ABOUT THE BOOK
A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER
Bev Thomas
Pamela Dorman Books /
Viking
On Sale: April 30,
2019
ISBN: 9780525561255
Price: $26.00
Ruth Hartland is an
experienced therapist at the top of her game. The director of a renowned
psychiatric unit for trauma victims, she is wise, intelligent, successful, and
respected by her peers. But her calm professional demeanor belies a personal
life full of secrets and sadness. The mother of grown twins, she is
haunted by the fact that her son Tom, a beautiful but fragile boy who could
never seem to fit in, disappeared eighteen months ago. So when Dan—a volatile
new patient bearing an eerie resemblance to Tom—wanders into her waiting room,
it’s not long before her judgment becomes clouded, boundaries are crossed, and
disaster ensues. Bev Thomas’ debut novel, A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER (Pamela
Dorman Books / Viking; Hardcover; $26.00; On Sale: April 30, 2019), is a
powerful page-turner about motherhood, grief, obsession, and the importance of
letting go.
A clinical
psychologist herself, author Bev Thomas has in-depth knowledge of therapy and
mental health, and takes readers inside Ruth’s head with rich detail and
realism. Who among us hasn’t wondered what goes on in the private thoughts and
life of a therapist? What is it like to be a sounding board for someone else’s
troubles—and how do you deal with your own demons in the meantime? A deeply
compelling narrator, Ruth is poised on the outside but troubled within,
incapable of moving on, fixated on how she failed her son and whether he can be
found. With her family in pieces and her marriage crumbling, Ruth finds this
new patient Dan is both a balm and a landmine—he is clearly unstable and
manipulative, but he is also the shadow son she might actually be able to save.
As Ruth twists herself into knots about her duties as a mother and a
therapist, she becomes frantic and reckless, events spiral out of control, and
her once calm and orderly life is violently disrupted.
A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER will
have readers on the edge of their seats, but it is also a brilliant, beautiful
story of parenting, of how love consumes us and how difficult it is to heal
from tragedy, even when we must.
PRAISE FOR A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER
“Taut, absorbing and
psychologically astute, in A Good Enough Mother Bev
Thomas combines all the tension of a thriller with the emotional resonance of a
powerful family drama.”
—Paula Hawkins,
bestselling author of The Girl on the Train
“[An] exceptional
debut. . . Thomas melds astute psychological insight with powerful storytelling
in this moving thriller.”
—Publishers
Weekly (starred review)
“A compelling,
ingenious novel about grief, love, the healing process, and what it means
to mother. . . Perfect for fans of psychological fiction, in
particular Alex Michaelides’ The Silent Patient.”
—Booklist
“A Good Enough Mother is not just everything a great thriller
should be—haunting, emotional, charged with depth and power—it is also a gorgeous
and devastating examination of motherhood that cuts right to the heart.”
—Aimee Molloy, New York Times bestselling author of The Perfect Mother
—Aimee Molloy, New York Times bestselling author of The Perfect Mother
“A gripping novel of
what happens when unexpected loss breaks open the boundaries of a carefully constructed
life, blurring perspectives and upending the best of intentions. This powerful
story of love, loss—and ultimately, healing—will resonate with anyone who has
ever loved a child.”
—Kim Edwards, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Memory Keeper’s Daughter
“The suspense is raw and enthralling, with a strong emotional ache at its center.”
—Hilma Wolitzer, author of An Available Man
“Both a riveting account of what goes on behind the scenes at your therapist's office and a dark meditation on motherhood, marriage and grief. I couldn't put it down.”
—Lisa Gabriele, author of The Winters
“Packs an emotional punch and is a gripping, original read. It is a novel full of loss and longing and the complexities of human relationships.”
—Kate Hamer, author of The Girl in the Red Coat
“A beautiful, compelling book about the hopes and terrors of motherhood. You’ll stay up reading way too late, desperate to find out what happens next . . . and even when you manage to put the book down, Ruth’s story will haunt you.”
—Gin Phillips, author of Fierce Kingdom
—Kim Edwards, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Memory Keeper’s Daughter
“The suspense is raw and enthralling, with a strong emotional ache at its center.”
—Hilma Wolitzer, author of An Available Man
“Both a riveting account of what goes on behind the scenes at your therapist's office and a dark meditation on motherhood, marriage and grief. I couldn't put it down.”
—Lisa Gabriele, author of The Winters
“Packs an emotional punch and is a gripping, original read. It is a novel full of loss and longing and the complexities of human relationships.”
—Kate Hamer, author of The Girl in the Red Coat
“A beautiful, compelling book about the hopes and terrors of motherhood. You’ll stay up reading way too late, desperate to find out what happens next . . . and even when you manage to put the book down, Ruth’s story will haunt you.”
—Gin Phillips, author of Fierce Kingdom
A CONVERSATION WITH BEV THOMAS
1. The
protagonist of A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER is Ruth Hartland, an
experienced therapist who specializes in helping trauma victims. You were also
a clinical psychologist for many years, and have an in-depth understanding of
this world. What made you want to explore the patient-therapist relationship in
fiction and how did your real-life experiences inform the novel?
