A darkly absorbing portrait of a woman in crisis, engulfed by the complexities of biology, queer family and motherhood
Stylist
Raises impressive ruminations on the nature of this ownership we call love, the definition of kin, the rights both of parents over their children and children out from under their parents. It is remarkably philosophical with the energy of a catastrophe
- Kenan Orhan, author of The Renovation,
In crystal clear prose, the book digs deep into the gnarly emotions hidden behind domesticity (or caused by domesticity!). Silje Marie is a wonderfully complicated character, so naturally lovable and obviously flawed, which is also what makes her irresistible to the reader. At times, Silje reminded me of an old friend, a former lover, or even a different version of myself
- Szilvia Molnar, author of The Nursery,
All you want from a novel: brave, well-written, distinctive
Morgenbladet
Åmodt has written the first significant Norwegian lesbian family novel. Its discomfort is the book's most important quality. . . The Other Mother hit me like a punch in the stomach
Klassekampen
An exceptionally powerful novel about the gap between what we think and what we feel, how we wish the world to be and how we experience it
Vårt Land
Åmodt writes honestly and with great insight about significant ethical problems of family life
Dag og Tid
A courageous story about a mother in crisis from one of Norway's most exciting writers, for readers of Boulder and Detransition, Baby
Silje Marie has been keeping a secret from her wife. She loves one of her sons more than the other.
In their sleepy suburb of Oslo, she's given Henry and Olav the childhood she never had: organic cotton clothing, a house by the forest, apple pies baked with Grandma on summer afternoons.
But when Silje Marie stays behind to clear the house for an upcoming renovation, buried thoughts resurface. She is haunted by the sense that only one of her children truly feels like her own-an admission that would destroy her wife, Helene. Worse still, there is the other mother. A woman befriended in secret, whose son's resemblance to Henry is impossible to ignore.
Spiky, daring and feverishly intense, this is a story about the complex confinement and joy of family life, and a mother drawn towards dismantling the home she has fought so hard to build.
'Raises impressive ruminations on the nature of this ownership we call love' Kenan Orhan, author of The Renovation
'Brave, well-written, distinctive' Morgenbladet
'Exceptionally powerful' Vårt Land
'Digs deep into the gnarly emotions hidden behind domesticity' Szilvia Molnar, author of The Nursery