Ten Most Memorable Moms in New Fiction
What better time of year than Mother’s Day to showcase some of the most memorable fictional mothers in some of the best new novels? From loving, supportive mothers to complex, trailblazing mothers to selfish, vindictive mothers, this list has it all!
1) The Perfect Son by Barbara Claypole White (Lake Union, July 2015)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5qtg4I_2jVZSohBjEIGmjcUEIrzFH3iL6pcD5rEHfpXSXGICOGk192blXGsjm8d7Gj6ih12CgUQY1C57u4RyfNc44SSBegmS4nQowr_lv02mJC3l4JhlT3UJSvKJcLuArS0VNUgTZ/s1600/the+perfect+son.jpg)
Ella Fitzwilliam, the mom in THE PERFECT SON, quit a successful career in jewelry design to be full-time parent, mental health coach, and advocate for her son, Harry, who has a soup of issues that include Tourette syndrome. She has devoted 17 years of her life to his therapy, to educating teachers, to being Harry’s emotional rock and giving him the confidence he needs to be Harry. Thanks to her, Harry is comfortable in his own skin, even when people stare. After Ella has a major heart attack in the opening chapter, her love for Harry tethers her to life. But as she recovers, she discovers the hardest parenting lesson of all: to let go.
2) Rodin’s Lover by Heather Webb (Plume, January 2015)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiFSKzQdksIFRa4KqSzzmnvoO-d8vK-jMFBkMR6IdRGPXHoUsh9oK7Z0fnNRXZuOjSDNwWhi35AQPikXJBnczgv-ToweDNkRIG-W6eUWouI31oCz-lfQaUw4RLQREBJu6bCEF_dl5tg/s1600/robin's%2Blover.jpg)
In RODIN’S LOVER, Camille’s mother, Louise Claudel, is spiteful, jealous, and disapproving of Camille’s pursuit to become a female sculptor in the 1880s. She also shows signs of mental illness. Because of this relationship, Camille struggles with all of her female relationships the rest of her life, and ultimately, to prove to her mother that she’s truly talented.
3) Imaginary Things by Andrea Lochen (Astor + Blue Editions, April 2015)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdW3vtXvVGO4cwEDsTbe8c3N8ddLUrnT-3MWx3_TS88JRBY6Yh2mkjwIGLj51wo_DdnU-0RnI30cs-vn_yGCh5atO20tngCFv0yggfwCRMbpH5vKuSOjH-z7MieBEcd2JG4jWBWWWW/s1600/imaginary+things.jpg)
In IMAGINARY THINGS, young single mother Anna Jennings has a unique power that most parents only dream of—the ability to see her four-year-old son’s imagination come to life. But when David’s imaginary friends turn dark and threatening, Anna must learn the rules of this bizarre phenomenon, what his friends truly represent, and how best to protect him.
4) The Magician’s Lie by Greer Macallister (Sourcebooks, January 2015)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEijdeQHsAfKg-rp54Feo9dXsqv2-3FM5ouo6mk-BP2Kbh32YVRAKvjwN_FeACiIPWtFaB8vf90mhh-KhyS2lT6LKaFw0XbVFsR5qWWFhHp3fwOPjV8dcLQ1TrWgDyZFNZas2nva9Oj-/s1600/magician's%2Blie.jpg)
In THE MAGICIAN'S LIE, Arden's mother is remarkable both for what she does and what she doesn't do. As a young woman, she bears a child out of wedlock and runs away with her music teacher, never fearing the consequences. But later in life, her nerve fails her—just when her daughter needs her most.
5) Five Days Left by Julie Lawson Timmer (Putnam, 2014)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNi6boZ2SaBHkI7IV6ikMAgh8UqxoTgkBetJ9PrUf898PX3R-Z5Lkct1wlfM8_2R8H8I7BKTCZNV6QyJlg3w361W40EGUTMMmEgqiRO6VpRL9RbLA1uQD7X_njqkdOH_tSwuo4OP8A/s1600/20821084.jpg)
In FIVE DAYS LEFT, Mara Nichols is, in some ways, a typical mother: she loves her daughter fiercely, thinks about her constantly and goes to great lengths to balance her high-stress legal career with her daughter’s needs. But there are two ways in which Mara isn't typical at all. First, she adopted her daughter from India, making good on a lifelong promise to rescue a baby from the same orphanage where Mara herself lived decades ago. And second, when Mara is diagnosed with a fatal, incurable illness that will render her unable to walk, talk or even feed herself, she has to make the kind of parenting choice none of us wants to consider—would my child be better off if I were no longer alive?