In my work, I had always been very interested in grief and
loss – powerful emotions that not only underpin the human condition but
frequently find their way into the therapy room. But I was initially reluctant
to explore the therapeutic world in fiction, as I didn’t want the focus to be
on a patient. It was only when I flipped the concept and made the protagonist a
flawed therapist instead, that the story began to emerge. What if a brilliant
therapist is blindsided by feelings of grief about her own missing son? What if
one of her new patients reminds her of him? And so the story began.
All the detail around the case work is fictionalized, but
the world is real. The workings of a National Health Service [NHS] department,
the therapy work, and the understanding and treatment of psychological
difficulties are very much drawn from my experience of working as a clinical
psychologist in the public sector.
2. How do you
feel about the way therapy is typically depicted in popular culture, including
books, movies, and television shows? And why do you think people are so
consistently fascinated with this subject?
I find that in popular culture, therapy is often used as a
plot device rather than something to be explored in its own right. There are
many different types of therapy, but since my training was in the
psychoanalytic model, it was this area that I wanted to explore in greater
depth in fiction. It places emphasis on the transference, the relationship
between therapist and patient, and the importance of boundaries, and these are
the elements that get played out in Ruth’s story.
Therapy is about enabling a person to make sense of their
own life story. I think the general fascination with therapy in the media is
partly because it’s such a private world: just two people talking in a room.
There’s both an intimacy and secrecy to that relationship. In my book, people
come to therapy feeling desperate, and hope their lives will change for the
better. By opening a window into this world, the reader becomes a fly on the
wall, and by seeing it all through Ruth’s point of view, the reader is
simultaneously party to, and full of, her anxieties and struggles. People are
endlessly fascinated and intrigued about other people’s lives, but I believe
it’s more than just curiosity. I think people want to ‘listen in’ to learn
about what makes people tick, in order perhaps to apply that learning and
wisdom to their own lives.
There is clearly an appetite for this subject matter. Among
recent works of nonfiction, there is the brilliant An Examined Life by
the psychotherapist Stephen Grosz, where he writes beautiful case study vignettes.
They read like perfect short stories that teach us about life, love, emotions
and relationships. On television, the series In Treatment with
Gabriel Byrne was an excellent portrayal of the complexities of psychoanalytic
psychotherapy.
3. A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER is
also, as the title suggests, about the responsibilities and challenges of
motherhood. Why did you choose to ground the novel in Ruth’s role as a mother and
in her relationships with her children—and were there particular themes or issues
you hoped to explore?
In my clinical work, I became particularly interested in
attachment theory, and how this can affect the relationship between a mother and
child. The title is taken from the writings of Donald Winnicott, a British pediatrician
and psychoanalyst. It refers to the necessary progressive detachment of a mother to
her child, so that the child is able to develop appropriate independence. The
aim is for something less than perfect, not all encompassing, enabling a child
to learn to thrive. In the book, the irony for Ruth is that, despite her best
intentions, it is her own difficulties in separating from her son that
contribute to his problems.
Attachment and mothering are key themes in the book,
reflected in the relationship between Ruth and her mother, Ruth and her
son Tom, and also what we come to learn about the relationship between Dan and
his mother. We also see how patterns can unintentionally be repeated
through the generations. And in making Ruth the mother of twins, I
wanted to help the reader to see differences in the way she parents her two
children. Carolyn, as the overtly less ‘needy’ child, gets much less attention
and focus, which clearly affects their relationship.
I think the book highlights a general tendency towards ‘over
parenting’ and perhaps taps into the maternal anxiety of our generation. We are
bombarded with messages that encourage perfection, success, and the emotional
happiness of our children. And while we of course need to offer love and support
to our kids, we also need to know when to stand back and let them find their
own way, however painful that might be.
4. Because of
your background, you already had firsthand knowledge of psychological therapy
and psychoanalytic theory before beginning this book. But you did do some
additional research while writing. Can you talk a little bit about what that
process looked like, and what you learned more about?
I did further research into the psychology of trauma. It was
something I had encountered in my clinical work, but I was able to deepen this
understanding through research, particularly into the psychoanalytic
understanding and treatment of trauma. I came to appreciate the difficult and
enormously valuable work done by therapists who treat the survivors of awful
tragedies and traumas. We might read those stories on the front page of the
paper, or see them on the evening news, but we don’t always think about how
those people go on to live their lives after experiencing such terrible events.
While Ruth is a flawed character, I hope readers will gain an insight into the
psychoanalytic model of therapy and the extraordinary work done by skilled
therapists in this field.
I also did further research into missing persons. I was
appalled by the statistics of young people and adults that go missing every
year. My research focused on the lives of families and loved ones who are
left in an awful limbo, a state that has been described as an ‘ambiguous
loss’—a particularly painful psychological experience that is punctuated by
hope, uncertainty, and a lack of closure.
5. From the
first introduction of Dan—Ruth’s new patient who bears a striking resemblance
to her missing son—it is clear that he is damaged and manipulative. Yet Ruth is
drawn to him all the same, and the reader must wait with bated breath to see
just how bad things get. How did you go about building suspense, and were you
inspired by any other novels or films?
