As the child of a mother whose parents both died when she was a child, I was drawn to "Always There, Always Gone" from the start. When you grow up with such secrets in your life, with a mother whose entire being is altered by childhood trauma, which inevitably makes its way into your own life, there is never a moment when you don't wonder if you can get to the core of the story.
Marty Ross-Dolen tells the story of her journey to figure out her family history and her mother's heart (as well as her own) in a beautiful, complex, hybrid memoir, one that braids together letters, pictures and the author's gorgeous writing. It is memoir as quest, memoir as soul search, memoir as the path to the answers. In short, spare chapters which are really discrete observations about myriad things, large and small, that take the reader down a path that toggles back and forth in time, the three generations of women -- the author, her mother and her grandmother -- come to life, helping the reader, along with the author, tie the many intricate pieces together. In the end, there is some closure, although anyone who lives with family secrets and pain knows well that that the story, and the quest for more information, will continue.
"Always There, Always Gone" is a beautiful read, with gorgeous imagery and a light into a multi-generational story of love and perseverance that is both relatable and revelatory.