I think the first thing I liked about this book was its format. There is a note at the beginning of the book acknowledging that “memory is a tricky thing”. Instead of the four Welch siblings trying to hammer out the truth of each event in their lives, they acknowledge that each remembers things differently, and put their accounts side by side – sometimes even saying “I don’t remember it that way”. Each person’s account is given equal weight and credibility, which gives the reader a better picture of the dynamics of the family.
Amanda, Liz, Dan and Diana Welch lost their father to a car accident and their mother to cancer within three years. Since Amanda, the oldest, was only 19, the younger children were split apart and all found different living situations. In this book, they detail the grief, confusion, fear, anger and some moments of joy that comprised that time in their lives.
“…Diana stayed home (from the funeral). Mom thought she was too young for such sadness and instead brought a photograph of her and Dad to place on the casket. It had been take the summer before: Dad standing in the shallow end of our pool, waist deep in water, with Diana on his hip, her pale arms wrapped tightly around his neck, her freckled face smashed against his as if she wished she were clay and wanted to mold into him. They were both smiling so hard, it was surprising the frame could contain the happiness of that moment, surprising that it didn’t shatter into a million pieces, floating around the funeral home like dust.”
The Welch children are forced to grow up and assume adult responsibilities far too fast due to the death of their father and cancer of their mother. Each tries to take on the role they feel they should perform in their family, yet their family is not something that they recognize – especially once their mother dies and they are separated.
It’s hard to know who to feel more sympathy for – the older kids who know what’s happening and the fearful possibilities of the future, or the younger kids who haven’t had as much time as a complete family and who feel lost without much understanding of what’s going on.
Liz takes on much of the care of her mother as she battles cancer. “She pulled my own hand to her chest and winced. I wondered what hurt more, the sickness that was consuming her or the realization that she scared me.” And, “Her mouth was saying “Keep out” without making a sound. I understood. It was no longer Mom. The monster within had won, and now it was only a matter of time.”
Amanda, as the oldest, ends up handling much of the paperwork and finances, and ends up being the force that brings them all back together. Dan, who is 14 when his mother dies, has a long road to get back to a place he feels he belongs, with his sisters.
And Diana, the youngest, tries to become part of a new family, the descriptions of which gave me chills. There is no physical abuse mentioned (that I recall) but some of the things that are said to her and the treatment she receives made my heart ache.
A comforting part of her life becomes the weekly school lice check: “The sharp metal comb felt good scraping against my scalp, and the nurse’s breath on my neck reminded me of nice things like Mom talking out of the corner of her mouth when I kissed her or Auntie Eve scratching my back while we watched her soaps on TV.”
And she is told to start calling her guardians Mom and Dad, “Now? I had to call them that now? So I said, “Um, can I have some nuts, Mom?” And Mrs. Chamberlain jumped up out of her chair and gave me a big hug, and her husband came, too, and he hugged me and I said, quietly, uncomfortably, “Thanks, Dad”. It was like walking off a cliff.”
After reading this compelling true story, I was left with one very strong feeling. I hope, more than anything, that these four children have taken the pieces of their family and forged them together to be stronger. To build on what was left when they lost their parents too early, and with the strength that they were forced to find in themselves and in one another. They lost so much, and I can only hope that they’ve found much good since then.