This journal offers a loving and poignant portrait of L'Engle's mother in old age that is more about living than dying.
--This text refers to an alternate
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
My Grandmother, too,
This review is from: The Summer of the Great-Grandmother (Crosswicks Journal, Book 2) (Paperback)
I have lived with my grandmother for two and a half years, watching her slowly slip farther into senility. L'Engle's narrative of her mother's last summer connected with me -- it was helpful to hear another's struggles, and to know I am not the only one who has prayed for the death of a loved one. My grandmother is gone: she was an artist, a world-traveller, a cook. Now, she does not know me, she doesn't remember her children (except my aunt who has been a constant in her life), she can't "do for herself" anymore. I just want her to have life back. I was touched by the way L'Engle put that --to be born again through death. I also enjoyed hearing about the life of two fascinating and wonderful women, both L'Engle and her mother. The book is a substantial, warm, human look into L'Engle's thoughts and her family.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Essays on Family, aging, and caretaking.,
By
This review is from: The Summer of the Great-Grandmother (Crosswicks Journal, Book 2) (Paperback)
Many middle aged women are the sandwich generation, caught in between caring for their children and their elderly mothers. L'Engle has written about being a mother and the meaning of family in her Crosswick Journal series. This one, however, is about the roots of the family, with its memories, and the passing of the generations. It is also about the heartbreaking labor and burden of caring for the elderly. But this memoir, which combines the stories of her ancestors' strengths in struggles, places these stories as a context in which one contemplates the problems of age, the struggles of feeding and caring for one at the end of life. The result is a satisfying string of essays into the eternal meaning of Family.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A story of strength and the importance of family history.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Summer of the Great-Grandmother (Crosswicks Journal, Book 2) (Paperback)
L'Engle confronts issues of death and dying in her experience of the death of her mother. But she also confronts issues of family history and the strength that the women in her family's history have exhibited. With each page I gained a greater respect for the trials that my ancestors have endured, and a greater curiosity to discover who my ancestors really were. The importance of story and passing on wisdom shines through L'Engle's account of her family experience. It explains why we should all feel compelled to pass on our history; to give our children deep roots so that they can understand themselves
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