We Are All Welcome Here: A Novel
by Elizabeth Berg
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Read in July, 2006
The year is 1964 and in Tupelo, Mississippi one 14-year-old girl is going to learn the importance of freedom in more ways than one. Diana Dunn has been taking care of her invalid mother on her own at night since she was 10 years old. Her mother, Paige, contracted polio when she was pregnant with Diana and even gave birth to her in an iron lung. With the help of Peacie, their daytime caretaker, and Mrs. Gruder, who stays with them in the evening, Diana and Paige live in a home of their own, but a...more
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Read in March, 2008
This is a really moving book- especially since it is based on the real life of one of Elizabeth Berg's fans- the characters in this book are interesting and complex brought together in an unique way to create a strange family under unusual circumstances...there is a deep kind of bond and love...although it is certainly unconventional in many ways...there is alot of adversity which isnt necessarily overcome- which to me is more interesting bc its more realistic....its partly a girl's coming of ag...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommended to Tracy by:
Ginnyrecommends it for: Anyone
I really enjoyed reading this book. I found it very refreshing. My emotions were all over the place. I found myself laughing in parts and yet there were other parts that tears were streaming down my face. After reading the premise of the story I thought for sure that I would feel sorry for the mother and possibly even the daughter at the crux of this story. I was suprised because the author writes this book in a way that makes it almost impossible for the reader to do anything but admire them. Y...more
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Read in February, 2008
I vascillated between 3 stars and 4 stars on this one. I really liked it, but there were also things that I didn't like as well. Pretty cool story, and a quick read if you can get into it right away. I didn't feel like she developed the characters all the way, and it felt like the ending was rather rushed. It seemed to end rather abruptly. There were certain characters that could have added more to the story if there had been more development. The main character's Mother (Paige) has an awesome a...more
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Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
anyone
I read this book several years ago but it still resonates with me. I love Elizabeth Berg's books as she really probes right into the heart of her characters and explores deep feelings.
I enjoyed learning about the time period of the early sixties with the civil rights movement but mostly I was amazed by the strength of the character Paige and her daughter Diana.
Paige contracted polio just after giving birth to Diana. Her husband couldn't cope and left leaving Paige to raise Diana alone wh...more
I enjoyed learning about the time period of the early sixties with the civil rights movement but mostly I was amazed by the strength of the character Paige and her daughter Diana.
Paige contracted polio just after giving birth to Diana. Her husband couldn't cope and left leaving Paige to raise Diana alone wh...more
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Read in November, 2007
This is a good book with a nice story. I liked the characters, but I feel like a lot of people were introduced and they weren't developed enough. One example is Dell, an "interest" of Paige's. He starts out as mysterious and a neat kind of person, then becomes something different with no information on what's happening.
Loved Peacie and would have liked to know more about her. There were several dichotomies going on there, black/white, mother/daughter, hired help/caregiver. I would ...more
Loved Peacie and would have liked to know more about her. There were several dichotomies going on there, black/white, mother/daughter, hired help/caregiver. I would ...more
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Read in April, 2008
I liked this book much more than I though I would. Written in memoir style; this books tells the story of polio victim and her 13-year-old daughter living in Tupelo, Miss., during the summer of 1964. Having contracted polio at 22 while pregnant, Paige Dunn delivers her baby from an iron lung, and ends up raising her daughter, Diana, alone after her husband divorces her. Able to move only her head, Paige requires round-the-clock nursing care that social services barely cover. Now 13, Diana has t...more
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We Are All Welcome Here by Elizabeth Berg is the story of a women who contracted polio while she was pregnant and delivered her baby daughter in an iron lung. Her husband left her, and she raised the child on her own - the first two or three years in the lung in the hospital, and later at home, able to move only her head. Berg wrote the story because a women wrote to her and suggested she write this book about her mother. Berg agreed to do it, but only if it could be completely fiction. The resu...more
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Read in June, 2008
I am on an Elizabeth Berg binge. This is the first one of her books I've read recently (I've read a couple of others in the distant past.) Love her style. She does a wonderful job of making her characters real. She writes in the first person which I like because it makes the story feel all the more personal. She writes the sort of prose that makes me want to go back and reread certain passages, almost as if she expressed the way I feel about something but hadn't gotten so far as to put it i...more
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Read in February, 2008
Opens you up to new worlds, to wit,the lives of a mother-daughter pair in Tupelo, Mississippi in the summer of 1964. We see the world through the eyes of the young adolescent daughter, Diana, and her polio-afflicted mom, who is paralyzed from the neck down. The mother, Paige, is an incredible character giving the lie to any notion of handicapped. The book makes you think, without being preachy, through its portrayal of the most developed characters.It explores the limits of categories- white/bl...more
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Elizabeth Berg, much to her own surprise, based two of the main characters in this book on real people (in response to a letter from one of her fans), although the story is fiction.
