I Know This Much Is True
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Incest in I Know This Much Is True?
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BAM who is Beth Anne
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Nov 14, 2008 06:44AM

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Sorry about the long comment! I hope this helps a little bit?? I really liked this book though! Have you read She's Come Undone or The Hour I First Believed??

thanks all for answering...i agree, with you, corrie....a large part of the book's narrative was emphasizing his mother's love for her children...her character probably would not harm either of her children in that way.
interesting..thanks for posting!



I have not started The Hour I First Believed yet, it's on my list of to-reads. How do you feel about it so far?






That never crossed my mind while I was reading it. I thought it was more that she didn't have a daughter and used him for activities a mom and daughter would do together.

I am excited to read his newest book" The Hour I First Believed" because I'm a huge Wally Lamb fan. I read "She's Come Undone" in like 2000 and it was so amazing, I couldn't believe how great he did at really getting into the psyche of a complex and damaged teenage girl. I would never have guessed it was written cross gender and I remember looking at the flap when I finished and being floored that it was written by a man. And being the same age as the girl was (I was a senior in high school) made it even more amazing because though I had nothing in common with her and was nothing like her, I could relate to a lot of the general mentality of being a girl that age. Wally Lamb is definitely one of my favorites.
I have to add (I know, I'm sorry for the long comment!) that "She's Come Undone" and "I Know This Much Is True" are very different books in style and everything, in my opinion. Just addding that after reading some of the other comments.

It had a suggestion of incest to me, but I don't think it was incest at all. I'm glad the author never went there. Adding incest to the mix would have turned the tragedy into melodrama.



I took it more as Dominick was further illustrating that Thomas was special to his mother: his traits allowed him to bond with his mother in a more effeminate way than he himself could.
The word special can certainly have some ambiguity to it, but I'm not sure of another word Mr. Lamb-or Dominick for that matter-could have used in that context to express the same idea without interrupting the flow.

AGREED!! you really read my mind.

The Hour I First Believed is my least favorite Wally Lamb book. Very disappointing.


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