In prose both heartrending and harrowing, National Book Award finalist Susan Straight conjures up the unforgettable voice of a mother coming to terms with her worst nightmare.
Twenty-year-old Jacinta grew up in her mother’s family home in Santa Ana, California, surrounded by a grove of orange trees. Little by little, Jacinta’s mother lost her—first to college, then to a boy she said she loved, and then, finally, to the rage of a school shooter. Snap. In an instant it was all gone. All she has now is her daughter’s phone. Like an album, gripped in the palm of her hand—texts, photos, messages, and videos of her daughter’s first three years at college. With it, Jacinta’s mother is reconstructing her daughter’s last three weeks.
In this uniquely moving exploration of mourning, fury, and reminiscence, Susan Straight evokes—through a grieving mother’s devastating internal monologue—both a modern-day nightmare and exquisite proof of love’s extraordinary power to overcome it.
Susan Straight's newest novel is "Between Heaven and Here." It is the last in the Rio Seco Trilogy, which began with "A Million Nightingales" and "Take One Candle Light a Room." She has published eight novels, a novel for young readers and a children's book. She has also written essays and articles for numerous national publications, including The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Nation and Harper's Magazine, and is a frequent contributor to NPR and Salon.com.
Her story "Mines," first published in Zoetrope All Story, was included in Best American Short Stories 2003. She won a Lannan Literary Award in 2007. She won a 2008 Edgar Allan Poe Award for her short story "The Golden Gopher."
She is a Professor at the University of California, Riverside and lives in Riverside, California.
Another timely read. Another school shooting. In a few pages(this is a very short read) so much pain and heartache. A mother coming to terms that her only child has been taken away while at school from yet another senseless shooting. A rambling string of thoughts as she remembers the distant past to the very recent one and back and forth. The contrast of how it was with hard work and pride to the less personal, technological ways of today and back and forth. It's hypnotizing. Most of all she remembers the oranges and the orange grove. Remembering the simple joy of savoring the sweetness of an orange heavy with juice like the sweetness of her princess Jacinta who passed on too soon from this bitter tragedy.
I agree with what previous reviewers wrote about the long, meandering sentences, and the first chapter almost made me give up altogether, but stick with it. It'll come together. Just remember, it's coming from a broken, shattered mind filled with wandering thoughts and numbing grief.
Totally different prose than I usually read, but vivid imagery. I didn’t think I’d get much out of a Kindle single, but she wrote about a specific incident that basically ended her world. I know if the same thing happened to me, it would end my world but I’d have to go on for my four beloved grandsons. Take a half an hour and read this.
This seems like an entire novel. Straight weaves a sad, long song, impossible to not hear. Terrifying to realize that no matter when you read this, it will be shortly after another school shooting.
I don't think the description of this book is truly accurate. It's much more stream of consciousness of a mother's pain after loss than it is her "recreating" her daughter's last weeks. I wasn't prepared for the rawness of the story or how it spilled out in jumbled pieces but it made sense for the story that was really being told.
At 72 years old I enjoyed the memory of a simpler time. God please help us love one another again. Well written and a sad reflection of the problems we are experiencing.
At 72 years old I enjoyed the memory of a simpler time. God please help us love one another again. Well written and a sad reflection of the life we are experiencing.
"...no one listens to Patsy Cline, my mother’s favorite, because they don’t want love that leaves you, so they want no love."
A mother examines the life of her daughter after the daughter is gunned down at school. A microscopic human look at this country's epidemic. Would recommend for a quick, impactful read.
Read on KU! A short story outlining the struggles of a mother who loses her daughter to a school shooting. I almost didn’t finish this, but not because it was a bad story. I think this was an emotional, well-written story that shatters your heart alongside the mother’s as you experience her heartache. Tears were shed reading this.
This is my first Susan Straight but definitely not my last. In less than 30 pages, she's created a moving story about parents, kids, the yawning gap between them...recommended.
I really enjoyed this short story as well, very wonderfully written. A different way of telling of a mother's pain about losing a child during a school shooting. I would recommend this as I really enjoyed her style of writing.
All of the emotion regarding school shootings is perfectly dosed for this short story, and these types of stories 1000% percent need to be told. I feel like this type of story would have been better suited for a longer form instead of a short story just because I tend to enjoy spending more time with my characters in emotional situations. But again, the author absolutely did her best with getting the point across in the page count of this story, and the more we normalize sharing these types of stories the better.
I wasn’t quite sure how I was gonna feel about this story mainly because at first read it seemed like a bunch of jumbled fragmented pieces of a story. I kept going and I’m glad I did. Your reading along with the thoughts of a grieving mother, trying to put the pieces together of her daughter’s sudden violent death. How do you go on? How do you function in a world when your child is gone? It’s heart breaking, and utterly depressing. If you can handle the subject matter it is most definitely worth a read.