Cover Image: Between Before and After

Between Before and After

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Member Reviews

This story is told in dual POVs/time periods, though both are historical, and I really enjoyed that. Excerpts from Hansel and Gretel are added throughout the story to help give a bit of insight into parts of the story. At times, the pacing was a bit slower than I would’ve liked, but it did balance out by the end. Drama and intrigue combine to make this a story that is easy to engage with, and the characters are realistic and relatable. While I felt a bit more could’ve been done with the ending, I enjoyed the book overall.

Disclaimer: I received a complimentary copy, but I wasn’t required to leave a positive review.

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BEFORE: Summer of 1919, 6 months after her mother and little sister's death, Elaine got a job to help support her family. Elaine and Stephen's drunk father was jobless as often as he was working. Every morning she went to read the newspaper to a blind older gentleman. The Gossley family was wealthy, giving the children opportunities for funds, food, and education they otherwise wouldn't have had.

AFTER: Molly's parents are separated. Her dad left because her mom (Elaine) wouldn't let the 'past stay buried'. Uncle Stephen came to stay with them while being investigated by the Catholic church for being a miracle worker. The investigation brought media and miracle hopeful people to their doorstep and Elaine's bitterness against God out in the open. Molly decided to do a biography and find out what happened to her mom.

There was a lot of drama; alcoholic father, death of a mother, parents separated, children neglected, depression, teenager wanting to fit in, hormones - but the stories were told in such a way that really captures the lives of the characters. So many cleverly written foreshadowing in the book. The story of Hansel and Gretel was told in segments between chapters to give insight in the lives of the characters. Its hard to tell in the moment what decisions will have a lasting impact on your life. Between Before and After reminds me a little of Then She Was Gone in that way, all the moments/choices.

The pacing felt a little slow. I know the author said to leave room for miracles in stories but there was so much drama, it didn't feel like the story would get better. (it eventually kind of does?).

I was given an Advance Reader Copy by the publisher in exchange for a review, all opinions are my own.

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Told in different times the past and future. Elaine's is a young girl worried about school, family and overall life. Given a hard hand in life she does her best to carry her and her brother throughout life. While the other point of view comes from, Molly who spends her summer chasing her mothers past, while dealing with her Uncle who is tossed into the light of the town for doing a miracle.

Once I started this story I was lost into the pages, so it was easy to spend hours reading this book. I finished it in just a few days and I still find myself thinking about it. I enjoyed the characters, for me, they are what made this book amazing. Their wit and caring, made me hope for them. The messages of family, roles of women and faith; parts were beautifully done. Going from the past to the future was done so well, I never got confused about who I was reading. I loved how Hansel and Gretel were sprinkled in between the parts. This title and cover fit this book perfectly. But for me, I loved how much writing and the power of words affected these characters and their lives. I did highlight a few lines that I love and hope they made it into the finished book.

Step into this beautifully written book, that feels like a classic with family, drama & hope!

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interesting read with unique and interesting writing. this book really made me think and question things but kept me into the story.

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Historical fiction is a beautiful, sometimes painful way to learn and appreciate past eras that have shaped our country. This new book by Maureen Doyle McQuerry is perfect for young adults. It gives them a close-up look of a young girl’s life in New York, 1918 when the flu epidemic took so many. The story flashes back and forth between 1918 and 1955, when the child, Elaine is grown with a daughter of her own. Molly is consumed with the need to understand her mother’s melancholy moods. As she digs deeper into the fractured history of her mother’s life, she may not be prepared for what she learns. This is an enjoyable, realistic but not too dark reflection of the growing pains suffered by many in the evolution of a nation.
(I received an advance copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an unbiased review. Thank you to Blink for making it available.)

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As someone who doesn't read a huge amount of historical fiction (though I have read quite a bit this year) so please take that into account when you read my review. I can't speak to tropes or what may be cliché or new or exciting - I can only speak to my experience reading this book - just something to keep in mind. 

I loved the way that this book had a split narrative. I've read books that follow two different timelines before (a huge trend around the same time as The Time Traveller's Wife was popular) but what I really liked about this book was that both timelines were historical fiction - the 1950s and the 1910s-20s. I liked that this gave you two historical perspectives as opposed to one historical and one modern day - which I've seen before and wasn't overly enamoured with. So not only do you get the grit, the grime and also the strange fantasy of post WW1 New York but you also get snippets of 50s America, with a trip to the newly built McDonalds and so forth. I thought this was written really well and it also made it feel so much more special with that element of dramatic irony knowing what was to come in the next few decades. Since the 1950s element is written as though it is being written (complicated but I promise it makes sense) you also get the feeling of perhaps a third generation reading the book in the modern day. Perhaps I'm reading too deep - but that's how it felt to me. 