Set in Tupelo, Mississippi during the historic summer of 1964, it tells the story of an exceptional woman who is paralyzed and on a respirator and raising her teenage daughter with the help of their black caregiver. It’s very moving and often inspiring. Although this is 13-year-old Diana’s story, the memorabl...more
Set in Tupelo, Mississippi during the historic summer of 1964, it tells the story of an exceptional woman who is paralyzed and on a respirator and raising her teenage daughter with the help of their black caregiver. It’s very moving and often inspiring. Although this is 13-year-old Diana’s story, the memorabl...more
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Read in June, 2008
I don't think I've read any other titles by Elizabeth Berg, but this one was pretty good. It was a quick, easy read and it did have some touching moments, but nothing that really moves you.
Berg wrote this book after she received a letter from a reader that wanted to share her story about being raised by a mother who was paralyzed from polio. "Welcome" in no way tries to be based on the real story, yet it did inspire Berg to create her characters here. Berg opens the book with an...more
Berg wrote this book after she received a letter from a reader that wanted to share her story about being raised by a mother who was paralyzed from polio. "Welcome" in no way tries to be based on the real story, yet it did inspire Berg to create her characters here. Berg opens the book with an...more
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Read in April, 2006
TITLE/AUTHOR: WE ARE ALL WELCOME HERE by Elizabeth Berg
RATING 4.5/B+
GENRE/PUB DATE/# OF PGS: Fiction, 2006, 5 CD's
TIME/PLACE: 1950's/1960's, Tupelo, MS
CHARACTERS: Paige/mother w/ polio Diana/her daughter
COMMENTS: Narrated by author -- excellent job! The amazing
story of Paige who contracts polio in her last trimester.
She is determined to not only have the baby but raise her.
Her husband abandons her and she faces many obstacles in
finding home health care. Set against the civil ri...more
RATING 4.5/B+
GENRE/PUB DATE/# OF PGS: Fiction, 2006, 5 CD's
TIME/PLACE: 1950's/1960's, Tupelo, MS
CHARACTERS: Paige/mother w/ polio Diana/her daughter
COMMENTS: Narrated by author -- excellent job! The amazing
story of Paige who contracts polio in her last trimester.
She is determined to not only have the baby but raise her.
Her husband abandons her and she faces many obstacles in
finding home health care. Set against the civil ri...more
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Read in January, 2006
Based on a true story,this novel is able to cover some of the most important issues facing society in the 20th century and today. A young mother, stricken with polio, delivers her daughter in an iron lung. Her husband, unable to deal with the demands of a disabled wife and small daughter, flees. The novel centers around the relationship between mother and daughter and delves into the Civil Rights movement with the story of their African-American caregiver. Although the ending was a little to...more
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Read in July, 2008
This book was my third reading of Elizabeth Berg, and I really enjoy the author's style. The story tells of a young girl who grows up with a disabled mother in the 60s and explores the differences between status and race. It was a good reminder to me that what I perceive as the "norm" isn't the same for everyone and that I have been extremely blessed. Although the book was a good, easy read, there were a few "bad" scenes that I would not have wanted to read or even think ab...more
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Read in May, 2008
A true delight - based on a true story. Set in 1964 Mississippi, teenage daughter helps care for her mother who is confined to an iron lung. Their unique mother-daughter relationship thrives despite a teenager's self-absorption. Strong supporting characters, like the adult day care provider and the teen's best friend, add controversy to everyday summer life. I laughed, was shocked and angered, and saddened as the story moved me to the conclusion that, in comparison, I had a really uneventful, ea...more
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Here I go again with Elizabeth Berg; at least I liked this one better than the last recent book she wrote. Based on a true story, and prompted by a reader who wrote to the author, this book deals with a woman who gets polio while pregnant and delivers her child while in an iron lung. Paralyzed from the neck down, and without the aid of a husband (he took a hike), we see how life goes for mother and daughter in Mississippi. This book is about the daughter, Diana, just as much as it is about th...more
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Read in January, 2006
recommends it for:
mothers, daughters, Berg fans
Elizabeth Berg is a wonderful craftswoman of novels that appear simple but have deeply universal resonance. Yes, this a novel based on a true story of a woman who raises her child despite the awesome handicap of living in an iron lung. But, the universal theme of what it means to be a mother is what I took away from the book. Who was the true mother here? The biological mother,Paige, raised her daughter but she could not have done so without the loving assistance of the beautifully drawn charact...more
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Read in June, 2008
This was a very short novel and yet it packed a powerful message. It takes place in the South during the Civil Rights unrest of the 60s and that piece of history is woven through the story. The interesting characters consist of a mom in an iron lung, due to contacting polio when she was pregnant with her now 13 year old daughter. A very unconventional family, but probably more of a true family than most people have in their own homes. The fact that it is based on a real person makes it pack...more
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Read in July, 2008
I liked this more than I thought I would at first. The 14 year old daughter is the narrator and at first I got the impression that this was a coming of age novel. Then the story seemed to switch towards her mother, who was paralyzed. I was more interested in the mother's story. The ending seemed very contrived and sudden. I read the book and listened to the BOCD. I did not like the author reading. He voice was too sedate and slow. Although, it could be argued that it was consistent with a hot ...more
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