Quindlen at her best
"When you start an Anna Quindlen novel, you know you will be getting a well-written, literate, moving story about families in all their forms. More than Enough is no exception. Reading it is like receiving a warm hug. Polly Goodman is our narrator - a forty-ish English teacher, struggling with crushing infertility, and feeling the weight of a rapidly declining father who is now in a care home. But it is really mothers and daughters who are at the heart of the book. As a character muses aptly - ""Maybe everyone's mother was a kind of mystery to her daughter. Maybe everyone's daughter was a mystery to her mother. "" The central tension in Polly's life is her fraught relationship with her formidable mother, and the unexpected results of a genealogy test that may or not be pointing her in a direction she does not want to go. But this is a Quindlen novel - there are reconciliations and revelations and most of the people in Polly's life are well-meaning and wise - this novel in particular is replete with grandmothers who are there to nurture you and tell you the things you don't want to really know. Highly recommend."