The Day

‘The Other Mother’ goes to dark places

- By OLINE H. COGDILL

Best-selling author Carol Goodman skillfully works postpartum depression into the chilling “The Other Mother” that has strong gothic echoes, with nods to Daphne du Maurier's novel “Rebecca” and the film “Gaslight.”

Goodman well structures “The Other Mother” with an unreliable narrator and details that, on the surface, seem ordinary but misconstru­ed can become sinister.

Daphne Marist became fast friends with Laurel Hobbes in a support group for women suffering from postpartum depression. The two have more in common than a shared mood disorder and living near each other in Westcheste­r, N.Y. Both named their daughters Chloe, though Laurel uses an umlaut, both are married to older, controllin­g men, both often feel powerless and are a bit obsessive. Soon both are dressing alike and even carry similar diaper bags.

Then Daphne leaves her home and her husband, taking Chloe with her. Daphne has accepted a job as a livein archivist with children's author Schuyler Bennett, a near hermit whose Catskills mansion borders a psychiatri­c institutio­n. It is a dream job. Schuyler is Daphne's favorite author and the job includes a small apartment and child care for Chloe. The only wrinkle is that Daphne got the job using Laurel's name and background. While working through Schuyler's papers, Daphne also begins to categorize those of the author's father, Morris Bennett, a famous psychiatri­st who ran the asylum. Along the way, Daphne becomes obsessed with the case of other young mothers who suffered from postpartum depression, including one who is still hospitaliz­ed at the institutio­n, 45 years after claiming she abandoned her baby.

But is that really what is happening in “The Other Mother?” Goodman keeps the reader off kilter as she plays with the identity of the mothers and what is really happening, and why. Goodman never delves into flights of fancy but keeps “The Other Mother” grounded in reality. Each twist is chillingly plausible.

Goodman's affinity for the dark psychologi­cal plot excels in “The Other Mother.”

 ??  ?? “THE OTHER MOTHER” by Carol Goodman; Morrow (324 pages, $15.99)
“THE OTHER MOTHER” by Carol Goodman; Morrow (324 pages, $15.99)

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