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Traveling with Pomegranates

A Mother and Daughter Journey to the Sacred Places of Greece, Turkey, and France

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

In this memoir, #1 New York Times best-selling author Sue Monk Kidd and her daughter Ann hope to overcome personal crises as they wend their way through Greece and France from 1998 to 2000. While Sue grapples with her own mortality, and Ann ponders her uncertain future, each records her inner thoughts and gives voice to their mysterious mother-daughter bond.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      In 1998, Sue Monk Kidd (THE SECRET LIFE OF BEES) and her daughter, Ann Kidd Taylor, make an emotional and spiritual journey of self-discovery through Greece and France. While a bit heavy-handed in ancient symbols and mythical allusions, the work is deeply felt and honestly expressed. The authors narrate in alternate sections. Both Kidd and Taylor have soft, pleasant voices that provide natural readings. Sue, at 50, confronts her womanhood, motherhood, and mortality. Ann, just out of college and a four-year relationship, wrestles with what's ahead and what she really wants. Years later, when the two travel back to Greece and France, revisiting and reflecting, mother and daughter come together in an even deeper, truer connection. S.J.H. (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 22, 2009
      In a probing literary collaboration that moves from Greece to their home in Charleston, S.C., novelist Kidd (The Secret Life of Bees
      ) and her daughter, Taylor, explore and record the changing stages of a woman's life. At 50, Kidd, a wife and mother who had found fulfillment as a writer in recent years, was approaching menopause and anxious about tapping the “green fuse,” or regenerative energy, for the next step in her life. Traveling to Greece with her daughter, Taylor, 22, when the latter graduated from college in 1998, Kidd recognized that her daughter, who had just received a stinging rejection from a graduate school, was also undergoing another kind of wrenching transformation—from child to adult faced with decisions about what to do with her own life. In passages narrated in turn by Kidd and Taylor, the two create a gently affectionate filial dance around the other, in the manner of the fertility myth of Persephone and her mother, Demeter. In travels through Greece, Turkey and later France, Kidd and Taylor found strength and inspiration on their respective journeys in the lives of Athena, the Virgin Mary and Joan of Arc, but mostly through a new understanding and appreciation of each other. Although the “maiden-mother-crone” symbolism grows repetitive and forced, their's is a moving journey.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 26, 2009
      Mother and daughter reconnect in this warm travelogue of a journey through Greece, Turkey and France. Both women are at crucial junctures in their lives (and both rely heavily on a tired Demeter-Persephone analogy for their relationship): Taylor, 22, is entering adulthood after recently graduating from college, and novelist Kidd is turning 50 and hitting menopause. Kidd mispronounces a number of words; Taylor reads with emotion, but her voice rises into an inappropriate question mark at the end of statements. Both have pleasant Southern accents with slightly gravely notes in their voices. Some listeners might enjoy the immediacy of hearing the authors read; most, however, will prefer the printed version. A Viking hardcover (Reviews, June 22)

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  • English

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