Books from the Backlog is a fun way to feature some of those neglected books sitting on your bookshelf unread. If you are anything like me, you might be surprised by some of the unread books hiding in your stacks.
If you would like to join in, swing by Carole’s Random Life in Books.
GOODREADS BLURB
Apart from Love contains two threads, volume I and II of Still Life with Memories, woven together (along with two new chapters) around the same events in 1980, when Ben returns to meet his father, Lenny, and his new wife, Anita. It is then that he discovers a family secret.
My Own Voice (volume I of Still Life with Memories):
Ten
years ago, when she was seventeen, Anita started an affair with Lenny,
in spite of knowing that he was a married man. Now married to him and
carrying his child, she finds herself condemned to compete with
Natasha’s shadow, the memory of her brilliance back in her prime, before
she succumbed to early-onset Alzheimer’s. Despite Anita’s lack of
education, her rough slang, and what happened to her in the past, Lenny
tries to transform her. He wants her to become Natasha.
Faced with his compelling wish, and the way he writes her as a character in his book, how can Anita find a voice of her own? And when his estranged son, Ben, comes back and lives in the same small apartment, can she keep the balance between the two men, whose desire for her is marred by guilt and blame?
The White Piano (volume II of Still Life with Memories):
Coming
back to his childhood home after years of absence, Ben is unprepared
for the secret, which is now revealed to him: his mother, Natasha, who
used to be a brilliant pianist, is losing herself to early-onset
Alzheimer’s, which turns the way her mind works into a riddle. His
father has remarried, and his new wife, Anita, looks remarkably similar
to Natasha—only much younger. In this state of being isolated, being
apart from love, how will Ben react when it is so tempting to resort to
blame and guilt? “In our family, forgiveness is something you pray for,
something you yearn to receive—but so seldom do you give it to others.”
Behind his father’s back, Ben and Anita find themselves increasingly drawn to each other. They take turns using an old tape recorder to express their most intimate thoughts, not realizing at first that their voices are being captured by him. These tapes, with his eloquent speech and her slang, reveal the story from two opposite viewpoints.
What emerges in this family is a struggle, a desperate, daring struggle to find a path out of conflicts, out of isolation, from guilt to forgiveness.
What’s in a name:
The title Apart From Love comes from a phrase used in the story:
After
a while I whispered, like, “Just say something to me. Anything.” And I
thought, Any other word apart from Love, ‘cause that word is diluted,
and no one knows what it really means, anyway.
Anita to Lenny, in Apart From Love
Why,
why can’t you say nothing? Say any word—but that one, ‘cause you don’t
really mean it. Nobody does. Say anything, apart from Love.
Anita to Ben, in The Entertainer
For
my own sake I should have been much more careful. Now—even in her
absence—I find myself in her hands, which feels strange to me. I am
surrounded—and at the same time, isolated. I am alone. I am apart from
Love.
Ben, in Nothing Surrendered
I used to enter every giveaway I saw when I first started blogging in 2012. This is another one of those books. It added it to my Kindle on 9.2.12 and added it to my TBR on 7.9.12. I must have won it after the fact.
Goodreads rating: 3.83
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Hope you’ll enjoy it if you read it!
me too. i hope to start knocking some of these off the list next year
I think I have this one too. So many books are waiting on my TBR.
it’s hard to know what to keep and what to let go.
I do love a book about family secrets. I hope you enjoy, Sherry!
thanks carole