Who Do You Think You Are?: A Memoir by Alyse Myers

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(Hardcover)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 (2 ratings)

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  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
  • Pub. Date: May 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9781416543053
  • Sales Rank: 6,105
  • 250pp
 
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Synopsis

At the heart of this powerful memoir is a compelling mystery. Shortly after Alyse Myers's mother dies, Alyse and her two sisters are emptying their mother's apartment, trying to decide what to discard and what to keep. Alyse covets only one thing—a wooden box that sits in the back of the closet. Its contents have been kept from Alyse her entire life. That box, she hopes, will contain answers to her questions: Who were her parents really, and why did her mother settle for so very little in life?

We are then transported back in time to the 1960s, to a working-class neighborhood in Queens, New York. It is not a happy home. Alyse's parents are young and good-looking, but they constantly veer between their mutual attraction and contempt. Her parents argue bitterly about everything—money, family, and her father's constant sickness. Her father drifts in and out of their apartment, and what his illness portends is never discussed. After he dies, Alyse's mother, at age thirty-three, retreats to the kitchen table with her cigarettes and resentment, detemined to stay there forever.

Alyse, on the other hand, yearns for more in life, including the right to escape. After a childhood of harrowing fights, abject cruelty, and endless uncertainty, Alyse adamantly rejects everything about her mother's life, provoking her mother's infuriated demand, "Who do you think you are?"

A heart-wrenching and ultimately uplifting portrait of a mother and daughter, Who Do You Think You Are? explores the profound and poignant revelations that often come to light only after a parent has died. Balancing childhood memories with adult observations, Alyse Myers writes with candor and eloquence of her journey to adulthood. Her story's power lies in its simplicity and the emotions it conjures up in the reader. No matter what your relationship with own mother is like, this book will stay with you long after you put it down.

The New York Times - Jennifer Gilmore

Who Do You Think You Are? is pleasantly old-fashioned, written in simple prose that allows the narrator insights into events as she ages…Yet what emerges from the single-layered narration is a touching, even tender, record of her thorny mother's difficult life raising three girls alone with few resources.

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Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 2
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Really moving
A reviewer, A reviewer, 04/28/2008

I read this book in one sitting, which is something I hardly ever do. It’s beautifully written. It made me think of how I am raising my daughter. And it inspired me to try to make things better with my own mother. I didn’t expect it to be such a powerful and uplifing story. At the end, I was smiling and crying at the same time.

Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 A beautifully written memoir about secrets, love and forgiving
Amy, A reviewer, 03/25/2008

'Who Do You Think You Are?' is a beautifully written book. I read it in one sitting because, from the first page, I literally could not put it down. It is such a BRAVE book: it dares to look at that most sacrosanct -- and mythologized -- relationship: mother and daughter. And it tells a truth: that not all of us like our mothers. And not all mothers like their children. The book begins with the mother's funeral. The only thing the author wants is a wooden box that has been hidden in her mother's closet for as long as she can remember. She takes the box but does not open it, afraid of the secrets contained within. We then flash back to the 60s in a poorer neighborhood in Queens. Through tight, beautiful prose, we learn of the author's childhood. What is magical about this book is that it is not a chronicle of some nightmare or a retelling of yet another horrifying story of abject cruelty. Rather, 'Who Do You Think You Are?' is the story of what really goes on behind the closed doors of many peoples' lives. Relationships are not perfect. People hurt one another. People damage one another. And life goes on. Especially for the survivor. Ultimately, this is a book about what it means to love and to discover that place within yourself that lets you love in spite of the hurt you have suffered. It is also a book about forgiving and how that contributes to love. This is an amazing book and one that I recommend in the highest possible terms. It's a gem.

Also recommended: 'Without a Map' -- Meredith Hall