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"There was her Irishness and his Jewishness," he says of his parents' unlikely marriage, "but there were other differences. He had graduated cum laude from Harvard. She had finished fourth grade at the Ballylongford National School." It was a union that "only the war could have made possible."
Sara does not like her son stirring up memories of his deceased father. "Here, more than anyplace else, she wants her memory uncontested," he writes. "She does not want me talking to others, gathering other stories, looking into the remnants of my father's past. When she is silent, she wants those things about which she refuses to speak to remain as quiet as the tomb."
The reader suspects from White's final sentence that he has respected those silences. "My mother's stories, and silences," he writes in his epilogue, "have made the world more dense and interesting than I ever imagined."
Writer Emily D'Aulaire is a freelancer who lives in Connecticut.
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