I thought that the 'mystery' element was less mystery and more intrigue? I appreciate that doesn't make a huge amount of sense so let me explain. I managed to work out the gist of what had happened (what Molly was trying to work out) pretty early on. I don't think of that as a negative, but those looking for surprising plot twists might not appreciate that element of this story. What that meant was that reading both Molly and Elaine's narratives you get to witness a daughter learning why her mother is the way that she is. There's a strange feeling knowing more than Molly does and then a very satisfying feeling when she puts together another piece of the puzzle that, as a reader, you've already solved. So I wouldn't describe this as a mystery in the traditional sense, though there are mysterious elements. 

I thought that some parts of the story needed spotlighting a little bit more, just to get the balance right. Namely, the 'miracle' performed by Molly's Uncle Stephen. It isn't that I didn't appreciate what that subplot brought to the story, but I'm not sure that the dramatic effect it had on Molly's family's life was brought into the forefront as much as it could have been. I think it would have helped to balance the conflict within the two perspectives. Just my take though, and perhaps that was just in the way in which I read the story. 

If you like historical fiction with mystery and intrigue that explores the complex relationship between mother and daughter as well as between the past and the present then I would absolutely recommend Between Before and After. It brings together a number of great ideas and it even made me shed a tear or two. 

My rating: 4/5 stars

I received a free digital advanced copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

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Maureen Doyle McQuerry has crafted a beautifully emotional story filled with love, loss, hope, and discovery.

Ms. McQuerry's writing style is absolutely captivating, as I can guarantee you will be unable to stop flipping the pages of this book due to its ability to enchant readers. Everything from the plot, setting, and characters in this novel are original and unforgettable. I loved reading in the perspectives of both Molly and her mother, Elaine, for they both had such exquisitely different ways of viewing things.

I loved this book's setting as well. It was very well-developed and vividly written. While reading Between Before and After, I felt as though I was actually being transported to another world.

The only thing I would critique about this book is its ending. I found it to be slightly rushed, for it lacked much-needed build-up and development.

But all in all, this is a dazzling story that you won't want to miss out on once it hits shelves!

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Writers are a strange lot, at least when they’re written about.
Fourteen year old Molly knows this better than anyone. In the mid-fifties, she and her family carve out a strange little life in California, mostly ruled by the whims and near-mania of her mother’s obsessive biography project.
Though Molly and her kid brother do their best to simultaneously win their mothers affection and stay out of her way, that is easier planned than done.
Through dusty archived of the lives of others, including her own mother, Molly stumbles upon a family secret too heavy to leave alone.
Through present (well, relatively, since it’s the 50’s) day struggles, wives through with threads of family history and fairytales, Between, Before, and After stays true to its name in a beautifully written overlapping timeline.
As is the case with many intricately written stories, there is a sizable helping of hard moments. Depression, substance use, abuse, and neglect made this one both difficult to read at times and heartbreakingly beautiful.
It’s certainly not a typical Yoing Adult novel but in many ways, that became a breath of fresh air.
The book comes out next month (February 5, 2019) and I’m grateful to Blink (an imprint of HarperCollins), Netgalley, and Maureen Doyle McQuerry for an early review copy of this book.

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* 4.5 stars *

A book that managed to tie the past and present together with the undertones of a fairytale gives us a story that shows how far someone will go to protect the ones they love and just how similar mothers and daughters can be.

“Between Before and After” finds Molly digging through her mother’s drawers when she finds a mysterious envelope that makes her question what secrets lie in her past and what it can tell her about their future as a family.

I really loved the style of this book setting us up with Molly’s discovery and her quest to find answers intermixed with the past told in her mother’s point of view as she and her brother struggle to survive when the odds are stacked against them. All the while we gets hints in Molly’s sections that something happens to make her mother lose all faith and over the course of the book we see what happened and why the past doesn’t always get to stay there.

Both of their stories were so beautiful and tragic in that these two share a lot of similarities but seem to clash more often than not. It’s especially true when we see their counterparts in their respective younger brothers and that plays to the roles put on older siblings to be more responsible even if it means putting your own happiness aside. Also due to the times in which this story takes place there’s always this lingering sense of dread when it comes to Elaine’s story that very much plays into the feeling most women have in their life at some point or another and in her case her anger towards those who (and this is as best as I can say without spoiling) believe one life is more important than another.

My only real critique is that the ending didn’t feel final to me it was almost as though someone had tried to make it something that would stick with you long after you turned the page but for me it felt a lot like I was missing one which was a bit underwhelming considering how much I enjoyed the rest.

Both of these stories are told with the undercurrents of Hansel and Gretel sprinkled in between and as the reader you know that though this is a story grounded in reality, one of them must meet the witch and you hope that they survive and as it blends heavy topics like the roles of women, generational struggles and faith you follow them along on this path and make their way back home.

**special thanks to the publishers and netgalley for providing an arc in exchange for a fair and honest review!**

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Between before and after is about the deep dark secrets between family members and how the secrets will break the family apart.

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