Before Our Eyes by Joan Alden

Before Our Eyes

Joan Alden

A quiet, strong book, startling at times, this novel captures Bern Rundle, a photographic journalist coping with her father’s alcoholism, her brother’s disability, her middle-aged mother’s lesbianism. She discovers new strengths — and new truths.

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From Publishers Weekly

A family story charged with so many tragedies could easily lapse into melodrama, except for Alden’s ability to give meaning and poignancy to the minutiae of family life. Protagonist Bern Rundle and her father achieve reconciliation, over her mother’s wedding dress, in a trunk room packed with boxes filled with the past. Central to the story is brother Jeff’s boat accident as a 13-year-old that has left him in a vegetative state. At 27, he lies motionless and fed by tubes in the family dining room, while his room upstairs is preserved the way it was on the day of the accident. Eventually, Bern carries him there to complete his destiny amid his baseball cards, dice and chewing gum. Alden’s crisp style and eye for detail enable her to move back and forth in time as Bern deals with her brother’s accident, her father’s guilt and escape into alcoholism, her mother’s budding middle-aged lesbianism and, finally, her own awakened lesbianism. As a photojournalist she documents all this and deliberates the ethics of doing so: ‘there’s a price to be paid for being open, even in a society that’s supposed to be free.’ The only price the book pays is Alden’s ( Letting in the Night ) tendency to overanalyze motives and feelings implicit in her narrative.

Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

For photojournalist Bern, the return home for her father’s funeral leads to a confrontation that allows her finally to let go of her family’s pain. In a series of flashbacks, Bern revisits her parents’ troubled marriage, the tragic accident that left her younger brother in a vegetative state, her mother’s love for another woman, and her own growing sexual awareness. The interplay of family memories with Bern’s present life makes plausible her decisions to end her brother’s life support and to seek out her mother’s lover. Gracefully written, this novel presents a thoughtful portrait of a mother and daughter, lesbian relationships, and the complexity of family life. Recommended for most fiction collections.

– Jan Blodgett, St. Mary’s Cty. Rec ords Ctr. & Archives, Leonardtown, Md.

Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.


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Details

ISBN 1563410338
Genre Relationships
Publication Date Sep-93
Publisher Lpc-Firebrand Books
Format Trade Paperback
No. of Pages 152
Language English
Rating NotRated
BookID 937

Author: LFWBooks