Traveling with Pomegranates
A Mother-Daughter Story
By Sue Monk Kidd; Ann Kidd Taylor
(Viking Adult, Hardcover, 9780670021208, 304pp.)
Publication Date: September 8, 2009
Other Editions of This Title: Compact Disc, Hardcover, Paperback
Categories: Personal Memoirs
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Selected by Indie Booksellers for the September 2009 Indie Next ListAn introspective and beautiful dual memoir by the #1 New York Times bestselling novelist and her daughter
Sue Monk Kidd has touched millions of readers with her novels The Secret Life of Bees and The Mermaid Chair and with her acclaimed nonfiction. In this intimate dual memoir, she and her daughter, Ann, offer distinct perspectives as a fifty-something and a twenty-something, each on a quest to redefine herself and to rediscover each other.
Between 1998 and 2000, Sue and Ann travel throughout Greece and France. Sue, coming to grips with aging, caught in a creative vacuum, longing to reconnect with her grown daughter, struggles to enlarge a vision of swarming bees into a novel. Ann, just graduated from college, heartbroken and benumbed by the classic question about what to do with her life, grapples with a painful depression. As this modern-day Demeter and Persephone chronicle the richly symbolic and personal meaning of an array of inspiring figures and sites, they also each give voice to that most protean of connections: the bond of mother and daughter.
A wise and involving book about feminine thresholds, spiritual growth, and renewal, Traveling with Pomegranates is both a revealing self-portrait by a beloved author and her daughter, a writer in the making, and a momentous story that will resonate with women everywhere.
A Mother-Daughter Story: A reflection on trips to Greece and France, Pomegranates goes back 11 years, when Sue Monk Kidd, then 50, was contemplating trying fiction for the first time, the seed for her blockbuster novel The Secret Life of Bees starting to germinate. Ann Kidd Taylor had just graduated college, suffering from depression with no clear picture for her life.
“A touching rapprochement between mother and daughter.”—Kirkus Reviews
“A return trip in 2000 finds both women changed, and a 2008 afterword rounds out this stunning account of inner journeys, separate and intertwined.”—Booklist
“Read this one as a memoir, a travelogue and as a self-renewal book”—Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

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