learn more about Deborah at the following sites: Facebook, Twitter, GoodReads, and her blog, The Things She Thinks About. . .
1 comment:
Wonderful! xxxj
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