Synopses & Reviews
After years of futon passion, Hemingway discussions, and three-mile runs, Jill Talbots relationship with a man carved in her doubts so deep she wrote to ignore them. And even though he was as unwilling to commit to a place or a job as Talbot was to marrying him, he insisted that she keep the baby when a pregnancy surprised them during their fourth year together. As it turned out, Kenny wasn't able to commit to a child either, so when the court ordered visitation and support for their four-month-old daughter, he vanished. His disappearing act was the catalyst for Talbots own, as she moved her daughter through nine states in as many yearsrunning from the memory of their failed relationship and the hope of an impossible reunion, all the while raising a daughter on her own. Then, one day while packing boxes, she found a photograph that changed everything.
In this memoir-in-essays, Talbot attempts to set the record straight, even as she argues that our shared histories are merely competing stories we choose to tell ourselves. A bold look at the challenges of love and the struggles of a single mother in America today, The Way We Weren't tells a complex, unforgettable story of loss and leaving, and of how Talbot learned that writing can't bring anything back, but that because of it, nothing is ever really lost.
Review
"A magnetic pull sets in while reading
The Way We Werent, a sinking into the authors state of heart and mind, a compulsion to keep turning the pages. The memoirs allure is a testament to Jill Talbots formidable talent."
The Boston GlobeTo say that Jill Talbot steps into the controversial borderlands between fiction and non fiction with The Way We Weren't is a vast understatement. It is more like she plunges into them off the fifty-meter springboard, doing three somersaults and a half gainer on the way down. This gut wrenching tale of abandonment (though it is never perfect clear who was the abandoner, who the abandonee) makes us ask giant, soul-bending questions, like Does anyone ever know anyone? and Are we always the creators of our own misery? A brave story of one woman's fight to survive, most of all, her own proclivities.” Pam Houston, author of Contents May Have Shifted
"White-knuckled on the steering wheel, Talbot drives her readers headlong into the fray of her own past. Powerful, effective, and relentless, Talbot reminds us that life is always half-highway and half-dirt road, that our experiencesno matter how universaldemand we pave the way ourselves." B.J. Hollars, author of Dispatches from the Drownings