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How to Love Your Daughter A Novel
āA stone-cold masterwork of psychological tension. Its final pages had me holding my breath.ā āFlynn Berry, New York Times Book Review
The seemingly inexplicable estrangement between a woman and her grown daughter opens up a troubling question: What damage do we do in the blindness of love?
Thousands of miles from home, a woman stands on a dark street, peeking through well-lit windows at two little girls. They are the grandchildren sheās never met, daughters of the daughter she has not seen in years.
At the center of this mesmerizing story is the womanās quest to understand how a relationship that began in blissāa mother besotted with her only childāarrived at a point of such unfathomable distance. Weaving back and forth in time, she unravels memories and long-buried feelings, retracing the infinite acts of parental care, each so mundane and apparently benign, that in ensemble may have undermined what she most treasured. With exquisite psychological precision, Blum traces the seemingly insignificant missteps and deceptions of family life, where itās possible to cross the line between protectiveness and possession without even seeing itāand uncertain whether, or how, we can find our way back.
The seemingly inexplicable estrangement between a woman and her grown daughter opens up a troubling question: What damage do we do in the blindness of love?
Thousands of miles from home, a woman stands on a dark street, peeking through well-lit windows at two little girls. They are the grandchildren sheās never met, daughters of the daughter she has not seen in years.
At the center of this mesmerizing story is the womanās quest to understand how a relationship that began in blissāa mother besotted with her only childāarrived at a point of such unfathomable distance. Weaving back and forth in time, she unravels memories and long-buried feelings, retracing the infinite acts of parental care, each so mundane and apparently benign, that in ensemble may have undermined what she most treasured. With exquisite psychological precision, Blum traces the seemingly insignificant missteps and deceptions of family life, where itās possible to cross the line between protectiveness and possession without even seeing itāand uncertain whether, or how, we can find our way back.
$24.95
How to Love Your Daughter A Novelā
$24.95
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āA stone-cold masterwork of psychological tension. Its final pages had me holding my breath.ā āFlynn Berry, New York Times Book Review
The seemingly inexplicable estrangement between a woman and her grown daughter opens up a troubling question: What damage do we do in the blindness of love?
Thousands of miles from home, a woman stands on a dark street, peeking through well-lit windows at two little girls. They are the grandchildren sheās never met, daughters of the daughter she has not seen in years.
At the center of this mesmerizing story is the womanās quest to understand how a relationship that began in blissāa mother besotted with her only childāarrived at a point of such unfathomable distance. Weaving back and forth in time, she unravels memories and long-buried feelings, retracing the infinite acts of parental care, each so mundane and apparently benign, that in ensemble may have undermined what she most treasured. With exquisite psychological precision, Blum traces the seemingly insignificant missteps and deceptions of family life, where itās possible to cross the line between protectiveness and possession without even seeing itāand uncertain whether, or how, we can find our way back.
The seemingly inexplicable estrangement between a woman and her grown daughter opens up a troubling question: What damage do we do in the blindness of love?
Thousands of miles from home, a woman stands on a dark street, peeking through well-lit windows at two little girls. They are the grandchildren sheās never met, daughters of the daughter she has not seen in years.
At the center of this mesmerizing story is the womanās quest to understand how a relationship that began in blissāa mother besotted with her only childāarrived at a point of such unfathomable distance. Weaving back and forth in time, she unravels memories and long-buried feelings, retracing the infinite acts of parental care, each so mundane and apparently benign, that in ensemble may have undermined what she most treasured. With exquisite psychological precision, Blum traces the seemingly insignificant missteps and deceptions of family life, where itās possible to cross the line between protectiveness and possession without even seeing itāand uncertain whether, or how, we can find our way back.











