Uncertain Inheritance: Writers on Caring for Family by Nell Casey, Frank McCourt (Foreword by)

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(Hardcover)

  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Pub. Date: November 2007
  • ISBN-13: 9780060875305
  • Sales Rank: 98,595
  • 304pp
 
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Synopsis

In this eloquent collection of essays—from the editor of the national bestseller Unholy Ghost: Writers on Depression—contributors reveal their experiences in caring for family through illness and death

Today, thirty million people look after frail family members in their own homes. This number will increase drastically over the next decade—as baby boomers tiptoe toward old age; as soldiers return home from war wounded, mentally and physically; as a growing number of Americans find themselves caught between the needs of elderly parents and young children; as medical advances extend lives and health insurance fails to cover them. This compelling book offers both literary solace and guidance to the people who find themselves witness to—and participants in—the fading lives of their intimates.

Some of the country's most accomplished writers offer frank insights and revelations about this complex relationship. Julia Glass describes the tension between giving care—to her two young sons—and needing care after being diagnosed with breast cancer; Ann Harleman explores her decision to place her husband in an institution; Sam Lipsyte alternates between dark humor and profound understanding in telling the story of his mother's battle with cancer; Ann Hood wishes she'd had more time as a caregiver, to prepare herself for the loss of her daughter; Andrew Solomon examines the humbling experience of returning as an adult to be cared for by his father; cartoonist Stan Mack offers an illustrated piece about the humor and hell of making his way through the medical bureaucracy alongside his partner, Janet; Julia Alvarez writes about the competition between her and her three sisters to be the best daughter as they tend to their ailing parents. An Uncertain Inheritance examines the caregiving relationship from every angle—children caring for parents; parents caring for children; sib-lings, spouses, and close friends, all looking after one another—to reveal the pain, intimacy, and grace that take place in this meaningful connection.

Publishers Weekly

Casey, a mental health journalist and editor (Unholy Ghost: Writers on Depression) has collected a remarkable array of mostly original essays by talented writers on being cared for themselves and caring for parents, children and spouses with illnesses as varied as depression and brain injuries. The writers have faced age-old dilemmas: for instance, novelist Julia Glass grapples with her own mortality and tries to raise two young children while undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer. Other essays venture into more modern problems: Julia Alvarez and Anne Landsman both struggle to help parents who live in other countries. Many of the essays are beautiful and all are moving, but they are also relentless. The tales of cancer, multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer's start to blur together, no matter how artfully told. Sam Lipsyte's irreverent portrayal of caring for his mother as she died of breast cancer shortly after he kicked drug addiction provides welcome relief. He describes injecting his mother's medication: "I tended to make a grand, nearly cinematic deal of flicking the bubbles away, as though to say, 'Now Mom, aren't you glad I was a junkie?' " Other essays are less developed, and Andrew Solomon rehashes territory he covered in The Noonday Demon. Overall, the essays are well worth reading-just not all at once. (Nov. 13)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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Biography

Nell Casey is the editor of the bestselling essay collection Unholy Ghost: Writers on Depression. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, Slate, Salon, the Guardian, Self, Fitness, Cookie, and Elle, among other publications. She is a Carter Center mental-health journalism fellow and is on the general council for Stories at the Moth, a nonprofit storytelling organization. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and son.

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An Uncertain Inheritance: Writers on Caring for Familyby Anonymous

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July 22, 2008: In 'An Uncertain Inheritance,' the voices of many essayists converge to tell the story of how providing full-time care for a family member is a life-changing experience for everyone involved. The essays, compiled by Nell Casey, range from adults confronting the realities of caring for their parents to children who are forced to forfeit their independence by returning to their parents for care. Stories such as the one contributed by Helen Schulman uncover the heart-wrenching internal and external conflicts that can arise from a loved one?s illness. In ?My Father the Garbage Head,? Schulman writes about her father, who endured a medley of illnesses and medical complications for 20 years before dying. Schulman chronicles the strain on her mother during those two decades, as well as her own weighty struggles. Schulman says that about five years before her father died, because of her enduring love for him, she pledged to ?help him as long as he needs it.? About this pledge, Schulman writes, ?I remember the moment I said this to myself outside his hospital-room door. It was a promise I lived to regret.? Anyone who is already caring for a family member or being cared for might be able to relate to some of the stories in An Uncertain Inheritance or glean some helpful information from them. And for those who are fortunate enough not to have dealt with long-term care, reading about the writers? experiences will open the mind to any unforeseen scenarios that life has to offer. Through a mixture of humor, sadness and unflinching honesty, the essays contained in An Uncertain Inheritance weave together a telling tale of the strength and sacrifice required when accepting responsibility for the care of a loved one.