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The Sum of Our Days: A Memoir | 
enlarge | Author: Isabel Allende Publisher: Harper Category: Book
List Price: $26.95 Buy New: $14.50 You Save: $12.45 (46%)
New (45) Used (15) Collectible (9) from $13.49
Avg. Customer Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 12217
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 320 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 006155183X Dewey Decimal Number: 863.64 EAN: 9780061551833 ASIN: 006155183X
Publication Date: April 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new Book - Ships next business day!!
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Product Description
In this heartfelt memoir, Isabel Allende reconstructs the painful reality of her own life in the wake of tragic loss—the death of her daughter, Paula. Recalling the past thirteen years from the daily letters the author and her mother, who lives in Chile, wrote to each other, Allende bares her soul in a book that is as exuberant and full of life as its creator. She recounts the stories of the wildly eccentric, strong-minded, and eclectic tribe she gathers around her that becomes a new kind of family. Throughout, Allende shares her thoughts on love, marriage, motherhood, spirituality and religion, infidelity, addiction, and memory. Here, too, are the amazing stories behind Allende's books, the superstitions that guide her writing process, and her adventurous travels. Ultimately, The Sum of Our Days offers a unique tour of this gifted writer's inner world and of the relationships that have become essential to her life and her work. Narrated with warmth, humor, exceptional candor, and wisdom, The Sum of Our Days is a portrait of a contemporary family, bound together by the love, fierce loyalty, and stubborn determination of a beloved, indomitable matriarch.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 7 more reviews...
Just what a memoir should be June 30, 2008 "It's hard for me to let go of people," Isabel Allende said of her deceased daughter Paula. "[She] is unreachable; only in my love for her are we in contact. She comes in signs." Pretty intense, right? Well, buckle up my friends. If you delve into THE SUM OF OUR DAYS, Allende's most recent book, you will find a bumpy, funny, delectable, brutally honest and provocatively fascinating look into the private life of her extensive and complex brood of a family. Written in daily letters to her mother back in Chile, Allende pours out the deepest and darkest secrets of her extended family post-heartbreak, the early death of her only daughter. In the wake of her mourning, she weaves a long and wavy path to her true heart, and every word is riveting.
Allende is known as a "magic realist," her stock in trade as an author. However, there is little magic and lots of realism in THE SUM OF OUR DAYS. For a nation obsessed with "family values," its newest citizen goes completely against the traditional American grain with her topsy-turvy, emotionally harrowing life. Her second husband is a garrulous and outspoken attorney and advocate for illegal immigrants in the Bay area; his daughter is a drugged-out mess in and out of jail cells, which he hopes will teach her the "consequences" of her criminal acts; and her son is married to a former member of Opus Dei, who walks a straight (and completely bigoted) religiously fueled road. There are endless characters in THE SUM OF OUR DAYS, all the more intriguing because of the unflinching honesty and bright light that Allende shines on their every course of action, their every life decision, and the way that it intersects with her own difficult life.
The death of her daughter has been the subject of another book (simply titled PAULA). It is clear from the content of this memoir that her broken heart will never completely mend, and the well-established credo that no parent should have to bury a child is utmost in her mind. Allende pulls no punches when discussing the bottomless love she has for her children, in life as in death, and it is this moving portrayal of motherhood that gives great heart to the stories about her family members. This is really a book about not just the sum of her family's "days," but the sum of her own multitudinous adventures as writer, mother, wife, lover, daughter, activist, immigrant, teacher...
If you think that it would be an epic maneuver to pull it all into one book, you would be right. But Allende somehow finds just the right anecdotes about each member of the family to make the reader feel as if he or she was being escorted into the author's boudoir and seduced into the vortex of her life and longings. It is rare that desire has so many names, but Allende finds them all and, in short order, brings them to life on the page with a power that towers over so many of the recent memoirists in this popular genre. There are no lies here, there is no Frey or Burroughs amping up of actual life to ensure a chuckle or gulp from the reading public. Allende doesn't have to play tricks to make your heart and breath rise and fall, to make your stomach tumble each time Willie's indigent daughter almost dies (again!) or your heart break each time Allende looks back on a moment during her daughter's strangely quick descent into serious illness.
THE SUM OF OUR DAYS is exactly what a memoir should be: a heartfelt and candid look at the good, the bad and the oh-so-ugly that makes up a truly human life. Like reality TV, we are hooked and cannot look away, whether we like it or not. This is a rewarding emotional rollercoaster in which a world-renowned author searches for the same answers as the rest of us, sidestepping disaster upon disaster with a warmth of spirit and an everlasting hope that any reader will find unbearably inspiring.
--- Reviewed by Jana Siciliano
Tedious, rambling, boring read June 16, 2008 As an ardent fan of Isabel Allende's works, I looked forward to her latest book...until I started reading the first 75 pages or so. Her attempt to weave a spellbinding tale around real people falls flat: these are real people with warts and all and no amount of magical storytelling as in her fictional works can make them interesting characters or for a compelling story. This is the first Isabel Allende book I did not finish. Also, Isabel needs to move out of Marin County to Middle America as I sense a fair amount of left-coast nihilism in her American experience that does not resonate with the vast majority of middle-Americans: perhaps, then, The Sum of Our Days would be more fulfilling.
Not the best introduction to Isabel Allende June 16, 2008 Isabel Allende spins a yarn about her family, friends and life. Some of the stories narrated here were arresting, some felt tedious and a tad overglossed. If you're a fan of Allende's you might find this book fascinating, otherwise starting off with one of her novels might be a better idea. I must say though that some passages or jottings were poignant, and allows for a bit of quiet self-reflection.
Disappointing June 8, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a terribly disappointing book for an Allende fan. Allende's editor should be taken to task for encouraging this author...probably for profit... to publish what is essentially an unedited, hastily written memoir. The editor may be pressing Allende to produce something on a schedule, but I don't think Allende has the time or inclination anymore to really devote herself to her writing. I bought the hardback for a long trip abroad and really felt mislead by trusting the author's name really meant I was in for a good read.
Isabel Allende: Raw and Honest June 2, 2008 I have read many of Isabel Allende's books and found that when she writes about real life as opposed to fiction, her narrative is much more convincing because when she speaks about real events she eliminates the romanticism and the supernatural that so often are injected in her writing. What we are left with is raw Allende, with no pretensions and complete honesty. She reveals much and hides almost nothing. She reveals that she has had plastic surgery as well as sheds lights about her thoughts of divorce and her experience in therapy to resolve her marriage issues. Her self-reflection reveals that she knows her faults and accepts them. She could have portrayed a glossy picture of her life but she chose to show us the messy, often painful details of a woman whom we could identify with. Her insight and wit, combined with her style of weaving the story of her daily life are what give the reader the motivation to read this autobiographical account of her life. We are not so much as interested in the details of her life as we are in how she recounts them. She reveals herself as self-depracating and insightful, practical, yet at times fanciful. Allende's complicated and interesting account of her life captivate the reader throughout the book.
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