West of Then: A Mother, A Daughter, and a Journey Past Paradise
Tara Bray Smith
I have mixed feelings about this book. At times the disjointed writing and style drove me mad but yet I found myself staying up too late to finish the book.
So....This is a memoir of a 30-ish woman who grew up in Hawaii with a drug-addicted mother (heroin is her drug of choice but she isn't too picky). That is the short version. Her family has lived on the islands for 4 or 5 generations. As she tells about her history and her family's, she also relates some of the history of Hawaii. I think she is trying to go for an idea of a fallen paradise -- both for the islands themselves and for her family. It is a a sad and moving story.
The present day setting of the story is Tara trying to find and help her mother who is homeless. That part of the story is what kept me reading -- wanting to know how it turned out and trying to figure out what motivated Tara to keep trying with her mom.
I was also intrigued by her mother's life as a drug addict. It hit a little closer to home than I would have liked. My idea, and probably most people's, of rock bottom is far from what is really rock bottom. It's a very sobering (no pun intended) look at the pain caused by drug addiction.
I would give it 3.5/5 stars.
Tara Bray Smith
I have mixed feelings about this book. At times the disjointed writing and style drove me mad but yet I found myself staying up too late to finish the book.
So....This is a memoir of a 30-ish woman who grew up in Hawaii with a drug-addicted mother (heroin is her drug of choice but she isn't too picky). That is the short version. Her family has lived on the islands for 4 or 5 generations. As she tells about her history and her family's, she also relates some of the history of Hawaii. I think she is trying to go for an idea of a fallen paradise -- both for the islands themselves and for her family. It is a a sad and moving story.
The present day setting of the story is Tara trying to find and help her mother who is homeless. That part of the story is what kept me reading -- wanting to know how it turned out and trying to figure out what motivated Tara to keep trying with her mom.
I was also intrigued by her mother's life as a drug addict. It hit a little closer to home than I would have liked. My idea, and probably most people's, of rock bottom is far from what is really rock bottom. It's a very sobering (no pun intended) look at the pain caused by drug addiction.
I would give it 3.5/5 stars.
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