This Is Your Mother
A Memoir
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Named a Best Memoir of 2025 (So Far) by BookPage and Real Simple * “A beautiful story about an extraordinary mother’s gift of love and hope.” —Jeannette Walls, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Glass Castle * “Candid...Heartbreaking...Illuminating.” —Oprah Daily
From “a writer who’s absolutely going places” (Roxane Gay), a “bewitching...innovative” (Publishers Weekly, starred review) debut memoir about a mother-daughter relationship across cycles of poverty, separation, and illness, exploring how we forge identity in the face of imminent loss.
When Erika Simpson was growing up, her mother loomed large, almost biblical in her life. A daughter of sharecroppers, middle child of ten, her origin story served as a Genesis. Her departure from home and a cheating husband, pursuing higher education along the way a kind of Exodus. Her rules for survival, often repeated like the Ten Commandments, guided Erika’s own journey into adulthood. And the most important rule? Throughout her life, Sallie Carol preached the power of a testimony—which often proved useful in talking her way out of a bind with bill collectors.
But where does a mother’s story end and a daughter’s begin? In this brave, illuminating memoir, Erika offers a joint recollection of their lives as they navigate the realities of destitution often left undiscussed. Her mother’s uncanny ability to endure Job-like trials and manifest New Testament–style miracles made her seem invincible. But while our parents may start out as gods in our lives, through her mother’s final months and fifth battle with cancer, Erika captures the moment you realize they are just people.
This gorgeously rendered story of a mother’s life through her daughter’s eyes weaves together a dual timeline, pulling inspiration from both scripture and pop culture as Erika moves through grief to a place of clarity where she can see who she is without her mom—and because of her.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A daughter's long-distance deathwatch animates Simpson's bewitching debut, which unfolds on two parallel tracks. One follows an adult Simpson as she agonizes over whether to leave Chicago and visit her mother, Sallie Carol, as she's dying in Georgia. The other paints a colorful portrait of Sallie, the larger-than-life matriarch who oversaw Simpson's financially unstable childhood. A daughter of sharecroppers, Sallie survived a cheating husband and cancers of the brain, breasts, and ovaries while raising Simpson and her sister on a science teacher's salary. Though Sallie was a devout Christian, she was also a hustler: she skipped rent, wrote bad checks, and stiffed restaurants, cab drivers, and baggage handlers, always relying on her conviction that people "could be swayed by the grace of God to help us survive." Simpson enlivens the often bleak proceedings with innovative narrative techniques: she writes exclusively in the present tense, frames some of Sallie's most outrageous antics as a sitcom script, and signposts the account with chapter and verse quotes from the imaginary "Book of Sallie Carol" ("2:6: Conceal what's real"). Readers will be wowed.