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Author Phil Jourdan’s Life Changes in an Instant in PRAISE OF MOTHERHOOD … And Your Life Could Change as You Read it – 4.7 Stars on 36 Reviews & Just $2.99 on Kindle

Book of the Year 2012 nominee at ForeWord Reviews

Praise of Motherhood

by Phil Jourdan

4.7 stars – 36 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

When Phil Jourdan’s mother died suddenly in 2009, she left behind a legacy of kindness and charity — but she also left unanswered some troubling questions. Was she, as she once claimed, a spy? Had she suffered more profoundly as a woman and parent than she’d let on? Jourdan’s recollections of his struggles with psychosis, and his reconstructions of conversations with his enigmatic mother, form the core of this memoir. Psychoanalysis, poetry and confession all merge to tell the story of an ordinary woman whose death turned her into a symbol for extraordinary motherhood.

Reviews

“Jourdan’s soul-baring is an emotional inspiration. The author’s feelings come across beautifully, and his story is both surprisingly candid and sad. Very relatable and raw, intellectual and heartfelt, but certainly not an easy read for anyone who has suffered a recent loss.” — Clarion Review, 5/5

“Early on in the book, Jourdan writes, ‘Everyone, even in his profoundest hatred, loves his mother’. So whatever his stated reasons for writing Praise of Motherhood, the end result still feels like an incredible act of generosity on his part, affording the reader the privilege of briefly encountering Sofia, this woman who ‘was Love manifest’.” — The Cadaverine
About The Author


Phil Jourdan is an author and musician from Portugal living in the UK.

In 2007 he formed the lit-rock band, Paris and the Hiltons. Their music merges many styles, from rock to jazz to electronic to classical, and often takes as its inspiration various modernist literary figures.

His memoir, Praise of Motherhood, revolves around the hardships his late mother endured in trying to cope with her aggressive adolescent son.

He runs Perfect Edge, a fiction imprint, and co-runs the popular Zero Books press.


And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of Praise of Motherhood by Phil Jourdan:

Phil Jourdan’s Memoir, Praise of Motherhood, is Now Just 99 Cents – Don’t Miss This Touching Tribute to a Lost Mother, Written by a Son Whose Troubled Adolescence Landed Him in Psychiatric Wards

“Praise for Motherhood” is a brutally honest, touching, and gut-wrenching story about love, loss, family and, possibly, forgiveness” –Richard Thomas, author of Transubstantiate

Praise of Motherhood

by Phil Jourdan

4.7 stars – 36 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

When Phil Jourdan’s mother died suddenly in 2009, she left behind a legacy of kindness and charity — but she also left unanswered some troubling questions. Was she, as she once claimed, a spy? Had she suffered more profoundly as a woman and parent than she’d let on? Jourdan’s recollections of his struggles with psychosis, and his reconstructions of conversations with his enigmatic mother, form the core of this memoir. Psychoanalysis, poetry and confession all merge to tell the story of an ordinary woman whose death turned her into a symbol for extraordinary motherhood.

Reviews

“This is a beautiful meditation, simultaneously subtle and powerfully direct, on the depth of emotion between a mother and son. Jourdan’s words come back to me long after I’ve finished the book. Moments of this memoir leave me haunted, and in that way renew my devotion to fragile lives, which is to say all of us, all so human, and to life as wild and fleeting.” –Monica Drake, author of Clown Girl

“Jourdan’s soul-baring is an emotional inspiration. The author’s feelings come across beautifully, and his story is both surprisingly candid and sad. Very relatable and raw, intellectual and heartfelt, but certainly not an easy read for anyone who has suffered a recent loss.” — Clarion Review, 5/5

“Early on in the book, Jourdan writes, ‘Everyone, even in his profoundest hatred, loves his mother’. So whatever his stated reasons for writing Praise of Motherhood, the end result still feels like an incredible act of generosity on his part, affording the reader the privilege of briefly encountering Sofia, this woman who ‘was Love manifest’.” — The Cadaverine

About The Author

Phil Jourdan is an author, musician, translator and columnist from Portugal living in the UK.

In 2007 he formed the lit-rock band, Paris and the Hiltons. Their latest album, Reading Journals, is based on the work of William Faulkner, of which Jourdan is a big, big, big fan.

His memoir, Praise of Motherhood, revolves around the hardships his late mother endured in trying to cope with her aggressive adolescent son.

He recently launched Perfect Edge Books, a publishing imprint.

