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What readers think of Never Coming Back, plus links to write your own review.

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Never Coming Back

by Alison McGhee

Never Coming Back by Alison McGhee X
Never Coming Back by Alison McGhee
  • Critics' Opinion:

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  • First Published:
    Oct 2017, 256 pages

    Paperback:
    Oct 2018, 256 pages

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There are currently 22 reader reviews for Never Coming Back
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Power Reviewer
Julie M. (Golden Valley, MN)

Call Your Mother....Now!
Alison McGhee does a brilliant job of portraying what mothers will sacrifice for their children and the pain of watching a loved one disappear into the awful disease of early onset Alzheimers. Clara is living with regrets, secrets and loss. She blames her mother and has punished her by staying away for the most part of ten years. The further her mother Tamar aka "The Fearless" fades into the illness the more Clara longs to understand and get to know Tamar as both her mother and a person and to do that she needs to understand what really happened years ago. This novel is Clara's journey through fear and truth to forgiveness and love. The writing is spectacular, both tender and raw with well drawn characters. McGhee pulls you in swiftly and holds you until the end. Her characters and their feelings will stay with you long after you turn the last page and make you want to call your mother.
Gretchen M. (Martinsburg, WV)

Mothers Were Teens Once Too
The author of this book gives an insightful look into a mother-daughter relationship that has ups and downs and lots of missed opportunities for real conversations about each other's lives. Clara has heartfelt regrets and questions about some of her mother's decisions and actions that come to light as her mother is plunged into Early-Onset Alzheimer's. I really enjoyed the author's style of writing and the gentle respectful way she presented Clara's mother's deterioration. Realizing that mothers are real people who were once young, vibrant and interesting people before they became mothers of teenagers is just one of the take-always from this story.
Power Reviewer
Beverly D. (Palm Harbor, FL)

Six stars!
This was the best book that I have read this year. I had tears streaming down my face more than once. Alison McGhee just "gets" the whole mother/daughter dynamic and has been able to put it down on paper without being overly cynical or overly sweet. Her writing evoked so many disparate emotions. Some of the passages were absolutely sublime. I highly recommend this book for adult readers as well as young adults...a perfect book club entry. Bravo!
Loretta F. (Fountain Inn, SC)

The Power of Words
This is so much more than another book about Alzheimer's disease. It's about the power of words to heal or harm, or to evoke calm or tension. Words connect us to the people we know and love in so many ways. Clara makes her living crafting just the right words to meet her client's needs. Yet, in her own life, she often struggles to find the right words to say to those she loves.

The book is also about accepting people as they are. I loved how Sunshine and Brown overlooked Clara's obvious poverty and eccentric mother to become her best friends.

The major theme is about relationships, especially the one between mother and daughter. Clara sees her mother through the cloudy lens of immaturity, not at all the way others view her. That changes as she begins to learn more about her mother.

I would recommend this book to any daughter who is not as close to her mother as she'd like to be. That is me, and I've learned some valuable truths here. Also, I think it would make for good discussion in book clubs.
Connie H. (Evanston, IL)

Resolution
Alison McGhee realistically conveys the discomfort of waiting for lucid moments to make a connection with a loved one with a loss of intellectual capacity. The pacing of this book mirrors this experience requiring some patience, patience which is rewarded in the thoughtful writing and in a realistic resolution.
After a distressing breakup with her high school love, Clara is pushed by her mother, Tamar, to go away to college. She flees brokenhearted and angry toward her headstrong and tight-lipped mother. As early onset dementia strikes her mother, Clara returns.

This should be a time for forgiveness and coming to terms with the past, but Clara has said things in anger that she cannot take back, and her mother remains obscured by past silence and current confusion. Slowly Clara attempts to peel away the past, address her anger, fears and desires.
Power Reviewer
Beverly J. (Hoover, AL)

Well-written and completely absorbing!
A compassionate and unflinching deeply moving testament to the bond between mothers and daughters enduring life's curve balls. Clara Winter knows her mother, Tamar, loves her despite not always understanding her taciturn mother's staunchly independent behavior. Clara's adult life is plagued by questions she believes only her mother can answer. But now her mother has been diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's and as time is running out for the resolutions to these issues, Clara begins to wonder if she really knows who her mother is. This storyline is brilliant and piercing as Clara seeks to provide as much comfort to her mother and explores who is her mother and in turn who she is. A standout in both craft and theme I was absorbed by the sensitive exploration of the effects of Alzheimer's on the patient and their family and friends, and by the atmospheric writing of the small Adirondack towns. Keep a tissue handy as this is a heartfelt story!
Christine P. (Gig Harbor, WA)

Never Coming Back
Never Coming Back is the perfect title for this book. If you have ever had Alzheimer's touch your life, you will know exactly what I mean by that. Clara Winter in losing her mother to the disease. She goes on a journey to know her mother and her self. Since I am a lover of words and writing, I love that Clara is too. Her mother had called her "Word Girl". The game show Jeopardy plays a big part of the story and it made me laugh at times how the author used it to point out some of the absurdities of life.
Carol N. (Indian Springs Village, AL)

Never Coming Back
This is a very good book about mother-daughter dynamics and what happens when someone loses themselves in dementia or Alzheimer s I am an only child and my mother is a widow so this story was very close to home for me. My mother has not shown signs of dementia yet but my maternal grandmother passed from Alzheimer's when she was 93. I found the writing slightly strange and while it didn't make reading the book difficult, it was somewhat annoying to me so that is why I gave it a 4. Seeing how Clara grows up an grows closer to her mother throughout the book redeemed her character to me. I also enjoyed Chris and his unconditional love and ability to take life as it came. I think this would be a great book club book although it might be difficult for some to read if they have family members with this debilitating disease. .
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Beyond the Book:
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