The Mother by Yvvette Edwards Reviewed by Frances Colville

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The Mother by Yvvette Edwards Reviewed by Frances ColvilleThe Mother is Yvvette Edwards’ second novel.  Her first, A Cupboard Full of Coats, was longlisted for the Man Booker prize and shortlisted for the Commonwealth Book Prize.  So I began reading The Mother with high expectations, and I wasn’t disappointed.

 

The story opens on the first day of the trial of Ryan’s alleged killer and is told through the eyes of Marcia, mother of Ryan who, aged 16, was stabbed to death.  How would you feel if you had failed to keep your beloved and only child safe?  How could you ever come to terms with the knowledge that you would never see him again, and that he had missed out on a full, long and happy life?  And how do you deal with the guilt?  In fact, as Marcia says – “as a parent of a child who has been violently killed, is it possible, ever, to completely absolve yourself of blame?”

 

Yvvette Edwards writes so compellingly and so fluently that it’s hard to put this book down.  And it’s the sort of book which will stick in your mind long after you have finished it, especially if you are a parent.

 

The Mother is published by Mantle in hardback and eBook