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Morning at Wellington Square Paperback – August 20, 2012
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- Print length170 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateAugust 20, 2012
- Dimensions5.25 x 0.39 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101475057458
- ISBN-13978-1475057454
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Product details
- Publisher : CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (August 20, 2012)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 170 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1475057458
- ISBN-13 : 978-1475057454
- Item Weight : 6.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.25 x 0.39 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #5,029,427 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #41,541 in Women's Biographies
- #133,457 in Memoirs (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

A former staff writer with The Philadelphia Inquirer, Susan G. Weidener is the author of "Again In a Heartbeat: a memoir of love, loss, and dating again," and its sequel, "Morning at Wellington Square." Susan's memoirs have been described as "brave, honest, humorous, and always entertaining."
Her novel, "A Portrait of Love and Honor"— a moving love story between Ava Stuart and Jay Scioli—is based on Jay's memoir as a cadet at the United States Military Academy at West Point during the Vietnam War. The sequel "And the Memory Returns" follows Ava as she develops a new life and landscape to her life as a widow, writer, and world traveler.
Susan runs the Women's Writing Circle in suburban Philadelphia. A graduate of American University and the University of Pennsylvania, she blogs at Along the Writer's Way https://susangweidener.com/. Susan lives in Chester Springs, Pennsylvania.
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I wanted to understand how a young woman with two young sons moves on from the hurt and pain of loss, a loss many of us will never experience, much less so early in life. Morning at Wellington Square is Susan's honest and moving tale of finding her way through a maze of responsibilities and social interactions as a single, working mom.
Like a tapestry woven from rich and vibrant threads, Susan invites us along as she searches for identity beyond the roles of daughter, wife, mother, journalist. The book opens 11 years after John's death, and John and Susan's son's are away at college. Living in their home alone, Susan is aware it is time to map out her journey into a new role.
However, as Susan's writing shows us by using flashbacks and memories, lives continually build upon memories while anticipating the unknown waiting down the road.
For me, the search for community or, as others might describe it, relationship was the most meaningful and poignant part of Susan's story.
Having been a single mother with a son in my 20s, the search for relationships, whether with the opposite sex or not, can be like walking through a mine field. After all, how do we ever know who another person really is? Is a relationship or community the source we seeking to heal our scars?
Following a testing of friendships and even a move to Arizona, Susan comes home and unexpectedly finds a way to share her gift of creative writing. One day while driving around she happens upon a bookstore called Wellington Square. And here she and others gave birth to the Women's Writing Circle. These women, through Susan, have experienced a new life through writing and sharing their writing with others. And through Susan, her books and her blog, Susan shares her experiences as a journalist and writer with the rest of us.
I highly recommend Morning at Wellington Square to those working their way past grief and loss and to those who are looking for a way to heal from those painful emotions through writing. Susan is a gift to fellow memoirists and other writers.
As a young single mother of two boys, Weidener tragically lost her husband John to cancer. As she reflected on their life together, she was grateful for the time they did have, and discovered it was an irreplaceable life time love, that continued to soothe and warm her heart.
Dating others was interesting and sometimes fun, her long relationship with a married man took a surprising unpredictable turn when he and his wife divorced. Weidner showed tremendous patience in dealing/dating various men, she was always gracious/kind to them, having a smart realistic outlook and not wanting to spend her time with men who weren't right for her.
Weidner's married parents were the 1950's traditional type, and weren't very happy together. This family didn't seem close, but Weidner dutifully visited and took charge of her parents health care needs until their deaths. Her sons completed their college educations and lived nearby.
It was interesting to read about the many places in Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and Arizona. Weidner loved the desert, and lived in Arizona briefly. She reserved time at a writing retreat, making many friends along the way. I liked this well written/edited memoir so much, in spite of all the adversity Weidener faced, there was never a hint of self-pity, bitterness, or need for revenge. Weidener writes: "I learned that no matter how much we think we know another person, we never truly do. At the end of the day the only heart you can ever know, is your own."
Author Weidener seemed to have it all: a loving and idyllic marriage, two thriving sons, and a stunning professional career as a newspaperwoman for the "Philadelphia Inquirer."
All that ended when her young husband died as a result of colorectal cancer, and she became a single mother raising her boys alone. Later she was forced out of her job when a younger less qualified woman became her manager, ending her career in journalism because of her age. In her efforts to find meaning and love in her life again, she had a series of boring dates with unsuitable men who failed to renew her romantic desires, she had an affair with a married man, and she followed her dream to live in the west.
Fortunately writing found her. After returning to Pennsylvania from Tucson Arizona, she decided to write her story "if only to make sense of how chronic illness had impacted my marriage and my naïve dreams of a happily ever after." And she was on her way.
Weidener is a true memoirist. She tells her readers her deep dark secrets, her most embarrassing moments, her desires, her fears, and her struggles in a flowing natural style. And she creates a character a reader can be interested in getting to know and root for. As a result of writing two memoirs, Again in a Heartbeat, a memoir of love, loss and dating again and the wonderful Morning at Wellington Square, she has discovered she "couldn't imagine a day without writing." Weidener has successfully found her passion and reinvented herself into more than a writer. "Memoir had also opened the door to teaching writing workshops, facilitating a weekend memoir retreat, and editing books," she writes.
I urge that you to read Morning at Wellington Square. Susan Weidener's story and her beautiful prose will not disappoint.
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I was sad to see this line-"I was no longer someone's wife, daughter or sister". Makes you think, doesn't it ? However, she does remain somebody's mother and someone's friend so it's certainly not all bad.
I did spot missed apostrophes and I thought damned should have been dammed near the end.....the apostrophe mistakes were more frequently occurring in this book hence the dropped star, though. In fairness to other authors I knock down for the same reason I had to do the same here !!
Thankyou for sharing your journey with us, Susan. I've enjoyed the travels with you and I'm happy for one that not one vampire was in evidence.