Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Floating in My Mother's Palm

Floating in My Mother's Palm
Floating in My Mother's Palm
Author: Ursula Hegi
From an award-winning author comes a deeply personal and powerful account of Hanna Malter, a young girl growing up in a small town in Germany in the 1950s, a time when Adolf Hitler isn't mentioned in history classes--or by anyone in town. "Stunning. . . . It can break your heart."--Los Angeles Times.
ISBN-13: 9781439501269
ISBN-10: 1439501262
Publication Date: 6/26/2008
Pages: 187
Edition: Reprint
Rating:
  ?

0 stars, based on 0 rating
Book Type: Library Binding
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

IMADiva avatar reviewed Floating in My Mother's Palm on + 43 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Hegel writes in a beautiful style about a post WWII family comprised of a little girl who is growing up and coming of age with her artistic mother and her stiff father who is a dentist. Her mother takes her to the quarry and teaches her to swim during thunder and lightening storms and swims in circles, holding her daughter's hands eventually letting go, thus the title. A lovely book. Well worth the read.
Leigh avatar reviewed Floating in My Mother's Palm on + 378 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Although well-written, this short series of vignettes told from the point-of-view of a young girl, did not emotionally hit me like Hegi's following book, _Stones From the River_. If I'd read this one first, maybe my feelings would be different. If you're a fan of _Stones_, you'll enjoy this book simply because it continues the lives of the families (and babies) you've already become acquainted with. There was nothing particularly revealing that surfaced in this book, so don't expect surprises. Recommended if you really, really enjoyed _Stones_.
reviewed Floating in My Mother's Palm on + 37 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This is a short novel that in many ways reads more like a collection of essays. It's a series of short vignettes about the people who live in a small German town in the 1950s. The narrator is a teenage girl, born just after WWII, and much of the novel deals with the consequences of war for the various townspeople. This is a town populated by a truly eclectic cast of characters. Hegi does an excellent job of delving deep into and developing each of her characters and their relationships to one another. This is the same town that was the focus of Hegi's novel Stones from the River, which is set in the same town in the interwar period and WWII. Some of the characters appear also in Stones, some do not, and they don't necessarily occupy the same places in each book. Trudi Montag, the central character in Stones from the River is far less sympathetic and far less interesting in this book. From publication dates it appears that Hegi wrote this book before she wrote Stones from the River, though I read them in the opposite order. The characters and life of the town are far more fully developed in Stones, though character development is still clearly Hegi's forte, even in this book. For those interested in Hegi's work, I recommend reading Stones first. Had I not had the background I did from Stones, I think I would have found this book less interesting.
starweaver avatar reviewed Floating in My Mother's Palm on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
The book is really a succession of short stories. I was so intrigued by Stones from the River that I had to read this one. I suspect for the writer it served as a character study for Stones.
Read All 15 Book Reviews of "Floating in My Mothers Palm"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed Floating in My Mother's Palm on + 2 more book reviews
Also authored Stones from the River an Oprah featured book.
reviewed Floating in My Mother's Palm on + 92 more book reviews
This author was a pleasant surprise, not knowing anything about her when I picked up this book of short stories. Great writing, set in Germany, about interaction between parents and children.
reviewed Floating in My Mother's Palm on + 404 more book reviews
"Ursula Hegi uses her usual hypnotic prose in this book, which flows like the water in the rivers that she loves, even as fast as 8 kilometers per hour like the Rhein.

The stories continue to flow seamlessly, through her whole book. Yes, "stories," as even though the book is a novel, it is composed of chapters, which are in fact free standing stories in and of themselves. All the stories are narrated by her protagonist, but each story could be lifted out of the book, and be self-contained. " amazon review