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Momoko Uno
Author
Bringing Sunshine back to my Mind
Momoko Uno, author
Sachi Kubo-Sanchez, a woman in her forties, leaves her unfulfilling marriage and conservative hometown for New York City. Plagued by resurfaced childhood trauma, she begins therapy and reconnects with lost aspects of her psyche, including her inner child, Sunshine. As she embarks on a journey of self-healing and integration, Sachi faces challenges balancing motherhood with her newfound sexuality, navigating the complexities of online dating, managing an unfamiliar job, and addressing family issues. Just as she mastered her new life, she is traumatized by an assault that leads her down a harrowing path of police investigations, complicated with drinking and paranoia, almost taking her own life. Armed with her humor and the support of friends, and various professional, she pulls through to confront her perpetrator and find peace and wholeness.
Reviews
When Sachi Kubo-Sanchez, unhappy and unfulfilled in her marriage, decides a change is in order, she determines to rediscover her love for life. “I thought this was life: as good as it gets. Then something shifted,” she muses, as, with the help of her boisterous friend, Anna, and her therapist, Sachi embarks on an intimate journey of self-discovery. She divorces her husband, commits to rekindling her passions, and steps out as a single mother in her 40s, in the bustling day-to-day of New York City, attempting to understand—and accept—her sexual desires while testing the waters of online dating.

Delving into the complex psyche of a middle-aged woman starting over, Uno creates a deeply relatable protagonist struggling to let go of her past. Therapy helps Sachi deal with unresolved sexual trauma from her youth while resurrecting her inner child—who she aptly names Sunshine—as she opens herself up to new ideas about life, sex, and relationships. Through family dynamics, self-awareness, and therapy, Uno’s thoughtful fiction debut explores the multitude of ways the outside world can influence one woman's mental health, even as she makes a concerted effort to grow on her own terms.

Sachi's story—often unfolding through Sunshine’s voice—quickly evolves into a broader pursuit of meaning and purpose, and readers will appreciate her raw and vulnerable honesty. As she wrestles with her inner demons—and experiments sexually—Sachi reawakens the buried forces driving her mental health, sexuality, and ideas on love. “It took me forty-something years to create my universe with my bare hands and uncontrollable outside hands as well,” she reflects, “and now I had chosen to recreate it.” The result of those birth pains is a complex rendering of Sachi’s true self, sweetly melded with her inner child into a stunning portrait of “joy, grace, and beauty.”

Takeaway: Middle-aged woman works through past trauma in the midst of starting over.

Comparable Titles: Rabih Alameddine’s An Unnecessary Woman, Rowan Beaird's The Divorcées.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A-
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

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