The End Is the Beginning, Jill Bialosky
The End Is the Beginning, Jill Bialosky
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The End Is the Beginning
A Personal History of My Mother

Author: Jill Bialosky

Narrator: Jill Bialosky

Unabridged: 9 hr 17 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 05/09/2025


Synopsis

Jill Bialosky, the poet behind the “tender, absorbing, and deeply moving memoir” (Entertainment Weekly) History of a Suicide, returns with a lyrical portrait of her mother’s life, told in reverse order from burial to birth. When Iris Yvonne Bialosky died in an assisted care facility on March 29, 2020, it unleashed a torrent of emotions in her daughter, Jill Bialosky. Grief, of course, but also guilt, confusion, and doubt, all of which were compounded by the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic which made it impossible for Jill to be with her mother as she was dying and to attend her mother’s funeral. Now, with a poet’s eye for detail and a novelist’s flair for storytelling, Jill presents a profoundly moving elegy unlike any other. Starting with her mother’s end and the physical/cognitive decline that led her to a care home, The End Is the Beginning explores Iris’s battle with depression, the tragedy of a daughter’s suicide, a failed second marriage, the death of her beloved first husband only five years into their young marriage, her joyful teenage years, and the trauma of losing her own mother at just eight years old. Compounding her challenges of raising four daughters without a livelihood or partner, Iris’s life coincided with an age of unstoppable social change and reinvention, when the roles of wife and mother she was raised to inhabit ceased to be the guarantors of stability and happiness. As we see Iris become younger and younger, we learn how we are all the sum of our experiences. Iris becomes a multi-dimensional, fascinating woman. We come to understand her difficulties and shortcomings, her neediness and her generosity, her pride and her despair. The End Is the Beginning is not just a family memoir, it is a brave and compassionate celebration of a woman’s life and death and a window into a daughter’s inextricable bond to her mother. “Exquisitely written … [Bialosky] expresses deeply poignant feelings and insights … spellbinding.”—Booklist

About Jill Bialosky

Jill Bialosky is the author of novels, memoirs, and several poetry collections. Her History of a Suicide: My Sister’s Unfinished Life was named one of the ten best works of nonfiction by Entertainment Weekly. She is currently an editor at W. W. Norton & Company and lives in New York City.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Douglas on May 20, 2025

This is a great book, but a difficult read. Having lost one parent and another at the end, I should’ve waited to read this under different circumstances. It would feel disingenuous not to acknowledge how my own experience colored my reading of a book about something I simply don’t want to face right......more

Goodreads review by Vivienne on April 06, 2025

A thought provoking memoir that brought tears to my eyes multiple times. Thank you to the publisher who sent an ARC.......more

Goodreads review by Bookreporter.com on May 12, 2025

THE END IS THE BEGINNING asks the question that any grown child might ask following the death of a parent: Who were they? We know tidbits or morsels of their lives from stories they shared or from anecdotes that families laugh about at gatherings. But do we --- can we --- know them as a whole person......more

Goodreads review by Nancy on April 25, 2025

One narrative that will explain it all because we always need a story, an account, to make sense of the inexplicable. from The End Is the Beginning by Jill Bialosky My mother was fifty-seven years old when she died of cancer. I was thirty-eight. She had been diagnosed with cancer two weeks before her......more

Goodreads review by Kenzie on May 25, 2025

*** I received a free copy of this book through a Goodreads Giveaway in exchange for an honest review *** 4 Stars - The End is the Beginning is a fascinating look at the life of Iris Bialosky. Although Iris is the central figure, I feel like I’ve learned as much about the author as I have her mother......more