by KathrynHarrison (Author)
When Kathryn Harrison was a little girl, her young mother left her in the care of her British grandmother. A remarkable woman and master storyteller, she had jilted an array of suitable men before concluding that she was not quite modern enough to have a baby without a husband. She finally married, at the age of 43, in 1942. The fruit of this union, Harrison's mother, was no more interested in forming permanent relationships. An occasional witness to her daughter's growth to adulthood, she would appear sporadically in film-star clothes and force unwanted glamour on her shy child. Now a mother herself, Harrison has written a memoir about the ties that bind mothers to their children - and the forces that can drive them apart. She reveals the thrill of shoplifting, and the horror of shopping with mother, sharing those unforgettable episodes that form the drama of domestic life. From the importance and danger of children's imaginary worlds to the unnerving pleasure a mother can derive from meting out punishment to a bloodthirsty tick, this book offers a glimpse into the worlds of mother and child and a portrait of three very different mothers.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Fourth Estate
Published: 03 Mar 2003
ISBN 10: 0007143184
ISBN 13: 9780007143184