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A Season of Grief (Southern Tier Editions)
 
 
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A Season of Grief (Southern Tier Editions) [Paperback]

Bill Valentine (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

156023573X 978-1560235736 February 6, 2006 1
This unique book celebrates a long-term, interracial relationship and details the everyday struggles of a surviving partner trying to carry on in a radically changed world.

A Season of Grief chronicles the author's emotional descent after the violent death of his partner of 21 years. Bill Valentine's journal of fear, anger, denial, and loneliness captures the glimmers of hope, moments of serendipity, and mysterious coincidences that emerged from his full-time devotion to grief following the death of Joe Lopes. Lopes died along with 264 others when American Airlines Flight 587 crashed in November 2001 in route to the Dominican Republic. It was the second deadliest accident in U.S. aviation history.

He is a word always on my lips as I try to work him into a conversation. He is a memory that I strive to keep alive. So yes, in this sense, he is not gone. But in reality, he is. He is gone as my lover. He is gone as my life partner. He is gone as my soul mate, the only person to whom I periodically bared my soul. He is gone as my best friend, the only person to whom I ever attached that label. So pardon me while I still hang on to the notion that he is not here with me. Pardon me while I cling stubbornly to the insistence that he is gone.

Valentine's candid and thoughtful account of his heartbreaking efforts to make sense of his partner's death—and survive in a world without him—is by turns, funny, frightening, sobering, and surprising. In the nine months following the tragedy of Flight 587, Valentine finds every waking moment of his life affected by his partner's absence—from mundane household chores to major life decisions. A Season of Grief is a story told in darkness and light, of hurt and healing, love and loneliness, but mostly, of a man who learns to live with his partner's absence through the persistent, surprising evidence of his presence.

Our job on earth is to live with uncertainty, ambiguity, and hope. We are given a limited tool set but one, in my opinion, that's sufficient for the job. Sufficient to allow us to be engaged in life-to love, grieve, work, play, celebrate, and despair. We have a remarkable ability to rebound and grow. We have been granted the capacity for wonder and laughter—especially at ourselves. These last two gifts were bestowed generously on Joe and he, in turn, taught me how vital they are.

Making a strong case for gay marriage, A Season of Grief chronicles Valentine's struggles to be recognized as a surviving spouse, including a historic lawsuit with Lambda Legal Defense and Education fund against the New York State Workers Compensation Board. Valentine and Lopes took every conceivable step to formalize their relationship, including New York City Domestic Partnership, but the Workers Compensation Board and a New York State appeals court refused to recognize Valentine as a legal surviving spouse.

Grief doesn't come with a set of instructions. But A Season of Grief can help guide you through the lonely journey that follows the death of a loved one. Valentine's memoir is a testament to the healing power of reality and the enduring nature of love.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"BEAUTIFULLY CRAFTED, CANDID, AND EXTREMELY MOVING." -- Flora Miller Biddle, Chairman Emerita, Whitney Museum of American Art and Author of The Whitney Women and the Museum They Made

"THIS IS AN UNUSUAL AND THOUGHTFULLY CRAFTED WORK." -- Robert B. Ridinger, MA, MLS, Editor of Speaking for Our Lives: Historic Speeches and Rhetoric for Gay and Lesbian Rights (1892-2000); Chair, Electronic Information Resources Management, Northern Illinois University, De Kalb

"This is a memoir to make us think again about who we are and who we can be." -- George Haggerty, PhD, Professor of English, University of California, Riverside

From the Author

Losing Joe was the thing I feared the most.

I had known him for only five days when I told him I loved him. This was in 1980. I was twenty-six and didn’t know any better. I never could have guessed then how deeply I would love him twenty-one years later. Or how much I would fear for his safety.

He flew for American Airlines for 18 years, giving me ample material for a short story chronicling my anxieties as a flight attendant’s spouse. In December 2000, we celebrated when "Widow’s Watch" was published in the Baltimore Review. In the back of my mind was another fear—had I tempted fate by writing this story? How would I live with myself if something did happen to Joe?

But, he survived September 11th. Then, on November 12th, came reports of another crash. I turned on a cheap portable radio in my office and when I heard his flight number I screamed. It was my brief moment of private, unscripted grief. I looked up to find people standing in my doorway. I said, "My partner was on that plane."

From that moment on grieving became my full-time job. I hoped that by describing the darkness I could keep it from engulfing me. As a journal of a living grief, A Season of Grief chronicles the struggles of a surviving partner attempting to carry on in a radically changed world.

As a love story, A Season of Grief celebrates the long-term bonds between two men. Joe and I were married in every sense of the word except the narrow, legal one. In spite of this, virtually none of the protections that federal and state law provide surviving spouses were available to me.

As a meditation on the nature of loss, A Season of Grief is a testament to the healing power of reality, to the enduring nature of love, and to the mysteries that point beyond our temporal existence.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (February 6, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 156023573X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560235736
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,077,071 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

This is my first book. It is an account of my season of grief--that period of time following Joe's death when I dedicated my life to grieving this loss. It is also a tribute to Joe--a rare and beautiful soul who graced this world for too short a time.

