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 amela Marin
was fourteen when her mother died of breast cancer. After keeping
her illness a secret from her daughter, Mildred Marin left her home in
Evanston, Illinois to spend her last months alone and without treatment in
California. When she died, in 1973, her husband buried the family's memories
with her—clearing the house of her belongings, avoiding any mention of her,
never once taking his young daughter to her mother's grave. Before the author
was out of her teens, her father went bankrupt and moved in with his
thirty-years-younger girlfriend. Now in this luminous memoir, written with
rare grace and unflinching honesty, Marin chronicles how she came to reject
her father's dismissal of the past and ultimately to embark on a cross-country
search for traces of the mother she never really knew.
With family and home gone, Marin got to work supporting herself, first as a
waitress in Chicago's northside bars, then as a secretary, and finally as a
journalist, landing a job as a staff writer at a newspaper in Southern
California when she was twenty-seven. Two years later, happily ensconced in a
beach house with the man who would become her husband and the father of her
children, Marin began to dream about the mother who'd been gone for more than
half her life. Those haunting dreams led to the quest at the heart of
Motherland.
Fifteen years after Mildred Marin's death, the author dropped out of her own
life to research her mother's. Using her reporter's skills, Marin traveled to
Tennessee, where her mother was born and reared; to Chicago, where her mother
worked as a commercial artist and met the man she would marry; and back to
California, where Mildred Marin went to die. Along the way, Marin collected
treasured artifacts as well as others' memories of her mother. She confronted
her father about the silence that enshrouded his wife's illness and death,
causing a rift in their relationship that would last until he died a decade
later.
Motherland is a journey shot through with love and pain. It is a story of
loss, discovery, and, ultimately, forgiveness. By coming to terms with her
mother's life, Pamela Marin opened the way for the emotional intimacy she had
craved as a child—and finally found in her own motherhood.



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