
Fig Trees
Description
'I couldn't put Fig Trees down. What I expected would take a week to read was finished in just a few days.This is one of those rare books that doesn't just tell a story, it makes you feel it. I was completely immersed in the author's world, experiencing the fear, grief and resilience as though I were living it myself. A deeply moving memoir that will stay with me long after the final page.'
A daughter returns to the story that shaped her life... because when a child loses her mother to violence, growing up changes forever.
When she was ten years old, Marnie Ross's childhood was shattered by a single act of senseless violence: the murder of her mother.
Told through the eyes of the child she once was, this memoir traces a girl growing up in the long shadow of loss, the author's voice maturing on the page as she matures in life. This is not a story about a crime, but about how a young mind survives grief, fear and responsibility far too early.
Some memories are sharp, preserved like photographs. Others are softened by time, yet still carry meaning. What follows is not the exact truth of how events happened, but the truer story of how they were lived.
Interwoven with tender recollections of a mother lovingly remembered, Fig Trees is a portrait of a childhood shaped by love and absence, and of a woman returning to the story that formed her.
Raw, poetic and quietly powerful, this is a memoir about loss, memory and the resilience of a child who learned too soon that the world is not always safe, but life must still be lived.
PRAISE FOR MARNIE ROSS
'I couldn't put Fig Trees down. What I expected would take a week to read was finished in just a few days. This is one of those rare books that doesn't just tell a story, it makes you feel it. I was completely immersed in the author's world, experiencing the fear, grief and resilience as though I were living it myself. A deeply moving memoir that will stay with me long after the final page.' Kylie Slater
'I was given this book to see what a male might think. From the first chapter I was blubbering like a baby and felt a connection to the author and her sisters. The author's storytelling hit me like the child was telling me herself. I can highly recommend this book and will be reading it again.' Nadim Jaber