Mama said Stories

Kristen Gentry

Book - 2023

"The linked stories in Mama Said are set in Louisville, Kentucky, a city with a rich history steeped in tobacco, bourbon, and gambling, indulgences that can quickly become gripping and destructive vices. Set amid the tail end of the crack epidemic and the rise of the opioid crisis, Mama Said evokes Black family life in all its complexity, following JayLynn, along with her cousins Zaria and Angel, as they come of age struggling against their mothers' drug addictions. JayLynn heads to college intent on gaining distance from her depressed mother, only to learn that her mother's illness has reached a terrifying peak. She fears the chaos and instability of her extended family will prove too much for her boyfriend, whose idyllic fa...mily feels worlds, not miles, apart from her own. When bats invade Zaria's new home, she is forced to determine how much she is willing to sacrifice to be a good mother. Angel rebels on Derby night, risking her safety to connect with her absent mother and the wild ways that consumed her. Mama Said separates from stereotypes of Black families, presenting instead the joy, humor, and love that coexist with the trauma of drug abuse within communities. Kristen Gentry's stories showcase the wide-reaching repercussions of addiction and the ties that forever bind daughters to their mothers, flaws and all."--

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Gentry Kristen
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Gentry Kristen Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Urban fiction
Social problem fiction
Linked stories
Short stories
Published
Morgantown : West Virginia University Press 2023
Language
English
Main Author
Kristen Gentry (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
272 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781952271984
  • Mama said
  • A new world
  • A satisfying meal
  • A sort of winning
  • Origin story
  • A good education
  • Grown folks' business
  • Introduction
  • To have and to hold
  • Animal kingdom
  • In her image
  • Everything you could ever want.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A set of linked stories map the lives of a Black family in Louisville, Kentucky, tracing the generational effects of addiction, poverty, and mental illness. At the heart of the book is the often fraught relationship between mothers and daughters--always complicated but made especially so by the unpredictable and deceitful behaviors typical of those suffering from addiction. Gentry maps the ways an unstable mother can unmoor her daughter, and how a girl's innocence is dissolved by the imperative to survive and protect her vulnerable mother: "You are starting to realize that you have no solution for your mother's depression. There is nothing you can say. Nothing you can do. You will never save her." In "A Satisfying Meal," the sharp contrast between two families at Thanksgiving provides an insight into not only the wealth disparity of the Black community, but also into various political divides. At the Thompson family's dinner, everyone is seated and served formally at the tab JayLynn--who's attending for the first time as Nigel Thompson's girlfriend--is subtly interrogated about her intellectual pursuits at colle and the use of the N-word represents an egregious blasphemy. Meanwhile, at JayLynn's aunt's house, where she and Nigel go afterward, family members eat without ceremony, use the N-word freely, and joke around. The absence of JayLynn's mother and the eventual departure of her aunts to buy drugs draws attention to the relentless mundanity of addiction and depression--and the ways these illnesses impact families. In "A Good Education," two young men who grew up together reunite, but now one sells the drugs the other's mother is addicted to, seemingly without making the connection: "Your moms is like my moms...I mean...you think she's using?" In "A New World," JayLynn's 16-year-old cousin, Zaria, goes into labor with the baby she'd hoped would deter her mother, Dee, from feeding her addiction, only to have Dee leave the hospital before the baby arrives, going in search of the next high. Gentry steadfastly refuses to reduce her characters to their misery, imbuing them instead with wit, loyalty, and humor. A celebration of Black family life that will make you laugh and cry in equal measure. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.