Too Many Mothers: A Memoir of an East End Childhood
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Average customer review:Product Description
"Too Many Mothers" is the remarkable story of Roberta Taylor's early life, and the extended family that brought her up. Roberta travels to the emotional heart of her childhood to reveal the lives led by the men and women who influenced her most in her formative years. "Too Many Mothers" is a portrait of an embattled family at war with itself and the outside world. From petty crime to pet monkeys, tender romance to emotional blackmail, illegitimacy, adoption and even murder, Roberta Taylor has written a bittersweet and memoir of her early life.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #27042 in Books
- Published on: 2006-05-01
- Format: Audiobook
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 320 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"'Absolutely breathtaking. What a fantastic read.' Martina Cole 'A gut-wrenching memoir that still has you gasping with laughter. A hell of a book. Give it to your prosperous friends who wonder what it's all about.' Frank McCourt 'A marvellous book! I couldn't put it down. Roberta Taylor brings that era and that part of London zinging to life with such an authentic voice. It's so rare to find the East Enders given their real voice.' Helen Mirren"
Frank McCourt
A gut-wrenching memoir that still has you gasping with laughter… simply unforgettable. A hell of a book.
The Sunday Times
Funny and touching, Too Many Mothers afforded me deep pleasure and it moved me to tears.
Customer Reviews
An Eastend Childhood brought to life with wit, humour and good writing
This is another one of these books which you will find hard to put down. This is really well written weaving in the all the family members in there own individual chapters. It is linked up with one memoir of a boxing day in 1956 which runs through the whole book. Mary and Bob have five daughters and two sons and it tells all there stories. Mary who's roots lie in an Irish travelling family spends her life begging, buying, selling and running from the Tallyman. She is a hard woman who seems to be ruled by money but in the abject proverty of London's East End between the wars who can blame her. We meet Granny Clara who sorts out young Mary. Uncle William who loves Flo who has a plate in her head. Vi who spends some time as a guest of HM Prison Service just like her Mother. Doll who wants something better and a baby, Win who falls in love with the wrong guy and Carol who marries the wrong guy. Robert who gets out and makes some life for himself despite his Mother stealing his 10 bob notes and young George who hits the road for New Zealand. You see them though the eyes of young Roberta who has to deal with her own idenity being a mystery. You do at times feel that this lot are a bit hard and Mary is not a perfect Mother by a long, long shot but the grinding poverty they have to put up with is an eye opener. Its also sad, funny and never does she once moan or pass judgement on any of them. She writes well and if you like Alan Bennetts obsevations and his family tales you will enjoy this.
A bewitching read from a bewitching author
I bought this book because I like Roberta Taylor as an actress, and would have been happy to read anything by her. I had expected a quick in-flight-read kind of a book. But it was a much better and richer experience than that. By the time I put it down, every character had been etched so clearly and memorably on my mind that I felt as if they'd all rented a large house in my head, and were carrying on their colourful lives up there.
Although it's all based on real-life characters and events from her own past, this isn't a book about Roberta Taylor, it's a book about life in the east-end of London in the first half of the 20th century. There's a real poignancy about it. You get the impression that the 1950s are such a watershed in Britain that looking back is like looking over a high wall.
She crafts the story for maximum impact and enjoyment, not to make herself the centre or focus of it. She does it brilliantly - the structure of the book leads to a tightly-woven cloth of overlapping and interwoven threads, with the same narratives sometimes retold from two or more perspectives. There's both a clear, forward-thrusting narrative, and a contemplative, side-stepping and time-hopping one which gives depth and suspense.
Far from being just another memoir by a celebrity, for my taste, this is up there with some of my favourites like Kate Atkinson's Human Croquet, or Cider With Rosie, or Under Milk Wood. Now that many of the places in the book have long since been glazed and steeled with new Docklands developments, this is a beautiful memorial to a past which is indeed another country.
brilliant!
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Rough, tough women, hardship, tears but also lighthearted moments and lots of hope. Just a blimmin' good read.



