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Are You My Mother?: A Comic Drama

Front Cover
32 Reviews
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Trade & Reference Publishers, 2012 - Art - 286 pages
Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home was a pop culture and literary phenomenon. Now, a second thrilling tale of filial sleuthery, this time about her mother: voracious reader, music lover, passionate amateur actor. Also a woman, unhappily married to a closeted gay man, whose artistic aspirations simmered under the surface of Bechdel's childhood . . . and who stopped touching or kissing her daughter good night, forever, when she was seven. Poignantly, hilariously, Bechdel embarks on a quest for answers concerning the mother-daughter gulf. It's a richly layered search that leads readers from the fascinating life and work of the iconic twentieth-century psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, to one explosively illuminating Dr. Seuss illustration, to Bechdel’s own (serially monogamous) adult love life. And, finally, back to Mother—to a truce, fragile and real-time, that will move and astonish all adult children of gifted mothers.

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Review: Are You My Mother?

User Review  - Stefanie - Goodreads

Alison Bechdel's, Are You My Mother, embodies the best of what memoir writing is - reflective, stark, unapologetic. The graphic novel format loans itself to memory, dreams, and literal framing of the ... Read full review

Review: Are You My Mother?

User Review  - Sara - Goodreads

This book is deep. I think if one were to actually step inside Alison Bechdel's mind for any length of time your path would be littered with steep, spiky stones and your feet would be constantly mired ... Read full review

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About the author (2012)

ALISON BECHDEL has been a careful archivist of her own life and kept a journal since she was ten. Since 1983 she has been chronicling the lives of various characters in the fictionalized “Dykes to Watch Out For” strip, “one of the preeminent oeuvres in the comics genre, period” (Ms.). The strip is syndicated in 50 alternative newspapers, translated into multiple languages, and collected into a book series with a quarter of a million copies in print. Utne magazine has listed DTWOF as “one of the greatest hits of the twentieth century.”