From Library Journal
When her mother was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's, 22-year-old Hilden refused to do what her aunt Betty and society expected her to do?quit law school and care for her now-incapacitated parent. Indeed, before her mother's death, Hilden visited her only once in the nursing home. Although the author expects readers to condemn her actions, she asks, "Would other people really have chosen to care for a mother who wasn't loving, who was often angry, who was often simply gone?" Hilden's brief memoir recalls her unhappy childhood with an alcoholic mother and her attempt to escape and create a new life. Ironically, Hilden, now 29, has a 50-50 chance of carrying the gene for early-onset Alzheimer's. While she raises some powerful issues (selfishness vs. self-preservation), her book is weakened by pretentious, "literary" prose and an unnecessarily long section explicitly detailing her sexual affairs. For collections where dysfunctional family memoirs are popular.?Wilda Williams, "Library Journal"
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Hilden's exquisitely written book is part confessional, part self-examination, part memoir, and totally riveting. It tells the nearly taboo story of an only child who refuses to care for an alienated, ailing mother. Instead, miles away, virtually in another world, the daughter continually re-creates herself, trying to put the past and especially her mother behind. So doing, she knowingly opts to be "bad" --that is, selfish at best, "unnatural" at worst. Hilden's diamond-cut prose pinpoints the exact moments of her preadolescent distancing from her mother and limns with astonishing precision the nuances of displeasure growing into distaste and, finally, disgust as her mother's condition deteriorates from alcohol abuse exacerbated by early-onset Alzheimer's. Whether depicting her mother's increasingly frequent outbursts of irrational rage (from which Hilden fled to Harvard at the earliest possible moment) or her own inability to remain faithful to any man and build intimacy, Hilden's dispassionate style chills and fascinates, never more so than when she learns she may possess DNA predisposing her to Alzheimer's, too. This short book leaves the usual parameters of the narrative of caring for a sick mother far behind and packs an enormous wallop, especially for those for whom alienation from their mothers has become a way of life.
Whitney Scott