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The Other Mother: A wickedly honest parenting tale for every kind of family

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As you would expect from a comedian, Brister writes with wit and peppers her narrative with funny episodes. Her tone is honest and open, inviting the reader to empathise and engage with her and her situations. I particularly enjoyed the times when she wrote about being a non-biological parent - the careless assumptions of others, her feelings as she bonded with her sons, the way she viewed her partner as a mother - as these made the book original and heartwarming. I did enjoy Brister’s snide comments on preachy parents and mumfluencers- as an absolute cynic, I’m here for that! This book brings up the lengths that people go to for the people they love, and how while actions may be rooted in good intentions, they don't always end up well. Each of the characters in the story have love in their heart, even if it doesn't necessarily show. And I have to admit, that this was one of the best portrayals of addiction recovery that I've ever seen. It touches on some heavy issues, such as homophobia, estrangement, death, and grief, but it's done in an extraordinarily sensitive way.

book ending Did Coraline really escape? Fan theory, movie and book ending

If Coraline loses she'll stay in the other world forever and be the other mother's daughter. But if Coraline wins, the other mother has to let Coraline, her parents, and the other three children go. Coraline meets three ghost children when she is pushed into a tiny room after an argument with the Other Mother. As it turns out, The Other Mother has captured the souls of the ghost children and has left them to wander around in the parallel universe, lost. The first ghost child is a subdued young girl while the second one is a relatively bold and outspoken ghost boy. The last ghost girl is a fairy girl who seems very much like Coraline. All three of them warn Coraline of the dangers ahead and help her defeat The Other Mother in various ways. Ultimately, the souls of the ghost children are set free through Coraline’s dedicated efforts and the three children wander off into the universe. You've put her quite out of sorts. And when she gets out of sorts, she takes it out on everybody else. It's her way." The Other Father I felt so strongly connected to all the characters even when I didn't agree with what they were doing.God, the fact that Micheal and his mom both cared so much about each other that they hid vital information about his father's death. If you need me I'll be sobbing face down on the floor The Other Mother is about family and coping with death, learning to speak about the subjects we're afraid to speak about but should discuss, and that living is never easy, especially when you lose someone you love. Both Laurel and Daphne's husbands seem unhelpful and unsupportive given Laurel and Daphne's unstable conditions. Both of them engage in somewhat suspicious behaviors, but it is unclear what their motivations are. Daphne ends up running away from her husband with baby Chloe in tow because she feels threatened by her husband. I can't say much more without giving away the plot. When Jenry Castillo shows up at Brown University to his estranged Grandfathers office, he has questions regarding his diseased father whom he never knew.

The Other Mother by Matthew Dicks | Goodreads

Coraline essays are academic essays for citation. These papers were written primarily by students and provide critical analysis of Coraline by Neil Gaiman. At one point, I was hoping it would take a Neil Gaiman-esque turn because surely the mystery in the yellow envelope couldn’t be solved with the most obvious solution. But guess what Dear reader? It was.Of course you don’t understand,” she said, raising the stone with the hole in it to her eye. “You’re just a bad copy she made of the crazy old man upstairs.” This began as an intriguing look into the dynamics of same-sex parenthood, looking at how it can feel to be the parent who’s not pregnant or who didn’t bring the kids into the world. I found the honesty around Brister’s relationship to feel like fresh air, and she didn’t hide from sharing everything, even things which may not have been flattering but were real. Comedian Jen Brister writes about her personal experience of motherhood from the time she and her partner Chloe decide to have children, through the birth of their twin sons and those early sleepless nights, up to the boys reaching four years old. She shares the highs and lows of that time, the expectations of others and also her own misguided expectations, and how what she has learned in that time has shaped her current perspective. The Other Mother" follows 13 year old Michael Parsons. He's dealing with the fallout from his father's death two years earlier. He is also responsible for his younger sister and brother and has to go and collect money owed his stepfather Glen. Michael also has to meet with the school therapist as well. When Michael wakes up one day though he realizes that his mother is not his mother anymore. Instead his mother has been replaced by someone else, the 'other mother' and Michael plans on doing what he can to make sure that he tells him where his mother is so he can save her. I expected this book to focus on the perspective of being the non-bio mom. It did speak from this perspective, but 90% of the book was the story of having twins and the stages of their life from conception through the toddler years and the antics that happen, the advice you get, etc.

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