6) House Broken by Sonja Yoerg (Penguin/NAL, January 2015)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjmoUjeoKIl0GZ9y2f2-HXiWQd0e0f51yFhgmnUU2WjUWuXD9cFdf70-01pSnLNHl9XN0wfvRnJlAo1drV91-feci4N2kzVi6HVB7o1VXWKqwMx1PUfJSJLSiRkdmk3hWlX-U-cJNMH/s1600/House+Broken+cover.jpg)
In HOUSE BROKEN, Helen Riley has a habit of leaving her grown children to cope with her vodka-fueled disasters. She has her reasons, but they’re buried deep, and stem from secrets too painful to remember and, perhaps, too terrible to forgive.
7) You Were Meant for Me by Yona Zeldis McDonough (Penguin/NAL, 2014)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWyEo5C2erU-sGnaWiSs_J614-49EX2gHSLFsCH1ns9rNBwSFHbOdgWCOe0rdDnAgo4VFRQyZZEwBfE4ZQeXMfM21U9F9x80tY_0577wholjA8MDK0izdTkeTKSJWmAZcyuXxgU4sh/s1600/you_were_meant_400-1-200x300.jpg)
8) The Far End of Happy by Kathryn Craft (Sourcebooks Landmark, May 2015)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3ipZBh5u_JXJuGkdQUYXIW5sUuTX2AM_-eO8jaRPJJmI4UdOl-Fd-DrsPkY_1ea2FMeAzzI6-e8lIAX-R2UpoEY_C2q3rK9pLWCANEX3fzWwEl31y7fv8zB8ws0j8RqFcONV0gBef/s1600/the+far+end+of+happy.jpg)
9) Your Perfect Life by Liz Fenton and Lisa Steinke (Washington Square Press, 2014)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEht9nsE3OMtXg8i4lMOaWQApd66OLNHnljXm6mj5_nAMHhWg6n3QcWTB8s19ORMEtX33QzxD_qHpsoL3WfE35w1c708x-2XtKlegvk4w-fefcy6YNSMBP_gbGL81ygZdvJRbp1RyVIf/s1600/18443302.jpg)
10) The Life List by Lori Nelson Spielman (Bantam, 2013)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKEfiOoHfUwXmhYhHpeu39Vag7bxmpWpFQPGt-MfTRnJdyMCbcTwLZemgtc6OcC0dYVB91kue01k6fKl9WG4QGCL7dMvRKgXDSRrsp9nI2KBf7EuaWO0G4Zsy611pi-Gza0r5Yx81I/s1600/IMG_1747+(3).jpg)
Elizabeth Bohlinger, the mother in THE LIFE LIST, is actually deceased. But she still has a big presence in her daughter's life—some may say too big! With heartfelt letters, Elizabeth guides her daughter, Brett, on a journey to complete the life list of wishes Brett made when she was just a teen. Like many mothers, Elizabeth has an uncanny ability to see into her daughter's heart, exposing buried desires Brett has long forgotten.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjGyeF0IhR1oMGq7fus4RzZlCO6xQiREfOX4DgVfoimX18DEW_Rt3Mz0OaWgQbm-NGfFYtiGb3dMPrsQJ9Civ1PpjlGelj-uizacfqGBFVL656b4wgcibpEC1kwKxrlnJJhWrpDpcNb/s1600/andrea-lochen-author.jpg)
Buy a copy of Imaginary Things by Andrea Lochen
Publisher: http://bit.ly/1HJ3VW9
Amazon: http://amzn.to/1FOikjL
This looks like a great list of books; some I've read, a couple are sitting in my TBR waiting to be read, and the rest I definitely need to check out. Happy Mother's Day!
ReplyDelete