For a full multi-media experience of author, Phil Jourdan, check out his band Paris and the Hiltons here!

(This is a sponsored post.)

Phil Jourdan’s memoir, Praise of Motherhood, is a small book that makes an enormous impact … a beautiful meditation, simultaneously subtle and powerfully direct, on the depth of emotion between a mother and son5.0 Stars with 14 straight rave reviews and just 99 cents!

Praise of Motherhood

by Phil Jourdan

5.0 stars – 14 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Here’s the set-up from Foreword Reviews, 5 Stars:

Phil Jourdan’s memoir, Praise of Motherhood, is a small book that makes an enormous impact. Jourdan writes about his mother and their relationship, covering the territory from his teen years to his early twenties and her sudden, unexpected death. He writes as though he is desperate to capture the essence of the woman who raised him, and his profound love for her reverberates throughout his story.

Jourdan’s book is both self-revelatory and immensely sad, circumspectly illustrating not only the complicated love of a child for a parent, but also the incomparable, horrible sense of loss that follows the death of a loved one. Jourdan is painfully honest and open, and his willingness to be so vulnerable gives Praise of Motherhood the very soul that makes his tale so emotional yet relatable.

Jourdan describes himself as a difficult teen. His mother, Sophia, was always there for him, without fail. Never judgmental, and reliably and patiently supportive, she saw him through not only the typical angst and anger of the teenage years, but also “depression that would later bloom into psychosis,” including severe psychotic episodes that required hospitalization.

Sophia remained calm while forever on call, acting not only with tolerance, but also understanding. “Being miserable when you’re thirteen, fourteen, is perfectly legitimate,” Sophia tells her son. “Something’s happening inside you that is unpleasant and horrifying,” and “there’s no such thing as being perfectly balanced.” Neither condescending nor coddling, she helps keep Jourdan afloat, giving him a perceived sense of independence wherever possible, but also calling his school weekly, unbeknownst to him, to check his progress. In short, she gives him the compassionate encouragement he needs in order to become a fully functional adult.

Praise of Motherhood contains very few outside characters, and those who do appear are merely superficial players in Jourdan’s story. His is a dedicated focus, and he refuses to be detoured in his account of what his mother meant to him. That Sophia comes across as a wonderful mother and a wise, generous, and extremely intelligent person, while the author himself sounds like a self-absorbed, highly self-critical brat is no accident. This is exactly how the son saw both his mother and himself, and his message comes from a place of deep grief over her loss. The tribute he gives her here is beyond what most parents expect, but it is an homage that most would be honored to receive.

People so seldomly know what to say to the relatives of one who has died, especially in the case of an untimely death. Their awkward attempts to convey sympathy, however well meaning, so often fall flat. Most recipients of such condolences merely nod or say thank you, but many would love to be able to say exactly what Jourdan says here: “Dear everybody who went to my mother’s funeral: it was kind of you to come, but you shouldn’t have…Thank you for telling us how sorry you were…but we didn’t need to hear that…Let (us) deal with our loss.”

Praise of Motherhood is a well-written tale of true love and devotion, and Jourdan’s soul-baring is an emotional inspiration. The author’s feelings come across beautifully, and his story is both surprisingly candid and sad. Very relatable and raw, intellectual and heartfelt, but certainly not an easy read for anyone who has suffered a recent loss.

One Amazon Reviewer Notes

“This is a fantastic and unique book, both a memoir and a novel, as honest as it is imaginative. Phil Jourdan deals with the question of what a person leaves behind after they die and the parts of them that will always remain hidden. He is warm, candid and questioning- all things that make this book more than just a touching account of a son’s relationship with his mother, but also an intelligent and stirring exploration of our understanding of ourselves and the people we love. A genuinely wonderful read.” – 5 Stars

Win an autographed copy of Praise of Motherhood. Click here to find out more!

About The Author

Phil Jourdan is an author, musician, translator and columnist from Portugal living in the UK.

In 2007 he formed the lit-rock band, Paris and the Hiltons. Their latest album, Reading Journals, is based on the work of William Faulkner, of which Jourdan is a big, big, big fan.

His memoir, Praise of Motherhood, revolves around the hardships his late mother endured in trying to cope with her aggressive adolescent son.

He recently launched Perfect Edge Books, a publishing imprint.

For a full multi-media experience of author, Phil Jourdan, check out his band Paris and the Hiltons here!

(This is a sponsored post.)