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Rabbit Heart
Rabbit Heart: A Mother's Murder, a Daughter's Story | Kristine S. Ervin
2 posts | 3 read | 1 to read
A Washington Post “Most Anticipated” Book of the Year For readers of My Dark Places and The Fact of a Body, a beautiful, brutal memoir documenting one woman’s search for identity alongside her family's decades-long quest to identify the two men who abducted—and murdered—her mother Kristine S. Ervin was just eight years old when her mother, Kathy Sue Engle, was abducted from an Oklahoma mall parking lot and violently murdered in an oil field. First, there was grief. Then the desire to know: what happened to her, what she felt in her last terrible moments, and all she was before these acts of violence defined her life. In her mother’s absence, Ervin tries to reconstruct a woman she can never fully grasp—from her own memory, from letters she uncovers, and from the stories of other family members. As more information about her mother's death comes to light, Ervin’s drive to know her mother only intensifies, winding into her own fraught adolescence. She reckons with contradictions of what a woman is allowed to be—a self beyond the roles of wife, mother, daughter, victim—what a “true” victim is supposed to look like, and, finally, how complicated and elusive justice can be. Told fearlessly and poetically, Rabbit Heart weaves together themes of power, gender, and justice into a manifesto of grief and reclamation: our stories do not need to be simple to be true, and there is power in the telling.
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kbuggle
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Pickpick

A true crime memoir focused around the author‘s mother and her death after being kidnapped when she was a young girl. All the trigger warnings apply here, this is raw and brutal, but beautifully written.

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Lesliereadsalot
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Pickpick

This one is not for the faint of heart. Five year old Kristine‘s mother is abducted from a mall parking lot, and she and her brother and her father have to live with that their whole lives. This true story grabs you from page one and continues to throttle you up until the end. Page after page, Kristine tries to make sense out of this senseless crime as it colors her every waking moment. It‘s a heartbreaker but a must read.