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Harrison, the
survivor of a fractured childhood and a damaging affair with her
father, somewhat ameliorates her boundless psychic pain and corresponding
anorexia and severe depression by writing searing memoirs, including
Seeking Rapture (2003), and she has gathered an avid readership.
She now continues her literary therapy by drilling to the very heart
of her predicament, her long-suppressed fury at her unloving mother,
a malignant rage undiminished by her mother's death. A compelling
and driven writer, …Harrison has succeeded in breaking the
pattern of dysfunctional mothering perpetuated by her grandmother
and mother, but as she struggles with fear over her son's debilitating
asthma, she realizes that she will never be well, nor her family
free from anxiety on her behalf, until she finds a way to exorcise
her mother's smothering spirit. As always, Harrison manages to shock
and awe her readers as she renders her own private hell universal
and instructive.
“Harrison’s
fascinating memoir nails a never-before-uttered psychological truth.
A drama with her own child forces the writer to unknot—with
great agony—the bonds that enslaved her to the memory of her
own capricious mother, who almost manages—even from the grave—to
destroy her only surviving child. This book should be required reading
for anyone who ever had a mother.” —MARY KARR
“Mothers:
They birth us, mold us, influence who we are and who we can become.
Even in memory, their hold on daughters is complete. I loved The
Mother Knot for its honest assessment of the ongoing impact this
most primal of bonds can have on an adult daughter. In prose that
manages to be both luminous and economical, in sentences that feel
as effortless as breathing, Kathryn Harrison poignantly details
the lengths to which one daughter must go, in order to finally let
go.”—HOPE EDELMAN, author of Motherless Daughters
“I am
not alone. Kathryn Harrison’s new memoir has revealed that
poignantly, beautifully, the way the best literature always does.
Sure, the details of her story are unique, but the haunting emotions
that weave together daughterhood and motherhood are universal. I
just couldn’t put The Mother Knot down.”—MARTHA
MCPHEE
“The Mother
Knot is a prose poem dedicated to performing a difficult task at
which Kathryn Harrison always elegantly succeeds. Here, once again,
she has found great beauty in limning hard truths. She is one of
the most compelling writers I know, a true artist whose formidable
talent is matched by her courage.”
—ELIZABETH BERG
“Kathryn
Harrison’s new memoir, written with razor blades and honey,
is a compelling mother-daughter study, full of truths about our
lives. The book is moving and beautifully written.” —ERICA
JONG
THE MOTHER KNOT
A Memoir.
By Kathryn Harrison.
Random House, $16.95.
Shortly before
her 42nd birthday in 2003, Kathryn Harrison embarked on a journey
of self-discovery and renunciation, revisiting the themes of freedom
and confinement that dominate her novels. The catalyst that catapulted
Harrison into the familiar territory of anorexia and depression,
she writes in ''The Mother Knot,'' was her son's hospitalization
after a severe asthma attack. Asthma had also struck Harrison shortly
after her mother left her when she was 6 years old, to be raised
by grandparents. Haunted with misplaced guilt and fear, Harrison
imagined a ''dybbuk'' springing from her chest to infect her son.
She initially identified this dark force as her own dead mother
but, in the course of grappling with childhood demons during therapy,
she unearthed the real dybbuk -- herself. ''My mother, like Lot's
wife, had made the mistake of looking back,'' Harrison concludes.
Examining the past ultimately gave Harrison the chance to make peace
with her inability to remedy her mother's shortcomings with her
own perfection. Harrison had her mother's body exhumed and cremated
-- literally reduced to dust. The book's struggle for causality
seems strained at times; for example, when Harrison insists on finding
a connection between her obsession with nursing her children and
her mother's rejection. Occasionally melodramatic, but unshakably
honest, ''The Mother Knot'' is a daring look at the complexities
of a troubled mother-daughter relationship. Beverly Willett,
The New York Times Book Review
-------------------------------------------------------
THE BOSTON GLOBE
As we know
from Kathryn Harrison's earlier autobiographical writings, the trauma
of an unhappy childhood she was rejected by her mother, who gave
birth as a teenager left her with two overwhelming compulsions:
to punish herself for her mother's failings, and to protect her
own children fiercely from any and all of life's abuses. When Harrison's
10-year-old son was stricken with severe asthma and genuinely needed
her protection, the two compulsions became mutually incompatible.
This tiny memoir
gives an anguished account of Harrison's struggle to vanquish one
side of her personality the neurotic, victimized child in order
to liberate the other side, the mature, nurturing mother. Overcome
by guilt and fear when her son fell ill, she gave way to the depression
and self-lacerating anorexia that had plagued her earlier years.
Harrison saw that to win this battle, she would need an exorcism,
a slashing of "the mother knot" that had bound her emotionally
since childhood.
The book's
searing climactic scene of a symbolic reverse childbirth tragic,
comic, appalling, and touching is too complex, too literate, to
be pinned with the facile label of "closure," though that
surely describes the outcome for which the author and her long-suffering
therapists devoutly wished.
--------------------------------
USA TODAY
When acute
asthma struck the 10-year-old middle child of Kathryn Harrison,
the author fell into a "black hole" of depression.
As she descended
into a seemingly inescapable pit of despair of anorexia and guilt,
Harrison found that she must make peace with her own deceased mother,
whom she refers to as a "dybbuk or dervish, twisting out of
my chest, a force of corruption that sprang from me and infected
my son, choked and smothered him."
In this unsettling
account, Harrison, author of the memoir The Kiss, the essay collection
Seeking Rapture and several novels, shows in almost uncomfortably
naked prose how thin the line is between sanity and madness.
Mental anguish
was not new to Harrison. She already was sneaking a half-milligram
of "stale Xanax" at night, a leftover prescription from
four years earlier, when she was hospitalized for depression. But
at the heart of this new attack of depression is an open sore between
the writer and her mother, who left Harrison with her grandparents
when she was 6. Her mother once told her the reason for her birth
was to act as a "surrogate, a new daughter for her mother to
manipulate, so that she herself could slip away."
Later, as Harrison's
mother dies of cancer in her early 40s, she predicts to her daughter,
"After I'm dead, you're going to be very angry with me."
While juggling her family's needs with a worsening state of mind,
Harrison starves her body to such a dangerous level that her internist
tells her that if she loses 3 more pounds, he will have her hospitalized
and force-fed.
What rescues
Harrison is ritual. With her husband's blessing, she has her mother's
body disinterred and then cremated. "I'm not so much having
my mother dug out of the ground as I am exhuming her from my own
body," Harrison tells her analyst. On a blustery March day,
Harrison takes the ashes to a Long Island beach, where she walks
out into the freezing water to let go of her mother.
The scene,
which alternates between flashbacks and the present, reads with
the emotion of poetry. "When the waves reached the middle of
my thighs, enough of me immersed that I could claim to be in the
sea with her." Whether this moving ceremony allows Harrison
to return to a peaceful state of mind is unknown. Indeed, more questions
than answers remain at the end of this 82-page book.
Is her son
recovering? Was this depression only a case of unfinished mother-daughter
business?
As the book
ends, Harrison watches her mother's ashes spread across the sea.
But has Harrison finally let her go?
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