davidfcooper: (headshot 01/18/07)
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“As moving as are each of these expressions of grief the cumulative effect of Falling Out of Time‘s nearly 200 pages is even more powerful. It certainly conveys bereaved parents’ pain to readers who have not suffered that loss and may help some mourning parents work through their grief, though others may feel it reopens emotional wounds.” -- from my New York Journal of Books review of David Grossman's new multi-genre book.

Also see my examiner article.

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“Your wife is killed by a cashew (anaphylactic shock), but there isn't time to grieve because your toddler son is always at your heels—wanting to be fed, to be played with, or to sleep next to you all night long. A change of pace seems necessary, so you decide to visit your parents in order to attend your twenty-year high school reunion. What begins as a weekend getaway quickly becomes a theater for dealing with the past—a past that you will have to re-imagine in order to have any hope of a future for you and your son.”--Mark Yakish, A Meaning for Wife

Ameaningforwifebookcover
“Toward the end of the novel there is a gutsy shift in narrative tone that lends the ending a sense of closure. In recent years, women writers such as Joan Didion and Meghan O’Rourke have published nonfiction memoir accounts of grief. In his debut novel Mr. Yakich provides the male perspective. Recommended to anyone who has experienced loss.”

Read the rest of my review in New York Journal of Books

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I spoke with my sister this evening, and she points out that at this stage Leah may receive better pain management at the hospital than at home. Perhaps I won't move her and leave these decisions to my parents. We both expected this, but we are nonetheless very sad now that the end is near. Leah never had children of her own (she had four miscarriages), but she was like a second mom to my mother, practically adopted my mom's first cousin when his parents marriage ended, was like a third grandmother to us, and is my role model as an uncle. Our sadness is very deep.
davidfcooper: (Default)
I spoke with my sister this evening, and she points out that at this stage Leah may receive better pain management at the hospital than at home. Perhaps I won't move her and leave these decisions to my parents. We both expected this, but we are nonetheless very sad now that the end is near. Leah never had children of her own (she had four miscarriages), but she was like a second mom to my mother, practically adopted my mom's first cousin when his parents marriage ended, was like a third grandmother to us, and is my role model as an uncle. Our sadness is very deep.

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