Inventive and Powerful Story
"The Unravelling of Ou by Hollay Ghadery Oh my heart. This beautifully written story of Minoo lodged itself in my heart from the first chapter and stayed there until the final page. “Minoo was never so ashamed of who she was until she saw herself through the eyes of her mother. ” A loving childhood inexplicably shifts into one marked by rejection, criticism and shame when Minoo reaches puberty. All she understands is that there is something wrong - something shameful - about her body and about herself. After a teenage pregnancy, Minoo is banished to Canada to be raised by an aunt, while her parents claim her son as their own. Overwhelmed, Minoo finds solace in a sock puppet named Ecology Paul, who becomes a safe place for her most painful thoughts and feelings. Ecology Paul narrates Minoo’s life, developing into a voice that feels almost independent of her - a supportive confidant and compassionate witness. Ghadery poignantly captures Minoo’s overwhelming shame, her profound grief and abandonment and her relentless longing for even the smallest glimmer of maternal approval. The novel’s inventive narrative lends emotional depth and tenderness to the story, while also creating moments of unexpected humour that made me laugh out loud. Though the story is heartbreaking, it is also threaded with resilience, strength and curiosity, moments in which Minoo dares to engage fully with her life. At its core, the novel is a nuanced exploration of motherhood in all its contradictions: the exquisite joy of holding and snuggling your baby; the intimacy of being your Childs entire world and the painful reckoning when they discover you are only human. It acknowledges the vulnerabilities and failures of motherhood without judgement and portrays the fraught mother- daughter relationship with complexity and compassion. This is a deeply moving and emotionally immersive novel, an exploration of how people survive trauma and alienation, how they can unravel without completely breaking, and how they can slowly find their way back to themselves. Creative, inventive and impossible to put down."