Good morning, I was sent the perfect book for moms to share with there daughters in exchange for a review. The new novel is called Twenty-Seven Letters to My Daughter by Ella Ward (Author). I wish Suzzane was here to share the book with but we all know she isn’t. Instead I can share the book with my step-daughter or my nieces.
About:
When death is dancing closer than you’d like, what becomes important? What do you need to tell your child? And how do you want to be remembered? A beautiful, tender, funny and poignant guide on how to really live, from a mother to her daughter.
Ella Ward comes from a long line of irrepressibly charming raconteurs, letter-writers, storytellers and people who ‘quite like giving toasts at parties’. And so, a few years ago, when Ella was 36 years old, with a husband and a young daughter, and was told that she had a rare cancer and might die, she decided that death wasn’t going to stand in the way of her mothering her child.
As Ella’s treatment for her cancer began, she started drafting letters to her daughter. To tell her about life, love, death, the importance of cotton knickers and – above all – her family. The kind of people who weren’t dissuaded by little things like cancer. Or war. Or loss. Or a charging elephant.
This is a story of what we inherit, and how we become ourselves. This is the story of a family – a glorious, funny, exotic and gutsy family – but it’s really a story about how your attitude to life, can shape your life. A time-travelling memoir from one mother, and the generations that came before her – these are twenty-seven letters about the good, the bad, the magical and the whole damn thing.
Jaunty, brave, moving and immensely appealing, this is a gloriously endearing inspirational story in the tradition of Tuesdays with Morrie and The Last Lecture … although with slightly more dry martinis.
About the Author
Ella Ward is an Aussie mum, wife, advertising boss lady and sometime freelance writer. She’s also, unfortunately, one of Those Cancer People. Her words have been published in places like Frankie, Lunch Lady and The Age; as well as online on sites including MamaMia, Whimn and KidSpot. Ella’s currently oversharing here, down the shops, at the hairdressers, anywhere near other people, and – of course – on Instagram @_msellabella
Thank you,
Glenda, Charlie and David Cates