My Real Children - Jo Walton

ratsy

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Has anyone heard of this book? It sounds quite interesting. Here is the blurb from Amazon.

It’s 2015, and Patricia Cowan is very old. “Confused today,” read the notes clipped to the end of her bed. She forgets things she should know—what year it is, major events in the lives of her children. But she remembers things that don't seem possible. She remembers marrying Mark and having four children. And she remembers not marrying Mark and raising three children with Bee instead. She remembers the bomb that killed President Kennedy in 1963, and she remembers Kennedy in 1964, declining to run again after the nuclear exchange that took out Miami and Kiev.

Her childhood, her years at Oxford during the Second World War—those were solid things. But after that, did she marry Mark or not? Did her friends all call her Trish, or Pat? Had she been a housewife who escaped a terrible marriage after her children were grown, or a successful travel writer with homes in Britain and Italy? And the moon outside her window: does it host a benign research station, or a command post bristling with nuclear missiles?

Two lives, two worlds, two versions of modern history; each with their loves and losses, their sorrows and triumphs. Jo Walton's My Real Children is the tale of both of Patricia Cowan’s lives...and of how every life means the entire world.​
 
This looks really interesting. i read the first six pages. Amazon gives a very long sample of this. I think the first eight pages was enough to grab me. The rest was annoying because at page 15 they skipped two pages and then they periodically skip pages. I Mean if they thought you need that big a sample why skip pages. When I read a book I don't skip pages and this is fiction so there really is no justifiable reason to skip pages so why not just stop the sample at page 15- where I stopped. There's no sense to jump out of the story and back in like that and it certainly doesn't help the author any to do that since one of the worst things in fiction is to push the reader out of the story.

Anyway, where was I, oh yeah I'll have to buy this book now.
 

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