
The Unquiet Daughter
Danielle Flood
(Author)Description
Danielle Flood, a journalist born of the wartime love triangle that inspired the one in Graham Greene's The Quiet American, searches for her father after surviving a bizarre youth of privilege, estrangement and cruelty. As she yearns for her father's love and presence, Danielle's beautiful French and Vietnamese mother leaves her in burlesque house dressing rooms in the American Midwest, in convent schools in Long Island and Dublin, and with strangers in New York City. Meanwhile she lies to Danielle about their past for decades in this sometime-humorous near-tragic love story between a daughter and a mother and more. In the end we learn if Flood's journey through the truth of what happened between her parents in early 1950's Saigon satisfies her life-long quest for who she is.
"Powerful," "compelling," "heartbreaking," "a gripping story of self-doubt and self-discovery." --Publishers Weekly
"Holy Moly, Mother of God...It's a knockout...Ferociously honest and gorgeously written, Flood's memoir is a fiercely tragic story of her search for her real father, her knotted relationship with her complicated mother-and her hard-won understanding of herself. About memory, love, loss and time, Flood's engrossing debut shines like mica and is as polished as platinum." - Caroline Leavitt, The New York Times bestselling author.
"The similarities in The Unquiet Daughter between Flood's parents' lives and the plot of Graham Greene's The Quiet American "are tantalizingly close, far too close to be coincidental; as Flood writes in the Prologue: 'I came from a love triangle much like the one Greene describes in his novel. I am the sequel he never wrote.'...As sequels go, Danielle Flood's life story could easily be a Graham Greene novel, full of dark twists and turns, betrayals, heartbreak and the saddest of all forms of unrequited love...moving and at times imbued with humour...the tension is all too believable, but so is the joy...forgiveness and healing are at the heart of the story and the author's ability to forgive is almost as powerful as the complex plot itself." - The Catholic World Report
"The Unquiet Daughter by Danielle Flood is the true story of an exceptional woman. It takes the reader on an amazing journey. Exotic, mysterious, exciting, and romantic.Bravo Danielle Flood. It's a classic." - Oscar-nominated actor Elliott Gould
"In Danielle Flood's clear eyed memoir of her early life with her exquisitely beautiful and deeply troubled mother, this truth echoes: the fact that a child could survive such emotional devastation and cruelty is a testament to her resilience and her valiant spirit." - Leslie Daniels, author, Cleaning Nabokov's House
"...a compelling, poetic account of self-doubt, self-discovery and the power of love." - Fordham Magazine
"Passionate and unflinchingly honest, this is a fascinating memoir...Danielle Flood is the child of an affair so much like the one described in the love triangle of Greene's novel, The Quiet American, that she is perfectly right to make her startling claim, 'I am a sequel he never wrote." --Michael Shelden, author, Graham Greene The Enemy Within.
Product Details
Publisher | Piscataqua Press |
Publish Date | September 01, 2016 |
Pages | 388 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781944393182 |
Dimensions | 8.5 X 5.5 X 0.9 inches | 1.1 pounds |
Reviews
"...a work that will outlive us all: compelling, acutely honest and profoundly moving, without being whiny or cruel. That's rare." - Joe McGinniss, the late author, The Selling of the President 1968.
"Danielle Flood is the daughter of a complex (woefully inadequate in this case) French/Vietnamese woman who was part of a wartime love triangle that inspired the one in Graham Greene's novel, The Quiet American...While the Greene connection may have lured me in, it was Flood's compelling "sequel" that kept me riveted as she chronicled her often harrowing childhood, an intensive search for her real father and finally the unraveling of impossibly fine threads woven between her parents's lives and Greene's fiction. Journalist and storyteller are in perfect sync in these pages." - Robert Gray, Fresh Eyes Now, Shelf-Awareness.
"Extraordinary and spectacular...a story that can connect powerfully and poignantly with most of us." -David Lawrence, Jr., international child advocate and former publisher of The Miami Herald.
This book relates to the triumph of the indomitable human spirit in the most trying of life's circumstances, and, for that alone, should be read by anyone who deigns to call himself/herself a sentient being. Yeah, it's that good." - Jo Manning, author, My Lady Scandalous.
"When I was 13 or so, the Vietnam War in full flower, reading Graham Greene's The Quiet American let me appreciate fiction in a whole new way. Years later, Danielle Flood's riveting memoir-cum-mystery-story has let me appreciate Greene and his novel - and the intersections of fiction and nonfiction - in new ways. Such a story! And so beautifully told." - Kurt Andersen, novelist, host of the public radio show Studio 360
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