In the novel "Don't Tell Mama", author Tony Maguire presents painful real events about a young girl who is exposed to one of the most terrifying aspects of primitive and contemporary life. Her mother, and her silence about it, stripped the writer of her most precious weapons and left her more painful. Rather, it appeared in the folds of the narration and in its texts, the writer’s clear accusation of the spirit of motherhood itself, and dictated to her the question that kept recurring in this and that incident, about the feasibility of venerating and sanctifying motherhood.
Pages: 287