The Nearly Departed: Or, My Family & Other Foreigners
by
Brenda Cullerton
Order:
USA
Can
Little, Brown & Co., 2003 (2003)
Hardcover
Read an Excerpt
Reviewed by Mary Ann Smyth
T
he Nearly Departed
starts like a comedic play that one might see Off-Broadway - a tongue-in-cheek depiction of an extremely dysfunctional family, written by a highly imaginative playwright. After the first few pages, though, one realizes with horror that this is the true story of the author's family. A mother who wears bras and baggy black underpants to do her gardening, her outfit embellished with pop-it beads and foam curlers. A father who spends his last years in a wee house built on the grounds of the family home. Cullerton's mother would visit her father by backing the car the few hundred feet it took to reach that wee house.
E
arly in life, the author left home to distance herself from this family, which included a younger brother and sister. She traveled to inaccessible spots all over the world, possibly seeking the family and home she thought she really didn't have. Because of her parents' last illnesses, Cullerton returns home to find that the love she had been seeking was there all the time. This is a heart-wrenching book, though full of really funny anecdotes about the parents. As the author begins to understand why her mother and father lived and acted the way they did, she begins to understand herself.
B
renda Cullerton has written from the heart.
The Nearly Departed
makes it remarkably evident that the sins of the father are visited upon the children and the grandchildren. It's worth the read.
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