Content Warning taken from novel:
“CONTENT WARNING-
This story is intended for mature audiences. This story contains situations that some readers may find objectionable, including childbirth, miscarriage, postpartum depression, accidental death/disaster (on and off-page), and mention of sexual assault on a minor (brief, mostly implied, or off-page).”
It was easy to fall into the plotline and texture of characters in Karen Heenan’s novel, “Coming Apart.” With a fluid style of writing there was a seamless transition into the narrative, as if I was observing a textual train-of-thought without having to become adjusted to Heenan’s words.
Set during The Great Depression, Coming Apart is written in a three-book series that humanely traces the varying lives of two sisters, Ava and Claire. Coming Closer, Coming Together and Coming Apart bring the reader into Ava’s working-class life of childbearing, motherhood and poverty in juxtaposition to Claire’s existence of luxury in wealth having escaped the mining town of a pre-disposed childhood to a businessman in Philadelphia. Heenan does not project onto the plot and let’s these two women exist as their situations would contour naturally in accessible character arcs. Despite struggling, Ava loves her children. Despite riches and a life of ease, Claire strives to fill the void of infertility. Pushed to the edges of hard decisions, both women illuminate the virtues of a sisterly bond that levels the narrative in equilibrium. Both women hold family together while appearing to fray and tear at the seams of obligation, sacrifice and perseverance through pain.
Having escaped a life confined to a cubicle, Karen Heenan is the author of various titles. Pursuing her passion of history, Heenan’s first series, The Tudor Court pertains to an interest in British History. The Coming Apart series exemplifies her personal ties to the Philadelphia area and her interest in life within her locality during the 1930s. In fact, the woman and child in the photograph on the cover is Heenan's great aunt and uncle. She resides in Lansdowne, PA with her husband.
Firmly rooted in character realities, Coming Apart depicts hardship and triumph moved along simply in the progression of enduring harsh environments. The main characters are round and do not present as flat when they need to carry depth that makes the reader become invested in the outcome of their wellbeing. Further, that they exist beyond possible preconceptions and biases that the reader could bring to the story. Claire is not unkind, but pushes through estrangement to care for her family. The reader can sympathize with the void she is in turmoil over, ‘feeling useless,’ a barren wasteland in a world that could cultivate a prosperous future for her family, idle and bored, she knows society perceived her as ‘just pretty,’ and not expected to accomplish more. Her husband, Harry, remains a fixed model of example of balanced masculinity in loving his wife despite the incapacity to bear children and despite her impoverished childhood. Each miscarriage the couple endures, the reader is shown Harry weeping and feeling helpless that he cannot protect the psyche of his wife and fabric of her emotional state. Harry genuinely loves Claire’s family.
Ava is the remaining matriarch of the family after the passing of her mother at the beginning of the novel. Ava has been raised in the aura of her mother. “Mama taught me how to be a mother. How to be a miner's wife, too. I have her lessons in my bones, and one of them is that with small children to care for, and a husband whose employer demands sixty hours each week, sadness is a luxury I can't afford.” So, with the pressure of her role as the glue holding family together, Ava perseveres through post-partum, death, the hard decision to give up her youngest son, the rape of her daughter and even cardboard lining the soles of her shoes, she endures.
The plot moves steadily and in rooting for the characters, there is triumph for Ava in the end with her talent as a dress-maker and Claire in bringing the family closer in helping raise her nephew and pushing to help care for the medical needs of her niece.
Coming Apart is a coming together and coming closer, as family, as strong women in hard times.
Thank you to Karen Heenan for the complimentary copy in request for an honest review!