Family Correspondence

Published
Sep 2000
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Pages
225

About This Book

Critics and readers alike applauded the release of Teresa Miller's first magnificent novel, Remnants of Glory, which Publishers Weekly called a "...slice of Americana studded with women who are survivors." Now, with her first new novel in more than a decade, Miller has written a thought-provoking and tender examination of the complex relationships between mothers and daughters, the delicate fabric that holds families together.

Family Correspondence is a multi-generational novel beginning in post-WWII Arkansas with fifteen-year old Marie Wallace, a young girl struggling to come to terms with her mother's frailties and the larger-than-life personalities who have shaped her world. A generation later, in modern-day Oklahoma, Marie's daughter, Nora Catron, is suddenly forced to confront her mother's past in the aftermath of a horrible and mysterious accident. Using letters to link the stories of mother and daughter, Teresa Miller skillfully weaves the two into a penetrating and magnificently observed tale. Because ultimately, as Nora realizes, their story is "larger than family correspondence." It is the ongoing and often joyful story of a mother and daughter learning to experience true kinship.

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Formats & Editions

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Hardcover

Hardcover edition cover
Hardcover
First Edition Sep 2000 Hawk Pub Group ISBN 1930709145
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Hardcover edition cover
Hardcover
Jan 2000 Hawk Pub ISBN 1930709218
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