Catherine Hernandez's novel The Story of Us is about 'love and the power of family' read an excerpt now | CBC Books - Action News
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Catherine Hernandez's novel The Story of Us is about 'love and the power of family' read an excerpt now

The Story of Us is about the unlikely friendship between an elderly patient with Alzheimer's and her personal support worker. The novel will be published on Feb. 28, 2023.

The Story of Us will be published on Feb. 28, 2023

Catherine Hernandez is a Canadian author and playwright. Her novels include Scarborough, Crosshairs and The Story of Us. (Audible.ca)

Catherine Hernandezis a Canadian writer, author and playwright. She is the author of several books, including the novels Scarborough andCrosshairsand the children's booksI Promise,M is for Mustacheand Where Do Your Feelings Live?. She is also the creator and star of the Audible Original sketch comedy podcastImminent Disaster.

Scarborough was championed by actor Malia Baker on Canada Reads 2022. It wasalso adapted into a feature film thatpremiered at TIFF in 2021. CBC Books named her a writer to watch in 2017.

A light blue book cover with purple and orange silhouette of Russian nesting dolls.

Hernandez is releasing her first adult book since Scarborough was the runner-up title on Canada Reads: a novel calledThe Story of Us.

The Story of Usis the story ofMary Grace Concepcion, a Filipino worker who has left her family behind to build a new life in Canada. She secures employmentas a personal support worker in Toronto, caring for Liz, an elderly woman living in a bungalow in Scarborough who is living with dementia. An unlikely relationship blossoms between the two, as Mary Grace works to bring her husband to Canada and learns more about Liz's surprising past.The Story of Us is narrated by Mary Grace's infant daughter, adding a unique twist to this heartfelt story.

"The Story of Uswas one of two novels I wrote during lockdown and I wanted it to feel like a warm hug to all my readers. Despite how bleak the future seems, I want people to read the last pages of the book believing in love and the power of family," Hernandez told CBC Books via an emailed statement.

Despite how bleak the future seems, I want people to read the last pages of the book believing in love and the power of family.- Catherine Hernandez

The Story of Us will be published on Feb. 28, 2023.

Read an excerpt from The Story of Us below.


Hello? Hi. Liz? Can you hear me? Can you see me if you look into my eyes? See the spirit in this infant body?I know you're distracted by my sweet smell and the plumpof my cheeks. If I wasn't swaddled this tightly I would tryand wave. Get your attention. Or... maybe that would makethings worse. Then you might be distracted by my advancedmotor skills. Ugh! I want to sigh in frustration, but even sighing has made you all coo at me before, and really, what I needfrom you is your focus. You, more than anyone.

What I'm saying isn't out of the blue. I think you'veknown it all along, but too many have pushed the idea to thefringes of folklore and myth. All that nonsense about babiesand past lives.

LISTEN | Why Malia Baker championed Scarborough on Canada Reads 2022:

Scarborough film to debut at the Toronto International Film Festival

3 years ago
Duration 9:00
Scarborough is based on a book by Catherine Hernandez. It's an unvarnished look into the lives of three children growing up around poverty, abuse and homelessness. Our Torontos host Marivel Taruc spoke with the writer, director, and the three young actors.

Maybe, while doting over the miniature edges of myfingernails, you caught a glimpse of me, the true me, the pastme. Maybe you watched me sleep in my first24 hours and you wondered at my expressions, the frowns, thesmiles, the knitting brow, wondered how I could be anxiouswhen surely I had never experienced anything but my mother's heartbeat and the warmth of her womb. Maybe you hada sense there was more that I knew. But as days pass, you've noticed this less. That is why I need you to listen. The formerme, the real me, is fading by the second and there are things I remember, at this very moment and never will again, that Ineed to share with you.

Yes, this is a lot to take in. But we're in a sweet spot, youand me. I'm leaving this in-between world, once housed bythe shell of my mother and her body memories, and you...you are leaving your memories behind too. That's why mymother is here taking care of you. I know you're leaving the world of order for one that rarely makes any sense at all andmy mother's purpose in your life is to keep you safe during this transition.

I did mention limited time. I should be more clear. I'mtalking days, not years, okay? And then there's the interruptions of diaper changes, bothersome visitors, bath time andmy own hunger not to mention all that burping business so we should get started.

The formerme, the real me, is fading by the second and there are things I remember, at this very moment and never will again, that Ineed to share with you.

I think it's best we map out the body of my mother first. To you, it may seem pretty simple. Like... there's her head.Those are her arms, her legs. Whatever. But in my in-between world, the map is more like this:

The back of her skull. This is what touched the tailboneof her mother, my Lola, with every contraction, during alengthy and difficult birth at the humble district hospital. The nurse encouraged Lola to pace the hallways. She did hip circles. She squatted over the toilet. Nothing was working. Ma was showing all the signs of being a posterior-facing baby. Head down but facing the wrong way. What finally helpedthe labour progress was the nurse standing Lola upright and presenting her with a stepping stool.

"Put your leg here. Here. On top. The other leg back in a lunge. Yes. Okay. When you feel the contraction, I want youto lean forward for me." Lola moaned in pain at the nurse'ssuggestion. "Sigena. I know it will be painful, but it's thisor surgery." She was right. The lunges helped to contort the shape of Lola's uterus, allowing my mother to corkscrew into position and crown. No surgery needed.

WATCH | Scarborough film adaptation premieres at TIFF:

If you're wondering how I know all of this, let me explain. I am small, but I have lived an enormous life well before thisyear of my birth, 2001. In fact, I have lived for years as a seedin the ovaries of my mother while my mother gestated in the body of my Lola Daning. I was a dream of a dream back then,a nesting doll of possibility. Before I had my own organs, Ilistened to the simultaneous beating of my grandmother'sheart (bass heavy, slow, sure) and my mother's heart (quick,excited) in an odd mismatch of a song. When my motheremerged into the cold air of the world, the year was 1972 in San Marcelino, in the province of Zambales, Philippines. The nurse placed my tightly wrapped mother into the arms of Lola Daning and Lola said, "Happy birthday, Mary Grace."

Mary Grace, I thought to myself back then. I like that.Of course, since she was Filipina, this name was rarely used unless there was paperwork to be filled out. She was destinedto be called a combination of Mare, Gracey and, more commonly, MG.


ExcerptedfromThe Story of Us by Catherine Hernandez.Copyright2022Catherine Hernandez.Published by HarperCollins Canada.Reproduced by arrangement with the Publisher. All rights reserved.

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