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Child of My Heart: A Novel
 
 
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Child of My Heart: A Novel (Paperback)

by Alice McDermott (Author) "I had in my care that summer four dogs, three cats, the Moran kids, Daisy, my eight-year-old cousin, and Flora, the toddler child of a..." (more)
Key Phrases: beach quilt, clover chains, pink shoes, Daisy Mae, Red Rover, Uncle Tommy (more...)
3.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (66 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Fifteen is a year of clarity; you're still one of the kids, but you're finally beginning to unlock the mysteries of adult behavior. In her luminous novel Child of My Heart, Alice McDermott's narrator is a 15-year-old girl who has two qualities that give her access to the secret lives of adults: she's beautiful, and she looks after their children. Her beauty has already shaped her life. Her parents have moved the family to the east end of Long Island in hopes of finding her a wealthy husband, or at least a fancy crowd to run with. Here she babysits the children of the rich, whose fathers demonstrate their relative decency by making passes at her, or not. The novel spans a dreamy summer as our heroine spends her days with her various charges at the beach, happily leading her crew on home-grown, rather sweet adventures. Among the kids she looks after is a toddler whose father is a famous, aging artist. The narrator's preternatural acuity is apparent in this exchange with a new client: "Mrs. Richardson learned by direct inquiry that I lived in that sweet cottage with the dahlias (interested) and went to the academy (more interested) and babysat for this child of the famous artist (most interested) down the road." Child of My Heart is a pretty straightforward coming-of-age novel, but it's marked throughout by this beautifully honed, wry, knowing tone. McDermott's narrator reminds us that our lost innocence might not have been so innocent after all. --Claire Dederer --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly
There is something almost too good to be true about Theresa, the introspective and unusually perceptive narrator who recalls the summer of her 15th year in this engaging, taut novel by McDermott (Charming Billy). Theresa's Irish-American "well-read but undereducated" parents have little money but plenty of foresight; when they see that their only daughter will be beautiful, they move to East Hampton, Long Island, summer playground of New York City's richest, in the hopes that Theresa's beauty will eventually win her a wealthy husband. Because she has a way with children and animals, her parents have long encouraged her to baby-sit and pet-sit as a way to meet and impress the right people. This particular summer, her favorite cousin, eight-year-old Daisy, tags along as Theresa cares for dogs, cats, neighbor kids and a toddler named Flora, the only child of a 70-year-old womanizing artist and his fourth trophy wife. Entirely self-involved, the artist does manage to look away from his canvas and mistress long enough to notice Theresa, who finds his attentions exciting. Early on, Theresa discovers a tragic secret of Daisy's that she decides to keep to herself, which gives the summer and the book a wistful, melancholy air. As the girls corral their charges, Theresa offers half-innocent, half-ironic comments on the vanities and topsy-turvy family lives of her employers. This is another charmer from McDermott; it's evocative, gently funny and resonant with a sense of impending loss, as all stories of youthful summers must be. There's a whisper of maudlin sentimentality throughout, but Theresa is so likable, and her observations so acute, that one easily forgives it.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Picador (November 15, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312422911
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312422912
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (66 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #360,291 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

66 Reviews
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33 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Inspired, Beautiful Prose;Some Reservations..., November 23, 2002
This review is from: Child of My Heart (Paperback)
You can read this book in one concentrated sitting, and the book feels like an inspired burst of breath. There are many passages of writing that are superb - some of the best sentence-writing McDermott has ever done... and that's saying something. Mcdermott's forte has always been rendering the specificities of life with a sober, but poetic slant. There is nothing really intriguing about the events themselves in McDermott's novels, but filtered through McDermott's eyes, everything becomes somehow meaningful... even sacrosanct.

This book can be called a bildungsroman, but unlike most rite-of-passage books which tend to take a sweeping view of a person's life, this novel takes a slice from a girl's life (a single summer, a few weeks) and examines how such a short moment transformed everything in the world for her.

The story is simplicity itself. Theresa is a fifteen year-old, a precocious babysitter, who looks after her young cousin, Daisy. On the surface level, not much goes on in the novel. There are adults who make up the moral landscape of the novel, and it's a tribute to McDermott's strength as a writer that much of this moral landscape is filled in through the absence of these adult characters... this vacuity that exists in the novel makes this suburban world of Theresa seem very lonely.

The climax of the novel (which I won't give away) is quite foreseeable, but this doesn't distract us from being engaged. The ending is as natural and inevitable as life itself, and although unspoken, it is quite clear that Theresa will never be the girl of fifteen again hence.

As I've mentioned, some of the writing is magnificent. The last fifty pages of the book achieve a kind of incandescence; I got one of those rare buzzes you only get from a special kind of writing. The prose alone can transport you. But at the same time, some nagging aspects of the novel got in the way of the story. It is clear that Theresa is fond of Daisy, but their relationship seemed too cloying at times. Undoubtedly, this is realistic; children can be attached to someone unequivocally. But it became repetitive... the constant 'poor daisy's' uttered, noxzema cream slathered on feet...

