“The first time I touched a dead person,
I was too short to reach into the casket, so my father picked me up and I
leaned in for that first, empty, cold touch. It was thrilling, because it was
an unthinkable act.”
When Kate
Mayfield was born she was taken straight to the funeral home where her family
lived. Her father was
the undertaker of the small town Jubilee in Kentucky. Consequently, Kate grew
up surrounded by corpses as her father dealt with the towns deceased.
Life above the
funeral home was much tougher for Kate. There she lived with her mother and
father, brother and sisters. Kate soon learned that life upstairs amongst the
living was much more challenging than downstairs amongst the dead.
This is a very
interesting memoir in which the author looks back on growing up in a small town
in Kentucky in the 1960’s and 70’s.
The cast of
characters that inhabited the world of her childhood and youth were wonderfully
eccentric and diverse and she describes them in such a way that I felt I knew
these people personally. Kate herself, was very easy to engage with and
she tells her story well.
At times it
made uncomfortable reading as methods used by an undertaker in preparing the
dead were described. However, it was not overly described so did not make me
feel squeamish. These sections of the book were handled with sensitivity.
This book is
very aptly titled as the focus of the book really is on the relationship
between Kate and her father. She appears to describe her father with great
honesty whilst never forgetting the flaws of the man. As a reader I respected
her for her sensitive portrayal of him.
However,
without doubt, Kate lays bare the dysfunctional relationships within her
family. How much of that can be attributed to the unusual circumstances in
which the family live, she leaves the reader to decide.
What I really
liked about this book is that although it deals with some very difficult themes
it is an optimistic book. It never becomes depressing to read and demonstrates
how people learn to cope with the difficult circumstances which life throws at
them.
This is an
interesting coming of age memoir which anyone with an interest in relationships
would enjoy.
ISBN: 978 1471134470
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster
Price: £10.39
About the
Author:
Kate Mayfield is co-author of Ten Steps to Fashion Freedom and Ellie Hart Goes to Work. She attended Western Kentucky University
before moving to Manhattan where she graduated from the American Academy of
Dramatic Arts. After living in New York and Los Angeles she now lives in London.
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