I probably spent an inordinate amount of time on the opening
chapter! It really needed to set up the book, revealing simultaneously both the
risk and the inevitability of Ruth’s choice to continue seeing this patient.
The reader needs to knows it’s unwise, but also to understand the pull. In the
book, the two parallel stories of Dan and Tom are interwoven. In each strand,
there are important questions to which the reader wants answers, and it is the
slow and steady revelations that build suspense, continuing until the
narratives collide and come to a climax at the same time.
Unsurprisingly, I’m drawn to books and film that explore
psychological and emotional complexities. One film that gets a mention in the
book is Ordinary People, which is an extraordinary film about the
aftermath of grief and loss in a family. I am endlessly fascinated about why
people do the things they do. The books and films I enjoy the most are
often about ordinary people’s lives. The dynamics of family life are steeped in
conflict and tension, and encapsulate huge drama.
One of the fundamentals for me in writing this book was to
ensure the characters make ‘psychological sense’. I wanted the reader to
really believe in them as characters; back stories, motivations, emotions and
subsequent behaviors had to be believable and true.
6. In many ways,
Ruth represents the archetype of the “wounded healer.” Can you expand on that
idea a little further, and what it means in the world of this book?
The “wounded healer” was a term originally created by the
famous psychoanalyst Carl Jung. It refers to the idea that analysts are
compelled to treat patients because they themselves are ‘wounded.’
Many people in the caring professions come to the work
because they are interested in it, but also perhaps because they have also had
difficult personal experiences. Therapists, just like all people, deal
with the complexities of emotional and family life, and this can often add,
rather than detract, from ability to do a good job.
As is highlighted in the book, however, a problem arises if
work becomes a way of trying to heal a personal problem. For Ruth, helping and
fixing was something that was rooted in her complicated childhood. She was the
child of an alcoholic, and after her father left her family, she was the sole
caretaker of a mother who was volatile and inconsistent. Undoubtedly,
this life experience played a part in her decision to train as a therapist –
and probably contributed to her being an extremely good one.
Yet, it is her more recent, current grief for her missing
son that is her undoing. She is ‘wounded’ by this trauma, so at the very time
she needs to be pulling back, she sinks in deeper, and Dan becomes a focus of
her feelings of grief and despair.
Therapists are not immune from the tragedies of life, and
support and supervision are essential to ensure that their work is not
compromised by their personal lives. In the book, Ruth has a supervisor, but
she is not honest with him, hiding crucial information because she knows
exactly what he would say if he knew the truth. She fails to practice what she
preaches.
7. Without
giving too much away, A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER culminates in a
terrible act of violence. But the book doesn’t end there, and instead shows the
characters working through the aftermath—confusion, grief, penance, acceptance.
Why was it important to you to examine the effects of trauma and to grapple
with the toll that this violence takes on the characters?
There is a multilayered aspect to the book, as I wanted to
create mirroring between the emotional experiences of the characters. We see
how Ruth’s childhood feeling of suffocation and lack of individuation at the
hands of her mother is mirrored in her relationship with her son. We
also see how her unresolved trauma regarding the disappearance of Tom draws her
inexorably to Dan, as she’s compelled to try to find a way to ‘fix’ him, in a
way she has failed to do with Tom. Dan was looking for a mother; she was
looking for a son. It was a perfect storm. Interweaving these stories was
fundamental to the plot, but I also wanted to make sure the emotional fallout
following the tragedy was similarly multilayered. It couldn’t be a clearcut
line of blame and responsibility that would fall at the door of one person –
life very rarely works that way. It felt important to show the subsequent
emotional unravelling in all its complexity.
8. What do you
hope readers take away from A GOOD ENOUGH MOTHER?
First and foremost, it’s a book of fiction, and so I hope
they enjoy it and find the narrative thought-provoking. But I also hope they
learn something new about the model of therapy, and the fact that you don’t
need to be in a therapy room to find the concepts useful. I hope people will
take away the value of acknowledging and experiencing our feelings. While Ruth
thinks she is in control of her world, she is in denial about the strength of
her deep feelings of grief and loss. But these feelings seep out. While there’s
no instant ‘cure’ for such feelings, talking and connecting with them is
essential. Ruth’s state of denial involves the suppression of feeling and that
is what causes problems.
I’ve worked in the NHS for many years, and currently work
with staff teams in mental health services. On a daily basis I work in a system
that is stretched and under-resourced. Mental health problems are increasing
and services to support people are decreasing. It was my aim to highlight this
pressure in the book. In one chapter, when Ruth works with a traumatized staff
team, we see firsthand the tragic impact of the unavailability of in-patient
beds for a desperately unwell patient. Services for mental health patients are
shockingly underfunded and as a patient group, they are often disenfranchised
and without voice and power to demand better services. One in four people will
be affected by a mental health problem in their lives regardless of culture and
social class, so this is an issue we should all be paying attention to. In
particular, the book highlights adolescent mental health issues and so I hope
it will draw attention to our responsibility for the youngest and most
vulnerable in our society.
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