This is a coming-of-age tale as only McDermott can write it. Most of the denouement of the novel, Theresa's coming to terms with life and its gravity, the passing of youth, becomes apparent through unspoken terms. Sure, this book doesn't quite fully plumb the depths of the characters as her excellent novels from the past. Nevertheless, McDermott's insight is enlightening, and the book contains some of her most effortlessly passionate writing to date.

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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Small Miracle of a Book, November 14, 2002
This review is from: Child of My Heart (Paperback)
To read Alice McDermott is to enter a wonderland made up of familiar terrain but you still need a road map. With her clean, economical prose she cuts right through the arrogance of the wealthy and the submissiveness of the poor. Fifteen year old Theresa is unlike anyone I have ever encountered in fiction but have known in real life. Thoughtful, kind, and confident, she marches through Long Island, ministering to the neglected children of the rich. When her eight year old cousin Daisy comes to spend a few weeks with Theresa's family, Theresa recognizes how much in need of repair Daisy is. Physically but also emotionally, for Daisy is one of many children of a poor family and has been not abused so much as over looked. Theresa's own family seems to emotionally neglect her too, so caring for Daisy is, in a way, also caring for Theresa. They have a strong bond and Theresa creates a lovely summer for her. The thoughtless and careless ways of the rich are balanced by the thoughtless, careless, ways of the poor. Reading Child of My heart is like reading a primer in how to behave. Do yourself a favor and read this wonderful book. Thanks goodness for Alice McDermott!
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mixed Feelings., April 11, 2005
By Mermaid (New England) - See all my reviews
I did enjoy this book; however, every parent portrayed was neglectful. Flora's mother just taking off as she did and leaving her toddler behind...Flora's father's self centeredness and lack of interest in taking care of her (as well as his extreme lack of morals), the Moran kids appalling lack of care and supervision - just leaving a baby to roam the streets!, and even Theresa's parents - benign and well-intentioned, but too busy with work and having their daughter rub elbows with "rich folks" to spend any real quality time with Theresa and Daisy. Then they would have noticed that Daisy was not well. Daisy's parents, in fact, should have noticed this sooner too, as her paleness and bruises were there when she got to Theresa's.
Theresa wasn't portrayed as a normal 15-year-old. Did she have any friends her own age, did she ever rebel at spending all her time being a surrogate mother to every kid and animal in the neighborhood? Did she resent the never ending cooking, cleaning, babysitting, having the responsibility of so many kids and animals? Did she have any interest in the opposite sex other than a womanizing and narcissistic elderly man? Losing her virginity was not as monumental of an experience to her as it is to most people. She just accepted it as weirdly and calmly as she accepts everything else. There is no passion or spark in her personality - it was like her thoughts and words were coming from beneith a languid warm sea.
I also thought the neighbors coming to get her at night to console their child after the cat got hit by a car was a bit over the top. Couldn't the child's parents comfort the girl themselves? That's what being a parent is all about.
In short, I liked the writing and the author very much, I just didn't like most of the charactors in this story.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars A book about nothing!
This is by far one of the worst books I've read to date. Booorrrring! I'm very proud of myself for even having finished it. Read more
Published 2 months ago by jrjccj

5.0 out of 5 stars Writing that goes down as smoothly as the best dark chocolate
McDermott writes masterfully. I don't typically especially love coming-of-age novels, or novels about babysitters (all that selfless nurturing of needy young children), but this... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Susan K. Perry

4.0 out of 5 stars Poignant
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3.0 out of 5 stars Too Good To Be True
I thought it was well written, but I was frustrated at the perfection of the main character Teresa, who took excellant care of everyone in the world at age 15. Read more
Published 13 months ago by C. Walker

3.0 out of 5 stars Baby sitter par excellence
This is a great novel for readers who are strong believers in children making their own entertainment. Read more
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5.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly Moving
This powerful and very moving novel centers on Theresa, a 15-year-old beauty on the cusp of adulthood who spends one almost imaginary summer hovering between the worlds of... Read more
Published on May 9, 2007 by W. Kaplan

5.0 out of 5 stars A Spiritual Journey
Deeply effected by the terrorist attack to the Twin Towers of September 11th 2001 (the book was published in November 2002), it portraits the life of a teenager who refuses to... Read more
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3.0 out of 5 stars Maudlin Sentimentality Ahoy!
Wow, this book was so uplifting and hilarious, I think I'll go and kill myself now! Hey! If you ever wondered whether children get the shortest, sharpest, boringest end of the... Read more
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2.0 out of 5 stars SOME GOOD; SOME REALLY DULL
A sluggish evocation of a teen ager's summer in the Hamptons. Theresa is an unworldly 15 year old. She spends the summer months caring for a younger cousin, Daisy, who is on the... Read more
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5.0 out of 5 stars A spiritual journey
Deeply effected by the terrorist attack to the Twin Towers of September 11th 2001 (the book was published in November 2002), it portraits the life of a teenager who refuses to... Read more
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