The Mother: A Novel
Written by Yvvette Edwards
Narrated by Janina Edwards
4/5
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About this audiobook
The author of the critically acclaimed A Cupboard Full of Coats makes her hardcover debut with a provocative and timely novel about an emotionally devastated mother’s struggle to understand her teenage son’s death, and her search for meaning and hope in the wake of incomprehensible loss.
The unimaginable has happened to Marcia Williams. Her bright and beautiful sixteen-year-old son Ryan has been brutally murdered. Consumed by grief and rage, she must bridle her dark feelings and endure something no mother should ever have to experience: she must go to court for the trial of the killer—another teenage boy—accused of taking her son’s life.
How could her son be dead? Ryan should have been safe—he wasn’t the kind of boy to find himself on the wrong end of a knife carried by a dangerous young man like Tyson Manley. But as the trial proceeds, Marcia finds her beliefs and assumptions challenged as she learns more about Ryan’s death and Tyson’s life, including his dysfunctional family. She also discovers troubling truths about her own. As the strain of Ryan’s death tests their marriage, Lloydie, her husband, pulls further away, hiding behind a wall of secrets that masks his grief, while Marcia draws closer to her sister, who is becoming her prime confidante.
One person seems to hold the answers—and the hope—Marcia needs: Tyson's scared young girlfriend, Sweetie. But as this anguished mother has learned, nothing in life is certain. Not any more.
A beautiful, engrossing novel that illuminates some of the most important and troubling issues of our time, The Mother is a moving portrait of love, tragedy, and survival—and the aftershocks from a momentary act of cruel violence that transforms the lives of everyone it touches.
Yvvette Edwards
Yvvette Edwards is the author of The Mother, the critically acclaimed story of losing a child to violent crime. Her first novel, A Cupboard Full of Coats, was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize and shortlisted for the Commonwealth Book Prize. She lives in London.
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Reviews for The Mother
34 ratings10 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book opened my heart. I’ve had so much death, my husband, mother, stepdaughter, sister, brother, grandmother, close people, and nephew, reading this book. Wow it opened my heart to hear this mother’s struggles to hear her emotions to hear what she went through. I never put a voice or even heard anybody else put a voice to, the deep deep pain that nobody knows about I read books but nothing like this and then how it circled back to that baby. This is a good book a must read wow that’s about the young people what they’re going through. I really felt for sweetie, and then the mother said she realize that she gives money to different people but not right here at home they gave me a lot to think about Was once I had help especially young guys until I witness how dangerous and evil they could be I mean young guys rob my son guys curse me out so I just I’m very nice to hold them the ones that on the street to trouble ones I’m nice to everybody all young people But I pull back on trying to see what I could do to make a difference but as I think about it, I do I always ask other people who were trying to give some advice to young people who may be struggling so that’s one way I guess I helpbut I close for now, but this is a good book. I love this author.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was a very interesting and thought provoking book
It made me think of the great mother who have lost their sons and daughters. But her response at the end was the greatest of it all - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book was definitely a page turner or should I say ear hunger.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was a must read This author is great and I know everyone should read her work
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Deeply moving, The Mother by Yvvette Edwards is an emotionally compelling novel of healing.
Seven months following her sixteen year old son Ryan's murder, Marcia Williams remains grief stricken and desperately trying understand why his accused killer Tyson Manley took Ryan's life. With the murder trial now underway, Marcia attends the proceedings hoping to get answers to the questions that haunt her. As evidence is presented to the court, she is surprised by her sometimes compassionate response as she learns about Tyson's dysfunctional home life. Marcia is also forced to admit that she might have misjudged Sweetie Nelson, the young woman whom Ryan was involved with in the weeks preceeding his death. With her marriage crumbling under the weight of anger and unresolved grief, Marcia cannot help but lash out at her husband Lloydie as he continues to withdraw from her as he struggles to cope with his loss on his own.
It is impossible not feel sympathy for Marcia as she tries to make sense of a senseless act of violence. Her hopelessness, her desperate need for answers and her desire to assign blame are palpable as she goes through her day to day life, locked in mourning. Despite her understanding that LLoydie is doing the best he can, Marcia cannot help but feel angry and resentful over his desertion just when she needs his support the most. While completely aware how deeply she is hurting him by her furious outbursts, Marcia is unable to keep her feelings to herself as the strain of the trial weighs heavily on her. Trying, yet failing, to bridge the ever widening gap between them, Marcia despairs her marriage will survive the unbearable loss of their son.
