7 thoughts on “Looking for Mama: The search for Kathryn Forbes’ childhood home

  1. That book should be removed from the libraries. Why would anyone want a child to read a book about a mother who continuously lies about the financial well being of the family? My God read Laura Ingalls Wilder instead…….. talk about promoting the things that create life long impossible to get out of attachment disorders and trust issues!

    1. Nazi Germany was big on banning and burning books and look at where it got them, and the horrors they created for the whole world. Our own government tells us many untruths to give us a sense of well-being even when things are very bad, not unlike Mama in Mamas bank account.

  2. It amazes me the way modern society puts a stamp on things from the past with the mores of today. Our mores of today were not theirs. Past generations did not think as we do. I suspect in most ways they had a much steadier compass to guide their morality then I certainly see in this generation. We should enjoy what they have to give us and build. I did not read the book, sorry to say, but the movie (I Remember Mama) and television programs I did. It was from the book all the rest evolved. Heartwarming and heartfelt. Appreciation of what the past has to teach us, and for a moment in time lets us try to walk in their shoes

  3. Wow, it sounds like we have a book burner here. I can’t remember ever saying that a book shouldn’t exist because of my own opinion. I read Wilder’s books years ago and they seemed good. I don’t know about the veracity of the content. The negative remarks about Kathryn Forbes’s bok compels me to buy a copy.
    The movie was lovely.

  4. I just read Mama’s Bank Account for the first time. What a touching set of loosely organized reminisces about a child’s affection for her matriarchal family. I found the book touching, hard warming, and, yes, sentimental. But sentimentality trumps cynicism, in my book, any day. That Mama fictionized a bank account to provide a sense of security during hard times seems smart, wise and utterly harmless.

  5. Yes, it’s much better to read a book that (a) completely falsified what actually happened to the Ingalls family and (b) is exceptionally bigoted (“there were no people. Only Indians lived there.”)

    One marvels at the psychology of someone who feels a mother who doesn’t panic her kids over their precarious financial circumstances is a bad parent.

    P.S.: Both books are phony; researchers have tried to verify the details. Which might be why they’re called “fiction”.

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