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The Accidentals

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Following the death of their mother from a botched backwoods abortion, the McAlister daughters have to cope with the ripple effect of this tragedy as they come of age in 1950s Mississippi and then grow up to face their own impossible choices—an unforgettable, beautiful novel that is threaded throughout with the stories of mothers and daughters in pre-Roe versus Wade America.

Life heads down back alleys, takes sharp left turns. Then, one fine day it jumps the track and crashes."

In the fall of 1957, Olivia McAlister is living in Opelika, Mississippi, caring for her two girls, June and Grace, and her husband, Holly. She dreams of living a much larger life—seeing the world and returning to her wartime job at a landing boat factory in New Orleans. As she watches over the birds in her yard, Olivia feels like an "accidental"—a migratory bird blown off course.

When Olivia becomes pregnant again, she makes a fateful decision, compelling Grace, June, and Holly to cope in different ways. While their father digs up the backyard to build a bomb shelter, desperate to protect his family, Olivia's spinster sister tries to take them all under her wing. But the impact of Olivia's decision reverberates throughout Grace's and June's lives. Grace, caught up in an unconventional love affair, becomes one of the "girls who went away" to have a baby in secret. June, guilt-ridden for her part in exposing Grace's pregnancy, eventually makes an unhappy marriage. Meanwhile Ed Mae Johnson, an African-American care worker in a New Orleans orphanage, is drastically impacted by Grace's choices.

As the years go by, their lives intersect in ways that reflect the unpredictable nature of bird flight that lands in accidental locations—and the consolations of imperfect return.

Filled with tragedy, humor, joy, and the indomitable strength of women facing the constricted spaces of the 1950s and 60s, The Accidentals is a poignant, timely novel that reminds us of the hope and consolation that can be found in unexpected landings.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 1, 2019
      Evocatively depicting the small town of Opelika, Miss., in 1957, Gwin (Promise) tells the heart-rending story of a mother feeling trapped in her life, whose death throws her family into turmoil. Olivia goes to a “chiropractor” for an illegal abortion, dying a few days later from complications. Her husband, Holly, copes by trying to protect his daughters from the unlikely threats of bombs and natural disasters while ignoring their emotional needs. The older daughter, Grace, blames herself for not finding Olivia sooner, and her own poor choices lead to her becoming pregnant at 16 and getting sent away to have the baby in secret. The younger daughter, June, grows up to marry unhappily. Meanwhile, Ed Mae, the orphanage worker who cares for Grace’s child, has a moment of distraction that leads to complex consequences. Though the story is wrought with sadness, there’s a sense of hope that those thrown off course may find happiness in the end. Fans of tear-jerkers will forgive the occasional too-pat coincidence as Gwin brings all the threads together for an uplifting finale. This is a satisfying fable of errors and consequences in a tumultuous era. Agent: Jane von Mehren, Aevitas Creative Mgmt.

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2019
      White sisters in 1950s Mississippi lose their mother to a botched abortion and spend the next several decades struggling to navigate their own fraught relationship. Grace and June McAlister live in Opelika, Mississippi, where their father is an accountant for the lumber mill and their mother stays home to look after the family. The girls don't know that their mother, Olivia, always wanted to be more than a wife and mother. When Olivia discovers she's pregnant again, she visits a local abortionist whose shoddy technique causes her irreparable physical damage. After Olivia confesses to her husband, Holly, what she's done, he takes the girls to see the giraffes at the nearby zoo. During the time they spend looking at animals, Olivia bleeds out and dies at home. As Holly grieves his wife, he becomes obsessed with protecting his daughters. Instead of tending to their meals or hygiene, though, he spends all his time in the backyard, digging a bomb shelter. After a few years of Holly's subpar supervision, Grace ends up a pregnant teenager. When her sister, June, discovers the pregnancy, she immediately tells Holly, and he sends Grace to a home for pregnant girls where she can wait out the pregnancy and put the baby up for adoption. Grace blames June for several unfortunate events that follow, and their strife continues for decades thereafter. Every time the sisters attempt to move beyond the mistakes of their shared past, something new seems to get in their way. An important story about women's reproductive rights and the consequences of limited choices, the novel will transport readers to the rural Mississippi of a bygone era. The prose is teeming with beautifully vivid portraits of local birds and vegetation as well as evocative descriptions of contemporary foods, homemade liquor, and weekday dinners. Told from the perspectives of multiple characters, including the sisters, their parents, and Ed Mae Johnson, an African American nurse from the orphanage, the story offers unique and insightful perspectives on family, race, forgiveness, and personal agency. An artfully crafted tale that explores how restrictions on women's choices impacted female relationships in mid-20th-century America.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Cassandra Campbell's sensitive narration draws listeners into this story of two unplanned pregnancies in 1950s-60s Mississippi and their repercussions on the McAlister family. Campbell captures the uncertainty and impulsivity of adolescence as she portrays the McAlister sisters, who are at the heart of this multigenerational story. She modulates the tone and pitch of her soft voice to express the older Grace's sad but rebellious nature and the younger June's thoughtful demeanor. Their benignly neglectful father, Holly, is depicted in a detached tone, a high pitch evokes their shrill Aunt Frances, and the other secondary characters are all fully realized. References to nature, especially birds, add complexity. While Campbell's languid pacing occasionally distracts from this involving audiobook, overall her delivery is masterful. M.J. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
    • Booklist

      June 1, 2019
      One Friday morning, Olivia McAlister took the money her husband had secretly been saving for a trip to Paris and made a journey instead to a filthy house in the country for an abortion. She had traveled far from her hometown of New Orleans, and her WWII job running the main office at a boatyard, to small-town Opelika, Mississippi?but she would travel no farther. Olivia's tragic story creates a chasm in the lives of her husband and their two girls, 10-year-old June and 12-year-old Grace. While her husband mourns the son he never had and becomes obsessed with keeping his family safe by building a bomb shelter, June and Grace must learn to care for themselves and navigate the stormy waters of young adulthood. Gwin skillfully switches between the varied perspectives of the family and those who impact their stories, creating a novel saturated with heartbreak but still offering thin rays of hope. As their fragile attempts to rebuild their lives are challenged, June and Grace see their chances at redemption hanging in the balance.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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