
The School for Good Mothers
A Novel
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Narrateur(s):
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Catherine Ho
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Auteur(s):
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Jessamine Chan
À propos de cet audio
Longlisted for the PEN/Hemingway Award for Debut Novel and the Carnegie Medal for Excellence | Shortlisted for The Center for Fiction First Novel Prize | Selected as One of Barack Obama’s Favorite Books of the Year!
In this New York Times bestseller and Today show Read with Jenna Book Club Pick, one lapse in judgment lands a young mother in a dystopian government reform program where custody of her child hangs in the balance, in this “surreal” (People), “remarkable” (Vogue), and “infuriatingly timely” (The New York Times Book Review) debut literary fiction novel.
Frida Liu, a hardworking Chinese American mother, is pushed to the edge. She doesn’t live up to the expectations set by her immigrant parents or her wellness-obsessed husband. Only with Harriet—cherubic and beloved—does she find a measure of fulfillment…until she has a very bad day.
In this close-to-future dystopia, the state targets mothers like Frida: mothers who check their phones, let their children walk home alone, or make one parenting error. Because of one mistake, Frida is sent to a government-run institution—a Big Brother–style reform school for “good mothers,” where every move is monitored, and even her love is judged.
For custody to be returned, she must prove that a flawed mother can be redeemed and learn to be “good.” Filled with dark wit and emotional urgency, The School for Good Mothers is an intense, captivating novel that scrutinizes upper-middle-class parenting, systemic surveillance of women, and the violence exacted by both the state and one another. It offers a transgressive exploration of motherhood, resilience, guilt, and the force of love.
Using spare, compelling prose, Jessamine Chan crafts an unforgettable, modern classic that resonates with listeners of The Handmaid’s Tale and 1984, while centering a richly drawn woman navigating class, race, and motherhood under the gaze of an unyielding system.
Ce que les critiques en disent
"Ho holds the listener captive as she narrates this deeply engrossing portrait of the boundless depth of a mother’s love. Her exquisite narration channels a heartbreaking, terrifying, and prescient story that leaves the listener gutted." (AudioFile Magazine)
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Gut wrenching.
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I feel like the author has potential but this book just had too many flaws to enjoy.
I get the idea of dystopia here but how does it work that the mother is doomed for life for making one(grave) mistake but the father can leave the mother with the newborn with no consequences, put the child’s development in danger by not feeding them carbohydrates and refusing vaccination and get zero punishment.
The protagonist is making terrible decisions and has not much else but self-pity. She has very low self-esteem and refuses to accept that anyone truly cares for them. She almost craves to be treated like garbage.
The toddlers in the book(the dolls and the real child) are supposed to be taught about merit and moral and social responsibility. A 2 year-old child?! At the same time these children can barely put together 2-word sentences..
Good idea, bad execution.
Hard to get through
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I admire the way this story serves almost as an allegory for modern motherhood, and the unspoken pressures many mothers must navigate - pressure from society to raise good, respectable, responsible kids, but also the pressure that can come from other women/mothers via our natural bent toward comparison and competition.
To me, this story highlights the idea that there simply is no ‘training’ for motherhood… you become a mother overnight, flaws and all— no matter your motives or the circumstances surrounding how you got pregnant in the first place (which, as the book highlights, are many and varied). But, once that child arrives, you are irrevocably connected in a way that supersedes anything else in your life.
For me, the ‘school’ is a clever invention in the story that gets you thinking about what it would truly be like if there was such a ‘motherhood training’ program to attend before having a child. I think most women would choose not to have kids after going through what Frieda experiences; but that’s just it. That’s the deep complexity (and challenge) of parenthood, that maybe this story is hinting at? We don’t have the luxury of a training program, we have only what we’ve witnessed in our own families, and the families of those we are connected to.
So in a way, we are all “bad mothers, learning to be good”.
A bit doomsday, but interesting
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Amazing book
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Dystopian novel that felt very real!
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A weird, sad, frustrating story.
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Seriously lacking any character development
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I can’t do it anymore
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The school for mothers was a ridiculous concept, the fathers also held to a different standard was insulting and while I’m a mother that has had plenty of bad mothering days, I could not relate to the main character at all. I never felt connected to her or sold on any of the character development. There just wasn’t much of that anyways.
Without blowing the ending, it was disappointing and left me further upset with the time I wasted on this book. The only emotion I got was with the ending and that was less on the outcome but more so because I had wasted hours on a book that left me emotionless until the last chapter. But by then, it was too late. While I felt I should feel emotion for the main character in the end, I was more ticked off at the author for finally giving me something to connect to the main character, 19 chapters in. The emotion the author was trying to give me at that point fell short and I was so over the book by then.
Depressing, dull, only finished it as it was a book club read
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Never went anywhere
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