It's 1960, and Elizabeth has a good life. A husband who takes care of
her, two healthy children, a farm in the Forties Settlement. But
Elizabeth is slowly coming apart, her reality splintering. She knows she
will harm her children, wants to harm her children, wants to be stopped
from harming her children. She doesn't sleep, becomes incoherent.
Elizabeth is taken away.
We rejoin her in 1975, "well" once again, living in a group home and
desperately trying to fill in the enormous gaps electric shock therapy
has left in her memory. She remembers five words from her past and knows
they are significant, but their meaning is slippery and she can't grasp
more. She knows that Jewel and Jacob are her children, though she can't
picture their faces, and more than anything, she longs to find them and
explain that she never meant to leave for so long.
Shifting through time and points of view, acclaimed author Laura Best's
first novel for adults allows us to see the ripple effects of mental
illness and its treatment in the mid-twentieth century. Good Mothers
Don't is a moving exploration of illness, memory, and how we fight for
who we love.