
The Abandoners: Of Mothers and Monsters
āThe best kind of book: the one you didnāt know you were craving until it appeared ⦠self-interrogative, intricately perceptive. I absolutely inhaled itā JIA TOLENTINO
āA very richly interesting exploration of a complex subject. BegoƱa Gómez Urzaiz tells the stories with such intelligence and wit and generosityā TESSA HADLEY
āFascinating ⦠I suspect there are many, many other mothers who are going to inhale TheAbandonersāOBSERVER
When it comes to children: a man leaves, a woman abandons
Journalist Begoña Gómez Urzaiz is fascinated by women who left their children behind to pursue their artistic lives. Women like Ingrid Bergman, Muriel Spark, Doris Lessing and Joni Mitchell.
This book captures those extraordinary stories, along with the realities of women who have no choice but to separate from their families, and the everyday guilt of mothers who dream quietly of freedom.
This is a book about motherhood, selfhood, ambition and creativity. Above all, it captures what our judgement of those women who āabandonā tells us about our judgement of all women.
āThe best book I've read on the implications of motherhood and its opposites after Sheila Heti's Motherhoodā CLAUDIA DURASTANTI
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āThe best kind of book: the one you didnāt know you were craving until it appeared ⦠self-interrogative, intricately perceptive. I absolutely inhaled itā JIA TOLENTINO
āA very richly interesting exploration of a complex subject. BegoƱa Gómez Urzaiz tells the stories with such intelligence and wit and generosityā TESSA HADLEY
āFascinating ⦠I suspect there are many, many other mothers who are going to inhale TheAbandonersāOBSERVER
When it comes to children: a man leaves, a woman abandons
Journalist Begoña Gómez Urzaiz is fascinated by women who left their children behind to pursue their artistic lives. Women like Ingrid Bergman, Muriel Spark, Doris Lessing and Joni Mitchell.
This book captures those extraordinary stories, along with the realities of women who have no choice but to separate from their families, and the everyday guilt of mothers who dream quietly of freedom.
This is a book about motherhood, selfhood, ambition and creativity. Above all, it captures what our judgement of those women who āabandonā tells us about our judgement of all women.
āThe best book I've read on the implications of motherhood and its opposites after Sheila Heti's Motherhoodā CLAUDIA DURASTANTI























