My sisters / Ann Roth.

By: Roth, Ann, 1950-Material type: TextTextPublication details: Thorndike, Me. : Center Point Pub., 2009Edition: Large print edDescription: 320 p. (large print) ; 23 cmISBN: 9781602854260Subject(s): Sisters -- Fiction | Mothers -- Death -- Fiction | Mothers and daughters -- Fiction | Large type booksGenre/Form: Psychological fiction. | Domestic fiction. DDC classification: 813/.6 Summary: Large print. When sisters Margaret, Rose, and Quincy Lansing receive the tragic news that a car accident has claimed the life of their mother, they must return to their childhood home -- and to one another's awkward company. Although they are shocked and heartbroken, none of the Lansing sisters is eager to be back, since the painful memories they thought they'd left behind are resurfacing. The Lansings were never a close or loving family. Each sibling had long ago found her own means of escape -- Margaret to her lab work, Rose to her "perfect" marriage, and Quincy to her acts of rebellion. When this crisis forces them together again, they discover that they know as little about one another as they did about their own mother. By unraveling her secrets, they find not only revelation, but also strength, hope, sisterhood, and a chance for love.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Wundowie
Wundowie Large Print
F ROT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111039002199

Large print. When sisters Margaret, Rose, and Quincy Lansing receive the tragic news that a car accident has claimed the life of their mother, they must return to their childhood home -- and to one another's awkward company. Although they are shocked and heartbroken, none of the Lansing sisters is eager to be back, since the painful memories they thought they'd left behind are resurfacing. The Lansings were never a close or loving family. Each sibling had long ago found her own means of escape -- Margaret to her lab work, Rose to her "perfect" marriage, and Quincy to her acts of rebellion. When this crisis forces them together again, they discover that they know as little about one another as they did about their own mother. By unraveling her secrets, they find not only revelation, but also strength, hope, sisterhood, and a chance for love.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.