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Did I Ever Tell You?

Did I Ever Tell You?

by Genevieve Kingston

Scribner ·2024 ·288 pages ·Memoir
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Top of the Pile

88/99

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About This Book

Based on her "Modern Love" piece ("She Put Her Unspent Love in a Cardboard Box"), this extraordinary memoir tells the astonishing story of a mother's last gifts to her daughter, and the wisdom and love she bestowed upon her from beyond the grave.Genevieve (Gwen) Kingston's mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer when Gwen was just three years old. Defying the odds, she lived another eight years—during which time she filled a chest with gifts and letters to Gwen and her brother, Jamie, for every major milestone and birthday through age thirty. The day Gwen got her driver's license. The day she graduated from high school. Gwen is now in her thirties and, when Did I Ever Tell You? begins, three unopened boxes remain: engagement, marriage, and first baby. Two decades after her passing, Gwen's mother's extraordinary efforts created a lifelong conversation beyond the grave. Did I Ever Tell You? is Crying in H Mart meets The Bright Hour by Nina Riggs. This is not just a gorgeously written mother-daughter story. It's also the story of a family riven by grief and mental illness, and a story of a young woman's navigation through both. It's a book about family and legacy; and it's one that emphatically declares, as Gwen's mother does in a particularly powerful letter, that "Love is stronger than death."


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Reviews

"A powerful testament to a mother's legacy and the importance of living a full and meaningful life, however long it may last."

Norah Piehl· Bookreporter Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Kingston's generous telling of her youth and loss is unforgettable and profound."

Kelly Fojtik· Booklist Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"This gorgeous, openhearted meditation on grief and family deserves a wide readership."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Both helped Kingston see the rage and terror her mother had papered over, as well as the steely will she'd summoned to keep going."

Kim Hubbard· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"As the shape of her grief changes with age, Kingston teaches us something essential about how to collect, hold, and savor memories of loved ones over a lifetime."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

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