The School for Good Mothers
Books | Fiction / Literary
3.4
(5.1K)
Jessamine Chan
Longlisted for the PEN/Hemingway Award for Debut Novel and the Carnegie Medal for Excellence | Shortlisted for The Center for Fiction First Novel Prize | Selected as One of Barack Obama’s Favorite Books of the Year! In this New?York?Times bestseller and Today show Read with Jenna Book Club Pick, one lapse in judgment lands a young mother in a dystopian government reform program where custody of her child hangs in the balance, in this “surreal” (People), “remarkable” (Vogue), and “infuriatingly timely” (The New York Times Book Review) debut literary fiction novel.Frida Liu, a hardworking Chinese American mother, is pushed to the edge. She doesn’t live up to the expectations set by her immigrant parents or her wellness-obsessed husband. Only with Harriet—cherubic and beloved—does she find a measure of fulfillment…until she has a very bad day. In this close-to-future dystopia, the state targets mothers like Frida: mothers who check their phones, let their children walk home alone, or make one parenting error. Because of one mistake, Frida is sent to a government-run institution—a Big Brother–style reform school for “good mothers,” where every move is monitored, and even her love is judged. For custody to be returned, she must prove that a flawed mother can be redeemed and learn to be “good.” Filled with dark wit and emotional urgency, The School for Good Mothers is an intense, captivating novel that scrutinizes upper-middle-class parenting, systemic surveillance of women, and the violence exacted by both the state and one another. It offers a transgressive exploration of motherhood, resilience, guilt, and the force of love. Using spare, compelling prose, Jessamine Chan crafts an unforgettable, modern classic that resonates with readers of The Handmaid’s Tale and 1984, while centering a richly drawn woman navigating class, race, and motherhood under the gaze of an unyielding system.
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Author
Jessamine Chan
Pages
336
Publisher
Simon and Schuster
Published Date
2022-01-04
ISBN
1982156147 9781982156145
Community ReviewsSee all
"I don’t normally read dystopian novels but this was very interesting. A mother has a very bad week and leaves her young child home alone and gets reported to CPS which results in her child getting taken away and her being forced to go to a school to learn to be a good mother, complete with robot children to help them become better mothers. Hard to read and it definitely felt like a horror movie, as I am a mother and we have all had bad days and it felt scary to imagine being judged for every minor infraction."
"Frida is not a perfect mom. Recently divorced, single mom of a toddler, she’s struggling: managing work, singleness, shared custody of her daughter, parental expectations and life in general. The story is about her encounter with child protective services agency after “her very bad day” and the overwhelming impact on her life as a mother. Heartbreaking.
I will be thinking about this book for a long time. About what it means to be a good parent, about society’s expectations of mothers, about the role of government in raising and protecting children.
Somewhat reminiscent of The Handmaids Tale and 1984.
Recommend. "
"⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Oooh I loved the way this one started. As a mom myself, this hit a lot of nerves. Punishing moms for things sometimes outside of their control, the way the fathers are not being watched under the same microscope, painful feelings of jealousy towards stepparents. It really hit them all in a unique way. I found a couple of the chapters particularly the ones surrounding the cleaning of the dolls to be really disturbing and I didn’t necessarily understand the point of it being on the story. Trigger warning, some suicide scenes and suicidal ideation. This book upset me deeply and will stay with me for a long time. I really enjoyed it. "
"It was all right. The first 25% was a little slow and repetitive. Also some things in the book were so ridiculous it was just silly and made me laugh. It was almost like a parody, but I don’t think that was the author’s goal. She could have toned it down a little and still have written a compelling social commentary. "
"⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️.25 Wow…. I was in an emotional rollercoaster while reading this. Mostly anger and heartache. Although I thought the middle-ish section was very slow and kinda boring to read, and in some of those parts I didn’t love the way the story was written. The beginning and ending kept me at the edge of seat. The book really explores the pressure they put on mothers to be perfect and left me in heartache. It was dystopian-esc (I wouldn’t say a true dystopian), but also felt so realistic that it can happen or is already happening. Overall I enjoyed the book."