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Postcards from the edge book review
Postcards from the edge book review











For example, when a fellow movie actor tells Suzanne, “I think I love you ” there’s a pause, then the reply, “When will you know for sure?”Īnyone really interested in these issues should perhaps instead read “My Mother/My Self,” or any of the other self-help books currently flooding the market. In fact, the illusions that the production hands create with Suzanne’s movie sets are more entertaining or amusing than some of her snappy lines of dialogue. However, POSTCARDS may have too much reality and not enough entertainment.

postcards from the edge book review

These are real problems that many parents and siblings go through these days. The issues of coming to terms with crippling, dysfunctional family patterns are clearly shown, as are the hurt and misunderstanding that exists between the generations. It is a good “slice-of-life” script, which is why the film merits three stars. On the one hand, the interplay between mother and daughter is humorous and insightful (both often talk at the same time without listening to the other). All these crises come to a head when Suzanne tells her grandmother to shut up, and a heartfelt talk between mom and daughter ensues. Themes of co-dependency and living out each other’s lives are further developed as daughter’s drug problem is shown to be connected with her mother’s drinking problem, which eventually puts Doris in the hospital when she gets loaded and runs the car into a tree. For example, when Doris throws a coming-home party to celebrate Suzanne’s release from the drug clinic and asks her to sing a song, wouldn’t you know that mom has to upstage the action with her own song. Problems like: the mother overshadowing her daughter the daughter unable to break off and be herself the mother telling daughter how to run her life and, the mother wants her daughter to do well, but not better than she. Suzanne agrees to the arrangement, but the mother/daughter problems they’ve had through the years soon begin to re-surface. Once Suzanne checks out, she is informed by her agent that she can only return to the set if she consents to her mother staying with her as guardian for the duration of the movie. While working on a movie, actress Suzanne Vale experiences a drug overdose and is brought to a hospital rehabilitation unit. The film follows Suzanne (Meryl Streep), an actress in her thirties, who struggles to rebuild her life and find the common ground that she and her mother, Doris (Shirley MacLaine), have neglected for years.

postcards from the edge book review

POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE is about a very real mother-daughter relationship set against the backdrop of life in the Hollywood fast lane.













Postcards from the edge book review