Lloydie is a quiet man who shows his love through his actions and he withdraws not only from Marcia, but life in general, after Ryan's murder. While he cannot give his wife the emotional support she craves, he quietly goes about taking care of her the only way he knows how. In the face of her unrelenting anger, Lloydie pulls deeper into himself and begins changing his routine in order to avoid her. Unable to accept the tentative olive branch she extends to him, their marriage continues to deteriorate and it is soon teetering on the brink of collapse.
The one person who could possibly provide some answers to Marcia's questions is the one person she avoids at all costs: Sweetie. Marcia made no effort to hide her disapproval of the young woman who captured Ryan's heart and she blames Sweetie for indirectly putting him in the path of a killer. Unable to avoid meeting with Sweetie, Marcia learns shocking information that she encourages Sweetie to reveal. Once Sweetie takes the stand during Tyson's trial, a stunning revelation gives Marcia unexpected hope and a new purpose that will honor Ryan memory.
The Mother by Yvvette Edwards is a raw, gritty novel that is heartbreaking, yet ultimately, uplifting. This powerful story will move readers to tears as Marcia tries to come to terms with an unbearable loss that no parent should ever have to experience. Although not all of the loose ends are completely wrapped up by the novel's conclusion, the ending is hopeful as Marcia, Lloydie and Sweetie find an unexpected bit of optimism that they can and will eventually move past this tragedy. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Marcia’s son Ryan has been murdered, and the trial of the accused killer is finally starting. In the months leading up to the trial, Marcia’s life has unraveled. She is physically a wreck, nearly a walking skeleton. Her husband can’t cope with the loss of their son and distances himself from her emotionally. As she searches for answers as to why this accused boy murdered her son, the reader becomes acquainted with the life the accused led and how the paths of the victim and the killer became entangled. The author paints a compelling story of how some young men want to help people while others kill with seemingly no reason or thought or remorse. Good character development adds much to the depth of this novel.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Mother is Marcia Williams, and her sixteen-year-old son Ryan has recently been murdered. She is attending the trial of his accused killer, Tyson Manley. As the trial proceeds, we watch Marcia deal with her feelings about her son, her husband Lloydie who is unable to attend the trial, the accused and his own mother and the young woman who seems to be the link between Tyson and Ryan. It's a bit unusual as the main setting is a court room, but the story isn't really about the trial or the crime. Rather, it's a story about motherhood and the doubts so many of us have about whether we are doing the right things for our children. It's also a commentary on race and violence in modern society. Very well done.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Edwards explores motherhood, specifically mothers of sons, through an incident of fatal violence between two older teens. The novel begins just as the trial is set to start. Marcia, mother of the victim, feels compelled to be present at the trial because she owes it to her son. Her husband refuses to go so Marcia relies on her sister and other friends for support. She hopes the trial will finally answer some of her questions and bring a sense of closure. Marcia's anger, frustration, and sorrow are palpable as the trial forces her to acknowledge her own failings as a mother. But there's plenty of blame to go around, not the least of which is the murderer and his mother who show a remarkable lack of concern about the case. This contemporary story explores many issues but the writing is compelling and easy to read. Thought-provoking literary fiction that is surprisingly a page-turner.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Mother opens on the first day of Tyson Manley's murder trial. The story is told by Marcia Williams, mother of Ryan, the boy Tyson is accused of killing and she relates the details of the trial, along with some of what happened just before.It's quite an unusual story in that respect, but it also deals with Marcia's feelings both about the loss of her son and about the trial. It took me a little getting into, but at around the half way point I started to get quite engrossed in it. I found it quite easy to feel empathy with Marcia and her husband, Lloydie, in what is ultimately a very sad story.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book looks at how the stabbing death of 16-year-old Ryan affects all those around him, especially his mother Marcia. This book takes us through the arrest of another black teen and concludes at the end of the trial. However, throughout we see the effects Ryan’s murder has upon his parents’ marriage, the girl he was involved with and other members of his family and community. The author looks at race, poverty and abuse in this moving tale that shows just how random life can be and what a waste of two lives such actions bring about.