October 10, 2019

Wild Game: My Mother, Her Lover, and Me - Adrienne Brodeur

 Wild Game: My Mother, Her Lover, and Me Review:

A lecture story about the traumatic life of a young girl Adrienne... Adrienne becomes a confidant of the epic relationship of her mother Malabar. She also begins to help her mother with this. Eventually, the relationship results in a catastrophe for everyone involved. This affects the young girl's life deeply. He becomes depressed after an insecure marriage. Adrienne can overcome her psychological problems years later. This story offers a lecturing contribution to the parent-child relationship. A lesson that tells a parent that a child should not be a parent...


Review
A Best of Fall Title from: People * Refinery29 * Entertainment Weekly * BuzzFeed * NPR’s On Point * Town & Country * Real Simple * New York Post * Palm Beach Post * Toronto Star * Orange Country Register * Bustle * Bookish * BookPage * Kirkus* BBC Culture* Debutiful

A Book of the Month Pick (September)
An Amazon Best of the Month/Spotlight Pick (October)
The Nervous Breakdown Book Club (October)
An Apple Best of the Month (October)
A Bookish “Kelly’s Pick” (Fall)

"[A] vivid memoir…[Brodeur] writes beautifully, even tenderly, as a mother herself, aware of repercussions, knowing how it all ended." —BBC

“Reading Wild Game is an infectious experience. The moment you finish the book, you’ll want to pass it on, so you too can discuss the memoir’s shocking content and astounding writing. Wild Game is for anyone who’s asked themselves the question, ‘Am I destined to become my parent?’“ —Refinery29

“Brodeur’s memoir has set both Hollywood and publishing ablaze.” —Entertainment Weekly

“Shocking, poignant, unputdownable.” —People Magazine

“It’s the kind of juicy what-is-happening memoir that just begs to be made into a movie.”—Buzzfeed

“An Amazon Best Book of October 2019. An engaging, at times breathless, read that builds in anticipation, even after that bang of a beginning. There is barely a wasted word in the book, and the tensions that develop between various members of the family, good or bad, recognized or not—as well the tensions we feel as readers—keep the narrative humming. It’s difficult to describe what makes one memoir more readable than another. But put this one at the top of your list.” —Amazon Book Review

"There are quite a few debut authors to pay attention to…most notably Adrienne Brodeur, author of Wild Game, a memoir that will sweep you into the quiet glamour of Cape Cod and enthrall you from beginning to end…Wild Game reads like a novel…This is the book to read if you want a juicy story.”—Bustle

“A fascinating tale about a troubled mother-daughter bond and the effect that decades of lies have on two families.” —NY Post

"Adrienne Brodeur's stunning memoir is the kind of true story that makes you wonder why we'd ever need fiction. It's a beautifully written, totally engrossing story unlike any we've read before—and will surely be one of the most talked-about books of the year." —Town and Country Magazine

“As the saying goes, you can’t make this stuff up. [A] remarkable web of relationships in a privileged, Cape Cod world and the lies a daughter was forced to tell. Riveting.” —Toronto Star

"I can’t stop thinking about this extraordinary memoir. In the spirit of The Liar’s Club and The Glass Castle, Brodeur takes on the complicated subjects of mother-daughter relationships and family secrets with masterful storytelling and cinematic style. Be forewarned that this book requires the buddy system; you’ll need to discuss it with someone the minute you finish!" —Allison K. Hill, Orange County Register

“This page-turning memoir…reads like heady beach fiction…This layered narrative of deceit, denial, and disillusionment is a surefire bestseller.”
—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

“Here is a book you won’t want to put down for anything. Not since The Glass Castle has a memoir managed to convey such a complex family bond, in which love, devotion, and corrosive secrets are inextricably linked. Gorgeous, addictive, unflinching, Wild Game is a must-read.”
— J. Courtney Sullivan, New York Times best-selling author of Maine and Saints for All Occasions

“It’s a rare memoir that reads like a thriller, but Adrienne Brodeur’s Wild Game manages to do just that. Beautifully written and harrowing, the book left me breathless.”
— Richard Russo, author of The Destiny Thief and Empire Falls

“Entirely unique and utterly enthralling, Wild Game examines the ardor of a daughter’s love, caught up in the relentless needs of her mother. In this courageous act of radical self-reflection and truth-telling, Brodeur untangles karmic threads that bind families together across the generations.”
— Ruth Ozeki, author of A Tale for the Time Being

“Wild Game tells an extraordinary family story, but this riveting memoir will touch all mothers and daughters. Adrienne Brodeur explores with compassionate clarity the intense bonds of love and need that create a family; and the destruction that can ensue. This is a beautiful book.”
— Claire Messud, author of The Burning Girl

“A searing, indelible memoir of an extraordinary mother and her equally extraordinary daughter. Among Adrienne Brodeur’s many achievements in Wild Game—beautiful prose, a riveting story, elegantly told—what I found most moving is the love threaded through every page of this unforgettable book.”
— Dani Shapiro, author of Hourglass and Inheritance

Adrienne Brodeur has had decades to consider her glamorous, aspiring, and deeply manipulative mother, along with her complex influence on her life. She appears to have used each day to explore and perfectly distill this legacy of sex, lies, and love into a memoir that is intimate, emotionally gripping, exquisitely shaped. Brodeur’s search for honesty is heroic and graceful; her hard-earned understanding animates this quietly shattering book about how lies passed by parents embed themselves into their children’s hearts.”
— George Hodgman, New York Times best-selling author of Bettyville

“Brodeur's story explores the bond between mother and daughter and the ripple effect a family secret can have when passed among generations. Highly recommended.”
—Library Journal starred

"A candid, deftly crafted narrative...a vivid chronicle of a daughter's struggle to find herself."
—Kirkus

"An absorbing story of secrets, love, and family."
—Booklist

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