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Paperback The Violent Child Book

ISBN: 1579620353

ISBN13: 9781579620356

The Violent Child

Teddie Durban is a college English professor who visits his elderly mother, Lorraine, at her inner-city apartment. Cigarettes and alcohol have stolen the health of the bony, blue-haired woman, yet Teddie glimpses the two-fisted young steelworker beneath the sagging skin and bloated belly -- the alley fighter, the body puncher, a woman fully able to bully life into a corner, then apply fists, feet, and teeth.Teddie and Lorraine spend the evening drinking and vying to tell the story of their youth -- mother and child -- as they struggled to survive the blue-collar poverty, alcoholism, and violence of a 1950's steel town. As in all their visits, they hope to stretch one another out, to see how much truth we can stand from one another before they exhaust the generosity of bourbon. But, if the two share a common history, they have long passed the place where they share common language and symbols. For a young Teddie had ultimately turned from his mother's care, fleeing to the security of his grandparents' home, where he was encouraged to escape the adversity of a working-class life through their gentle guidance and insistence upon the importance of education.The Violent Child portrays the life of a tenacious woman who struggled to make a home for her son, to nurture the disabled daughter of her lover, and to embrace the gift of an unexpected, unconventional love. It is the story of a son who finds himself, at the end of his mother's life, with a final opportunity for reconciliation.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

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We receive fewer than 1 copy every 6 months.

Related Subjects

Fiction Literature & Fiction

Customer Reviews

1 rating

An Excellent Novel

The Violent Child is a beautifully written novel which explores relationships between generations and classes, perception, and the nature of reconciliation and forgiveness. The well developed characters drew me in immediately, from feisty Lorraine, to the intellectual and introspective adult Teddy. I wish the novel could have been longer, so I could have seen more of all the other characters, who, no matter how small their part, jumped off of the page for me. One of the things that I enjoyed was that the author allowed the action of the characters to unfold the story before me, instead of summarizing already described events for me, as I have been disappointed to find in some novels. There is a wonderful contrast between the language used by the various characters, and also between the young and the adult Teddy, which also serves to mark Teddy's transition to a different way of life in his adult years. While I achieved a deeper understanding of the characters and themes with a more careful second reading, I think the novel can be enjoyed on many different levels.
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