 

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grieving is hard, March 13, 2006
By 
C. Hansen (London, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Season of Grief (Southern Tier Editions) (Paperback)
Grieving is a part of life, but it can be grieving for an aged parent who has lived a long and fruitful life or it can be grieving for someone who died an untimely death early in life. The first kind of grief is healing, looking back with honour on a long life well lived. The second kind can be earthshattering, as it not only looks backwards, but tried to look forward into what would have been.

Bill Valentine's book speaks of the second kind of grieving: that for a life-partner who died an untimely, accidental, but brutal death. In speaking of Joe Lopes, he makes Joe come alive for those of us who never knew him. The best works of fiction or non fiction are those that can actually make a character live on the page. After reading the book, I feel as if I knew Joe, and (incidentally) Bill. This is living writing that jumps off the page.

Many of us will suffer such grief, and Bill takes us through his grief, not clinically, but as he lives it. The slow cleaning out of Joe's closet, the mundane details of settling debts, cancelling credit cards, and changing names on mortgages are things that we never think about until they have to be done. We cry with Bill as he goes over the what-if's that would have saved Joe from death in a plane crash in November 2001 over Jamaica Bay.

This isn't a how-to book. It's too immediate for that. But reading it will help those who are even now going through grief at untimely death, and will inspire those who haven't yet gone through such grief. I'm so glad I read it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Tender and Ultimately Life-Enhancing Journey about Grief, February 28, 2007
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This review is from: A Season of Grief (Southern Tier Editions) (Paperback)
Grief for the loss of a loved one is not a new topic for current literature. Such luminaries as Joan Didion, Mark Doty, Andrew Holleran, and Michael Cunningham have addressed the grieving process in novel form, poetry, memoir, and homage. And new author Bill Valentine steps into that realm with a brief but richly detailed examination of death, of memory, of residual, of extended family - all of these ingredients and more that underscore the fact that perhaps the loss of his beloved Joe Lopes, his life partner of 21 years in the tragic crash of American Airlines Flight 587 in November of 2001, has provided him with a new window and a new life as a writer of obvious talent.

Valentine presents his story of the 'other AA crash' that occurred in November of 2001 too soon after the 9/11 event to elicit the worldwide attention of that tragedy as a starting point to remember and recreate a relationship of such rare beauty that reading about it is staggeringly impactful. Valentine very wisely does not emphasize the mourning he endured (although his retelling of that aspect is understated and deeply touching), but instead takes the path of the 'ending' to reminisce about not only his meeting and formation of a relationship but also about the backgrounds of both him and his partner, an exceptionally quiet and private sanctuary that allows us the reader to better appreciate the aura of both men.

Some write about grief and mourning in a manner that seems to dig a hole of self pity, and that is most assuredly not the direction Valentine takes. He does not avoid for a second the impact of every detail of the loss of Joe - dealing with family, with the cremation, with friends, with pets, with things shared by the couple that suddenly become the responsibility of one partner, with the 'I' that replaces the 'we' - and yet what he offers us is a warm embrace of survival technique, a memoir as lovely as any that has been written. Valentine steps quietly into the arena of artist with the publication of A SEASON OF GRIEF. Grady Harp, February 07
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars as much a love story as a book about grief, December 20, 2006
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This review is from: A Season of Grief (Southern Tier Editions) (Paperback)
I believe it is safe to say that as Valentine dreamed of a writing career, he never once imagined that he would be writing an exploration of his grief journey following his life partner's death. This book is much more than a memoir of loss. It is a beautiful love song, a testament to the love shared by a couple who worked hard for their relationship.

As a bereaved grandmother, I found Valentine's descriptions of loss to be achingly accurate. Even though each person grieves differently, there is commonality to the emotions. The book opens with Valentine's eulogy, and moves easily back and forth between the time before Joe's death and after. The story of their relationship is an example of life fully lived and of love honored and respected. Valentine handles his grief by facing it head on. He says that the only way to transform the pain is to go through it. He shows us that writing and talking and thinking about the impact of Joe's death is a positive way to cope with the pain. Sharing not only grief but the story of their love is a marvelous memorial to Joe. Now that I've met Joe, I will never forget him.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Two memories from August 2001, a time that now seems from a different era, although it is only four months previous to the time of this writing. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ceiling child
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, San Francisco, American Airlines, Hong Kong, Joe Lopes, Morningside Gardens, Big Bend, Booda Dome, Joseph Lopes, Lake Winnipesaukee, Mary Rosinski, World Trade Center, Jamaica Bay, Tony Lopes, Cape May, Central Park, Dianne Snyder, Etta James, Lesley Metz, New Hampshire, Uncle Joe, Workers Party, Chaplain Davis, Honda Civic, Jackson Heights
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