Ellen finds there is a lot more to her mother than she thought and realises that she made the ultimate sacrifice – her own dreams and ambitions – to raise a family and be a good wife.Įventually cancer wins out and the family begin to deal with their grief. The next few months are spent talking, reading and cooking – mother and daughter form their own book group and share recipes and gradually discover they actually have a powerful bond. When her mother is diagnosed with terminal cancer Ellen rather reluctantly puts her career on hold to come home and care for her, at her father’s request. She’s never understood how her mother could settle for a life of domesticity when there was so much more to be explored. Ellen’s father is an academic and Ellen has always allied with him rather than her mother, who she feels somewhat apathetic towards. One True Thing focuses on Ellen, a high achieving young woman working as a journalist in New York. The book affected me deeply in many ways and while I was keen to read more I felt I needed to give myself time to savour her writing rather than devouring it all at once.Īnd so finally I started on my second Quindlen novel, One True Thing, and it was again a moving experience – though one that wasn’t quite as satisfying overall. Last year I was introduced to Anna Quindlen through her book Every Last One, which was a stunning depiction of a normal, average family torn apart by a tragedy.
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