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About This Book
ISBN13: 9780060528492 |
Synopses & Reviews
Publisher Comments:
In her previous books, celebrated author Kim McLarin skillfully examined issues of race and love. Jump at the Sun is her stunning third novel in which she addresses the same complicated subjects, as well as gender, class, and motherhood.
Grace Jefferson is an educated and accomplished modern woman, a child of the Civil Rights dream, and she knows it well. But after a series of rattling personal transitions, she finds herself in a new house in a new city and in a new career for which she feels dangerously unsuited: a stay-at-home mom. Caught between the only two models of mothering she has ever known — a sharecropping grandmother who abandoned her children to save herself and a mother who sacrificed all to save her kids — Grace struggles to embrace her new role, hoping to find a middle ground. But as the days pass and the pressures mount, Grace begins to catch herself in small acts of abandonment — speeding up on neighborhood walks, closing doors with the children on one side and her on the other — that she fears may foretell a future she is powerless to prevent. Or perhaps it's a future she secretly seeks.
Jump at the Sun is a novel about an isolating suburban life and the continuing legacy of slavery, about generational change and the price of living the dream for which our parents fought. Primarily it is a novel about motherhood, and not a sentimental one. As Grace struggles not to damage her children with her own fears and complications, her thoughts stray far from the greeting-card picture often expected of mothers in society today. In her bold and fearless voice McLarin explores both the highs and the lows of being a mother and how breaking the cycle of suffocation and regret is infuriatingly difficult, and absolutely necessary.
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Linera, January 5, 2007 (view all comments by Linera)
I just finished reading Kim McLarin's newest novel, Jump at the Sun. There isn't a sentimental moment in it, though the topic is one prone to the worst excesses of squishy thinking, for Jump at the Sun is about mothers and daughters, motherhood, and what,if any, are the boundaries of familial duty.
This is a compelling, unflinching read. And now that I've said that, I'm sure you will never want to pick up the book. And that would be a pity, as it is a darn good read, a real page-turner. But the word "unflinching" I can hear you mutter, this scares me. Yup. Real discusions of what it means to be a mother, those are rare, and they are not all sweetness and light.
What I find so amazing and powerful is that McLarin asks the hardest questions about this subject. And there are no easy answers. That she does this, and comes up with a novel with characters who make me ache for them, that is the mystery of good writing.
Product Details
- ISBN:
- 9780060528492
- Author:
- Publisher:
- William Morrow & Company
- Author:
- Author:
- Subject:
- General
- Subject:
- Race relations
- Subject:
- Mothers and daughters
- Subject:
- General Fiction
- Publication Date:
- July 2006
- Binding:
- Hardcover
- Grade Level:
- General/trade
- Language:
- English
- Pages:
- 306
- Dimensions:
- 9.26x6.24x1.07 in. 1.26 lbs.











