Powerful and Moving: Read our Review of Lioness by Sue Brierley

Powerful and Moving: Read our Review of Lioness by Sue Brierley

A powerful and moving account of adopting the boy who inspired the motion picture Lion.

Saroo Brierley’s journey home to a small village in India with the help of Google Earth became an internationally bestselling book and inspired the major motion picture Lion. But the story of how his adoptive mother, Sue, came into his life half a world away in Tasmania is every bit as riveting.

In this uplifting and deeply personal book, Sue reveals for the first time her own traumatic childhood. The daughter of a violent alcoholic whose business gambles left her family destitute, she grew up in geographic and emotional isolation. When Sue married, and broke free of her father, she was determined to also sever the cycle of despair, and made the selfless decision not to have a biological child. Instead, inspired by a vision she’d had as a young girl, she chose to adopt two children in need – Saroo and Mantosh. Little did she imagine that twenty-five years later she would be portrayed on screen by another Australian mother who chose to adopt – Nicole Kidman.

Like countless other people, I was transfixed by Saroo Brierley’s story, as told on 60 Minutes, in his book The Long Way Home, and in the film adaptation of the novel, Lion. When I saw that his mother, Sue, had written her own book, I’ll admit that I did wonder ‘what else can be said about this?’.

Turns out, quite a lot. Sue Brierley’s own story is just as fascinating and emotional to read. While she certainly writes about Saroo tracking down his biological family, and her experience with both that and his telling of the story publicly, the book isn’t just Saroo – it’s much more.

Lioness starts with Sue’s backstory and own family, including her alcoholic father. She marries quite young and it’s sixteen years before she ‘has’ her own child. Determined to do things differently in her own family, Sue and her husband John adopt their first son Saroo from an orphanage in Calcutta, India. I was mesmerised by this part of the book. Her immediate and intense love for Saroo is evident, and their relationship deep and profound.

A few years later, they welcome Mantosh into the family, and the experience is very different. It’s a raw, honest read about her love for Mantosh and the difficulty his issues brought to their tight-knit family.

Moving and inspiring, Lioness explores the myth of motherhood, how families are formed in many ways, and how love and perseverance can bring us together. It’s a fascinating read, and one I couldn’t put down.

 

 

 

 

Reviews

Sue Brierley on her Inspirational New Memoir, Lioness

Review | Author Related

2 November 2020

Sue Brierley on her Inspirational New Memoir, Lioness

    Uplifting and Deeply Personal: Take a Sneak Peek at Sue Brierley’s Lioness

    Review | Extract

    2 November 2020

    Uplifting and Deeply Personal: Take a Sneak Peek at Sue Brierley’s Lioness

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        Publisher details

        Lioness: The extraordinary untold story of Sue Brierley
        Author
        Sue Brierley
        Publisher
        Penguin
        Genre
        Non Fiction
        Released
        03 November, 2020
        ISBN
        9780143796039

        Synopsis

        A powerful and moving account of adopting the boy who inspired the motion picture LION. Saroo Brierley’s journey home to a small village in India with the help of Google Earth became an internationally bestselling book and inspired the major motion picture LION. But the story of how his adoptive mother, Sue, came into his life half a world away in Tasmania is every bit as riveting. In this uplifting and deeply personal book, Sue reveals for the first time her own traumatic childhood. The daughter of a violent alcoholic whose business gambles left her family destitute, she grew up in geographic and emotional isolation. When Sue married and broke free of her father she was determined to also sever the cycle of despair and made the selfless decision not to have a biological child. Instead, inspired by a vision she’d had as a young girl, she chose to adopt two children in need – Saroo and Mantosh. Little did she imagine that twenty-five years later she would be portrayed on screen by another Australian mother who chose to adopt – Nicole Kidman. Moving and inspiring, Lioness explores the myth of motherhood, how families are formed in many ways, and how love and perseverance can bring us together.
         
        Sue Brierley
        About the author

        Sue Brierley

        Books by Sue Brierley

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        1. Lorraine Cairns says:

          Beautifully written,very true account of Sue and Johns International
          adoption story and how as a mother and as parents, they both stood
          up for what they believed in and how adoption is special, miraculous
          and how two mothers worlds apart, can bond undeniably for the love of their child. I loved it.