When Nerea's mother Luisa is
suddenly struck by amnesia, the graveness of the situation puts Nerea in stress,
burdened with guilt and fear of losing her mother's memory forever. The
photographs from Nerea's childhood bring back memories of the lives they
shared, but now she feels it is parting away. Luisa is in hospital bed, and she
doesn't recognize her daughter or son, and of little she speaks Nerea has no
way to connect what she means. Nerea belatedly calls her aunt Dolores in
Germany to let her know about her sister, feeling helpless. After all, she was
the one who has known Luisa in the best way. Aunt's visit and Luisa's reaction
thereafter hints a long forgotten episode of their lives which Luisa never
shared with her children.
Nerea is torn between her job as
a journalist, the guilt of not taking seriously her mother's early symptoms,
her role as a wife and mother which has now seemed to her out of balance and
her mother's condition. It is hard for her to cope with this status, and she
sees no way out, until her reluctant aunt shares the story of Luisa's past. In
the meantime, Nerea has her own trouble dealing with a faded memory1
and now sudden appearance of an individual from the past has made her further
restless. We see, Nerea and Luisa bearing almost the same fate of being haunted
by lost love and longing. The culmination of the novel is Nerea and Luisa
trying a way out, to help her mother recover her memory or at least her deeply
buried wish be fulfilled. Within this escape, Nerea too finds her way back into
the life, refilled with courage.
1. "We
repaint ourselves endlessly, putting one event on top of another, forgetting the
one underneath or thinking we've forgotten. But one day we take a hit,"
There are so many stories that
are unspoken of2, and the motherhood bears it all, embraces the
new way to find and furnish happiness in many lives. But something stays, as a
part of our identity, only to be realized by few who experience the same or have
the need to know. The dramatic appeal of the conversations or
images/photographs in the novel captures the tense ambience where memory and
love dominates all in existence.
2. The
things that are not said earlier cannot always be said later, and one cannot
give after death hugs that were left ungiven in life.
Senses and dreams revolve around
questions people try to solve in their lives. The liveliness can suddenly be
turned into an unexpected loss, and in this horror of being forgotten Nerea
struggles to help her mother, and tries to relive the life her mother and aunt
lived. The story suggests, we try to keep the tragedies to ourselves, as if
they are our personality, but the fear of being left alone also torments us. The
fate and the choices — Nerea tries to clear this fog, and attempts to make the
best of what's left to her. The references in the Her Mother's Hands also point to the need
to be daring, to seek for the second chance. The novel's subtlety is in its
meaning that life is divided into precious moments and we have little time to
appreciate or be nostalgic except for to live it with courage.
Author: Karmele Jaio
Translator: Kristin Addis
Publisher: Parthian Books
Page Count: 122
Price: $ 11.99
Photo Credit: https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karmele_Jaio
Review Copy Courtesy: Parthian Books
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