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The Making of Her

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Chosen as one of New York Post's Best Books of 2022
People were forever telling her how lucky she was. But what did people know?
Dublin 1966. When Joan Quinn, a factory girl from the Cranmore Estate, marries Martin Egan, it looks like her dreams have come true. But Joan lives in the shadow of a secret – the couple’s decision to give up their first daughter for adoption only months before.
Then one day in 1996, a letter arrives from their eldest daughter. Emma needs her birth parents’ help; it’s a matter of life and death. And the fragile facade of Joan’s life finally begins to crack.
 
Spanning the nineties and the sixties, with Dublin as its backdrop, The Making of Her is the tender and page-turning story of marriage, motherhood, a culture that would not allow a woman to find true happiness—and her journey to finally claim it.
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    • Books+Publishing

      April 5, 2022
      The Making of Her is a historical family drama that immediately conjures the sense of a time not so long ago. Spanning the 1960s to the 1990s, this cross between Jodi Picoult and Monica McInerney examines the decisions of several women across generations and asks readers to imagine what they themselves might do if faced with an impossible choice. Joan, the perfect housewife, grew up in poverty and couldn’t believe her luck when heir Martin Egan noticed her. Thirty years on, their carefully constructed life is distant, cold and full of secrets. When a letter from Emma, the baby they adopted out, suddenly arrives, Joan is thrilled and Martin is alarmed. But Emma has her own reasons for making contact, and her appearance threatens to shatter everything Joan and Martin have built. The Making of Her unravels Joan’s story and those of her daughters: Emma, the one she lost, and Carmel, the one she couldn’t connect with. While the shifts in perspective sometimes get muddled and the ending feels a little pat, Bernadette Jiwa’s novel is full of empathy and deep understanding for the lack of opportunities for women in an earlier time. Full of the pain of heartbreaking choices and the weight of secrets and how they reverberate through time, The Making of Her is an evocative and engaging story about the ways a family can come apart—and the ways it can be mended. Fay Helfenbaum is a freelance writer and editor and was a bookseller for five years.

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