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Susan Dodd

Author of The Mourners' Bench: A Novel

16 Works 239 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Susan Dodd is an assistant professor in the Foundation Year Programme at the University of King's College.

Works by Susan Dodd

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Reviews

It’s hard to write a review of such a heartfelt story without reaching for cliches. I found the MC, Murana Bill, to be a tragic figure at first. She deals with the loss of her parents, becomes essentially a single mom to her younger brother and then nurses him when he returns from the Vietnam War with battle fatigue, or PTSD. He doesn’t speak but has a tremendous appetite, which she feeds by endlessly cooking meals and preparing foods for him. Later, however, Murana finds friendship in the character of Lucille. Their relationship is so well written and beautiful. Unfortunately, this is not a happy read. It’s full of tragedy and sadness. Yet, in a way, it’s more about learning how to move on and embrace life and happiness as well. This was a random find at a local used bookstore and I’m glad I stumbled on it.… (more)
 
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psalva | Jul 15, 2023 |
Book club selection
 
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BookConcierge | 4 other reviews | Mar 5, 2016 |
Pretend it's not a western. Pretend it's historical fiction.

Imagine this story takes place in Ireland or South Africa instead of western Missouri. A young woman marries a religious man who takes her away from home to start a new life. The two raise several children on a hard-scrabble farm. When he dies, she re-marries, this time to a doctor. More children are born. Unable to continue living a life he feels is constantly hindered by a distant and unjust government, her favorite son becomes involved with a violent independence movement. He later joins the army and fights on the losing side in a civil war. Disillusioned and jaded, with no job-prospects he turns to a life of crime. Before he can turn himself in, do his time and begin his live again, he is killed by one of his compatriots. His mother is left to live the rest of her life with a reputation she had little hand in generating.

What makes this story a western?

Would it be substantially different if it were a book about a woman with a son in the IRA instead of a book about the mother of Jesse James, Civil War veteran turned outlaw?

It's not a pretty story. Certainly not along the Missouri-Kansas border at the time of the American Civil War. I've a hard time deciding if there were any heroes in that particular struggle, but I'm certain Jesse James was not one of them. So how does one approach a book about the woman who raised him, who loved him more than any of her other children and protected him when she could even though she knew her protection made more crimes possible, including murder? To her credit, Ms. Dodd doesn't whitewash her story, as far as I can tell. Her heroine loves her son, admires him, pushes him to action, protects him and his reputation as much as she can. But even she reaches a point where she must simply refuse to look too closely at what her son has done. In order to remain the mother she has always been she must make herself willfully ignorant of her son's crimes. This is probably the healthiest choice she could have made. Not the wisest or the best, but the only one that would work for her.

And Mamaw worked for me. Whether it's a western or not, whether or not the question even matters, Mamaw is a fascinating book that took me into the life of someone I never expected to meet.
… (more)
 
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CBJames | Jul 17, 2011 |
The title sets the mood for this somber novel, a meditation on the ways to carry grief, to remain constant in loving someone, and considerations for forgiveness. Some beautiful language, some plot points that are a little hard to believe...including the main storyline of an erudite New England poet falling in love with a stubborn young woman from South Carolina. But a worthy read nonetheless, if particularly for the graceful language.
½
 
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Lcwilson45 | 4 other reviews | Sep 9, 2010 |

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Works
16
Members
239
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Rating
3.8
Reviews
8
ISBNs
31
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2

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