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Missing Persons
Missing Persons: or, My Grandmother's Secrets | Clair Wills
1 post | 1 read
Blending memoir with social history, Clair Wills movingly explores the holes in the fabric of modern Ireland, and in her own family story. "Clair Wills shines a brilliant, unsparing light into the dark recesses of her familys historyand the history of Ireland. Missing Persons is a stunningly eloquent exploration of how truth-telling, secret-keeping, and outright lies are part of all family storiesindeed, the stories that unite all communitiesand how truths, secrets and lies can both protect and destroy us." Jeannette Walls, author of The Glass Castle and Hang the Moon When Clair Wills was in her twenties, she discovered she had a cousin she had never met. Born in a mother-and-baby home in 1950s Ireland, Mary grew up in an institution not far from the farm where Clair spent happy childhood summers. Yet Clair was never told of Marys existence. How could a whole familya whole countryabandon unmarried mothers and their children, erasing them from history? To discover the missing pieces of her familys story, Clair searched across archives and nations, in a journey that would take her from the 1890s to the 1980s, from West Cork to rural Suffolk and Massachusetts, from absent fathers to the grief of a lost child. There are some experiences that do not want to be remembered. What began as an effort to piece together the facts became an act of decoding the most unreliable of evidencestories, secrets, silences. The result is a moving, exquisitely told account of the secrets families keep, and the violence carried out in their name.
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AnneCecilie
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It‘s doesn‘t seem like Litsy have the entire title: “Missing Persons. Or: My grandmother‘s secrets”. It‘s also interesting that the Norwegian title has switched the sentences.

So what is this about?
In her 20s Wills is told about a cousin she never knew about. Apparently her uncle Jack fathered a child in the 50s. Since he and the mother didn‘t want to get married, the mother was sent off to a home to give birth.

How could her family accept

AnneCecilie this? And the woman‘s family? And what does it say about the 50s society? Wills looks at the social changes from the Great Famine and how that changed the society. Poor people dying or living for America, increasing the church power. She also looks at all the bureaucracy that was involved. This was an eyeopener. And in the process, Wills also discover that her grandma had some secrets 2w
BookmarkTavern Sounds very interesting! 2w
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