The School for Good Mothers - Jessamine Chan

The School for Good Mothers

By Jessamine Chan

  • Release Date: 2022-01-04
  • Genre: Literary Fiction
Score: 3.5
3.5
From 574 Ratings

Description

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.

Reviews

  • Can’t finish it

    2
    By mrffy listens
    She is a talented writer but this is way too grim for too long for me. I am done
  • Ugggh

    1
    By cwhite2015
    Probably one of the worst books that I have read. The whole story could have been told in 6 chapters .
  • Sad but worth it

    5
    By _morenaza
    The tension and frustration is always there. Sad to think this could happen even worse to know it does.
  • Wish I could get the time back

    1
    By Cjcutiepie
    I started the book because it was on Barack Obama’s list. But I thought it was terrible! I kept waiting for it to get better, but it didn’t. I kept reading because I had already invested so much time. Then, I hoped that it would be neatly tied up and justified in the end. Instead, I actually wanted to scream! This book was ten hours of my life I wish I could get back.
  • Beautiful. Heartbreaking

    5
    By JS52022
    Wow. Shows how deeply society judges Mothers and demands perfection. This book made me sob, really thought provoking.
  • Wonderful book!

    5
    By onestar oscar
    Loved everything about this book. Unfortunately, I worried for Frida through much of it and even now when I have finished it, I find myself worried. I guess that’s the testament of an excellent book.
  • Depressing

    2
    By bemarb
    This was the most awful, unfulfilling, depressing book I've ever read. Psychologically abusive in its entirety and a complete waste of time and money. The only reason I gave it two stars is because the writing is decent.
  • Interesting Concepts

    4
    By Mego65
    Interesting concept. At first I wasn’t enjoying the story but I soon wanted to read more and more. It never grabbed me emotionally. I felt robotic at times.
  • A powerful read!

    5
    By Air Touch
    This novel is simultaneously eye opening and heart breaking. 😢 Frida is a convincing protagonist, as she learns to survive in a dystopian future (that shares many similar traits to our own present) where the government, with its own female enforcers and accomplices, continues to put the burden of innocence on mothers to prove themselves in every hardship. I felt like I was reading a Asimov novel with a contemporary take through a parents eye. 🔥🔥🔥
  • Could not connect

    2
    By JtCOLo
    This book just made me…queasy. As a mom of 3 I could connect with feeling overwhelmed & the impossible expectations- self inflicted and external. Yet I could never connect with the the characters, and the lumping together of women who made mistakes and those who abused. I just really disliked this book. Personal opinion