Editorial reviews

Mira Bartok explores the ideas of survival, family, truth, and forgiveness in the haunting literary memoir of a woman reconstructing her past and examining her relationship with her paranoid schizophrenic mother.

Hillary Huber brings lyricism and good pacing to the book. This super prolific narrator performs a wide variety of books, including the vampire series The Midnight Breed and several mysteries. Huber nails the mother’s voice and underscores the compassion and love that Bartok had for her talented and loving mother, who was ravaged by mental illness.

Bartok, an artist and children’s book author, began The Memory Palace after a car accident impaired both her long-term and short-term memory. She writes with an artist’s eye, creating keen visuals. The narrative gets bogged down in places, but the story is always made interesting by the weaving together of excerpts from Bartok’s mother’s letters and journals, her own artwork and travel experiences, and conversations with her sister. Bartok describes the secrets she kept as a child of a paranoid schizophrenic and what she gained and lost from living with her talented, loving, and very ill mother. Eventually, her mother became so violent and disruptive to her life that Bartok made the excruciating decision to change her name and not allow her mother to know where she lived. This act of self-preservation colored the next 17 years of her life. As Bartok makes her way in the world, her mother’s absence looms large, even in the far-flung places she travels, from Israel to the Norwegian Arctic.

With the success of Angela’s Ashes and The Glass Castle, memoirs of painful childhoods have become very popular. The Memory Palace distinguishes itself by its richness peppered with art, music, and cultural explorations. Strong writing by Bartok and a thoughtful performance by Huber combine for a fine listen, particularly for memoir fans, literary fiction followers, and those with an interest in mental illness. Julie MacDonald

Publisher's summary

National Book Critics Circle Award, Autobiography, 2012

When piano prodigy Norma Herr was healthy, she was the most vibrant personality in the room. But as her schizophrenic episodes became more frequent and more dangerous, she withdrew into a world that neither of her daughters could make any sense of. After being violently attacked for demanding that Norma seek help, Mira Bartok and her sister changed their names and cut off all contact in order to keep themselves safe.

For the next 17 years, Mira's only contact with her mother was through infrequent letters exchanged through post office boxes, often not even in the same city where she was living. At the age of 40, Mira suffered a debilitating head injury that left her memories foggy and her ability to make sense of the world around her forever changed. Hoping to reconnect with her past, Mira reached out to the homeless shelter where her mother was living. When she received word that her mother was dying in a hospital, Mira and her sister traveled to their mother's deathbed to reconcile one last time.

Norma gave them a key to a storage unit in which she has kept hundreds of diaries, photographs, and mementos from the past that Mira never imagined she would see again. These artifacts triggered a flood of memories and gave Mira access to the past that she believed had been lost forever.

The Memory Palace explores the connections between mother and daughter that cannot be broken no matter how much exists - or is lost - between them. It is an astonishing literary memoir about the complex meaning of love, truth, and the capacity for forgiveness within a family.

©2011 Mira Bartok (P)2011 Tantor

Critic reviews

"A disturbing, mesmerizing personal narrative about growing up with a brilliant but schizophrenic mother.... Richly textured, compassionate and heartbreaking." ( Kirkus)

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