Daughter of the Queen of Sheba
(1997)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1997
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9780547745718 (electronic bk.) MWT11995166, 0547745710 (electronic bk.) 11995166
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

As a foreign correspondent for NPR, Jacki Lyden has spent her adult life on the frontlines in some of the most dangerous war zones in the world. Her childhood was a war zone of a different kind. Her mother suffered from what we now call manic depression; when Jacki was a child in a small Wisconsin town, her mother was simply called crazy. In her delusions, she was a woman with power: Marie Antoinette or the Queen of Sheba. In her real life, she had married the nefarious local doctor, who drugged her to check her moods and terrorized the children to keep them quiet. Holding their lives together was Jacki's hardscrabble Irish grandmother, a woman who had her first child at the age of fourteen and lost her husband in a barroom brawl. Lyden vividly captures the seductive energy of her mother's delusions, which were both an inspiration and a threat as she set out on her own impassioned journey. In her twenties she joined a traveling rodeo. Later, as a radio journalist, she interviewed Arafat and maneuvered her way through Baghdad at the height of the Persian Gulf War. Always, her mother's exotic fantasies were an irresistible lure. Like Mary Karr in The Liar's Club and Tobias Wolff in This Boy's Life, Jacki Lyden portrays her unstable mother with a child's aching regret and an adult's keen wisdom. In Daughter of the Queen of Sheba, three remarkable women-mother, daughter, and grandmother -reveal their obstinate devotion to each other against all odds, and their scrappy genius for survival

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits