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Ancestor Trouble: A Reckoning and a…
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Ancestor Trouble: A Reckoning and a Reconciliation (edición 2023)

por Maud Newton (Autor)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
20911129,896 (3.54)8
"Maud Newton's ancestors have vexed and fascinated her since she was a girl. Her mother's father, who came of age during the Great Depression in Texas, was supposedly married thirteen times, and survived being shot in the stomach by one of his wives. His father purportedly killed a man in the street with a hay hook, and later died in a mental institution. On her father's side, a Massachusetts ancestor was accused of being a witch, who cast sickness on her neighbor's ox and was later tried in court for causing the death of a child. Maud's father had a master's in aerospace engineering on scholarship from an Ivy League university and was valedictorian of his law school class; he also viewed slavery as a benevolent institution that should never have been disbanded, and would paint over the faces of brown children in her storybooks. He was obsessed with maintaining the purity of his family bloodline, which he could trace back to the days of the Revolutionary War. Her mother was a whirlwind of charisma and passions that could become obsessions; she kept over thirty cats and birds in a tiny two-bedroom apartment, and later started a church in her living room, where she would perform exorcisms. Maud's parents' marriage was acrimonious, their divorce a relief. But the meeting of their lines in her was something she could not shake. She signed up for an online account and began researching her genealogy. She found records of marriages and trials, wills in which her ancestors gave slaves to their spouses and children. The search took over her life. But as she dabbled in DNA testing and found herself sunk in census archives at 1 o'clock in the morning, it was unclear to her what she was looking for. She wanted a truth that would set her free, in a way she hadn't identified yet. This book seeks to understand why the practice of genealogy has become a multi-billion-dollar industry in contemporary America, while also mining the secrets and contradictions of one singularly memorable family history"--… (más)
Miembro:settingshadow
Título:Ancestor Trouble: A Reckoning and a Reconciliation
Autores:Maud Newton (Autor)
Información:Random House Trade Paperbacks (2023), 432 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca, Lista de deseos (inactive), Actualmente leyendo, Por leer, Lo he leído pero no lo tengo, Favoritos
Valoración:
Etiquetas:to-read

Información de la obra

Ancestor Trouble por Maud Newton

Añadido recientemente porepa, airgid, pearcare, lafstaff, gonzocc, CharScraps, kitcaswe
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» Ver también 8 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 10 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Although I was truly excited to read this book, it disappointed me. Although I think the author has many wonderful ideas and passages, they weren’t communicated in an organized way. The book felt disjointed with repetitions throughout and seemed to oscillate from one idea to the next. To me, it felt like an early draft of what could be (but wasn’t yet) a truly fascinating memoir interspersed with information about genealogy and the dna companies and how they use the data they collect. ( )
  mixterchar | Jul 19, 2023 |
This is an autobiographical story of a woman trying to come to terms with her family heritage both in terms of mental health and their various misdeeds in the past. (Racism and slavery are the big ones). She goes back many, many generations and she has done a vast amount of research. I loved when she wrote about her family stories but bogs down when she describes other books on ancestry and genetics. Also toward the end she believes she has found a way to contact relatives from hundreds of years ago. Call me a skeptic. ( )
  muddyboy | Oct 22, 2022 |
(38) Ugh. I so disliked this book - it took me forever to read and was really a chore at the end. I sadly bought a hard cover version of this book based on something promising I read or heard and was looking forward to it with my new love of non-fiction and my son's curiosity regarding genetics and genealogy. But it was just .... not good. The author is a lawyer who fancies herself a writer who writes this extend amateurish term paper regarding her research into genealogy; her own family history; and some bizarre musings and explorations into the practice of ancestor worship.

It turns out she is just really disappointed because not only does she have no black descendants; she finds out her family (from the Mississippi Delta, no less) was actually; shockingly -- racist. Evangelical. Mentally ill. Violent. All the things that a wanna be bougie progressive writer abhors. Sigh. We get it. We are glad you had your own personal "reckoning" with race.

The chapters would seem to start off pseudo-intellectual with some quotes from primary sources, newspaper clipping, a thesis of sorts -- and then be so rambling and disconnected and repetitive. I completely lost track which great great great grandfather or grandmother she was talking about even with re-reading. Whenever she went into the ancestor worship and her fat fairy blue moth-like guide; I was done. I threw up in my mouth and shut the book.

Just.. bad. I won't get the time or money back, so I finished. Only redeeming thing - I am certainly interested in the life of my ancestors and the karmic, cosmic connection that might exist. This is worth exploring. But the execution of this premise was dreadful. One of the worst books I have read and certainly bought in recent memory. ( )
  jhowell | Aug 24, 2022 |
I'm torn with this book. To begin with Maud does an interesting and thorough job sharing her family history with us, and turned family lore into proven story with all of it's skeletons, murder, racism, & slaveholders to name a few. Then she delves very well into the DNA and the industry of genealogy, but when she tries to go into the spiritual reckoning and connection part she lost me towards the end. All in all, a very well researched, thought provoking book! ( )
1 vota EllenH | Jul 7, 2022 |
Ancestor Trouble is an intriguing historical detective memoir, though the answers Maud Newton is searching for are more nebulous and more intriguing than any “whodunnit” could be. The nicest thing you can say about her antecedents is that they are interesting. She is estranged from her father who is so racist he would paint out the faces of Black people in her books when she was a child. A certain level of mental illness persisted from generation to generation including religious mania in her mother and ninth great-grandmother. Definitely an interesting bunch. I am sure they were far more entertaining to read about than to live with.

I think Ancestor Trouble begins well enough. It’s fascinating, at first, to learn more about her family and see the reverberation of trauma over generations. I think, though, that she fails to recognize that if nature provides a bit of insanity, that may also translate into nurture, so she becomes a bit too much of a biological determinist for me. As the book progressed she got more and more into the mystical/spiritual side of things and it turned me off.

I received an e-galley of Ancestor Trouble from the publisher through NetGalley

Ancestor Trouble at Penguin Random House
Maud Newton author site

https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2022/05/15/ancestor-trouble-by-maud-... ( )
  Tonstant.Weader | May 15, 2022 |
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"Maud Newton's ancestors have vexed and fascinated her since she was a girl. Her mother's father, who came of age during the Great Depression in Texas, was supposedly married thirteen times, and survived being shot in the stomach by one of his wives. His father purportedly killed a man in the street with a hay hook, and later died in a mental institution. On her father's side, a Massachusetts ancestor was accused of being a witch, who cast sickness on her neighbor's ox and was later tried in court for causing the death of a child. Maud's father had a master's in aerospace engineering on scholarship from an Ivy League university and was valedictorian of his law school class; he also viewed slavery as a benevolent institution that should never have been disbanded, and would paint over the faces of brown children in her storybooks. He was obsessed with maintaining the purity of his family bloodline, which he could trace back to the days of the Revolutionary War. Her mother was a whirlwind of charisma and passions that could become obsessions; she kept over thirty cats and birds in a tiny two-bedroom apartment, and later started a church in her living room, where she would perform exorcisms. Maud's parents' marriage was acrimonious, their divorce a relief. But the meeting of their lines in her was something she could not shake. She signed up for an online account and began researching her genealogy. She found records of marriages and trials, wills in which her ancestors gave slaves to their spouses and children. The search took over her life. But as she dabbled in DNA testing and found herself sunk in census archives at 1 o'clock in the morning, it was unclear to her what she was looking for. She wanted a truth that would set her free, in a way she hadn't identified yet. This book seeks to understand why the practice of genealogy has become a multi-billion-dollar industry in contemporary America, while also mining the secrets and contradictions of one singularly memorable family history"--

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