Reading this now . . . trying to learn craft techniques from Rosellen Brown, whose stories I always respond well to. The story is the reunion of an upscale, white Houston mom with the (half) black daughter she delivered and then relinquished during the turmoil of the civil rights movement. I teach a class in research writing, based in the 1960s, and so this is especially relevant in light of what I'm always "into" from that decade.
The pacing is thoughtful (read: on the slow side); this is not a "chase" book, but the writing is lovely and the characters are so real. In one powerful scene, the mom, who's taken the newly met daughter up to her New England summer home for a chance to get reacquainted, runs into a summer friend and DOESN"T INTRODUCE HER DAUGHTER AS HER DAUGHTER. You want to hate her, but her flaws are woven with love and regret and a real desire to reach out to her (quite difficult) daughter, and you end up in sympathy.
Another great read from Brown: Before and After. But skip the movie, which was way underdeveloped.