Circumspect
Everything My Mother Taught Me (Inheritance Collection #1) is a poignant story of a mother’s relationship with her daughter, husband, and neighbours. Some women should never be married, some women should never have children, meet Nora Ivie, mother to Adeline. Only a mother that is so narcissistic and devoid of caring for her daughter, could furnish so little love and personal development with her child.
While Nora openly cheated on Adeline’s father, he remained devoted to his family right up to his death when Adeline was twelve. Suddenly as a widow with a child, the male interests subside, “… after all, they had wives of their own.” Adeline decides to stop speaking in response to a remark from her mother, and in memory of her late father.
Adeline and her mother move to a small group of families responsible for the upkeep of two lighthouses on Thacher Island, off Cape Ann. It isn’t too long before Nora has adulterous plans for one of the other married men, and they record in a notebook their amusement at how feckless and unattractive the deceived wife Julie is. Meanwhile, Julie becomes much more maternal towards Adeline and they develop a close bond. Alice Hoffman does a superb job creating the silent witness in Adeline, a young girl who is acutely observant and now driven to feel more obligation towards someone other than her mother. I didn’t feel the characters were fully formed but there is enough to experience the emotional impact of neglect, deceit and loss.
At the outset I considered the title and wondered how a title of such scope could be validated in a short story, but therein lies the moral of the story. What if everything you learnt from your mother was so negligible that your only wish was to be as different as possible. As part of the Inheritance series, it is fascinating how traits or personalities are either impulsively followed or are moulded in a reaction to reprehensible behaviours.
I would recommend reading this book and it is a good addition to the Inheritance Collection from Amazon Original Stories.