Talk Before Sleep by Elizabeth Berg

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    (Paperback - Reprinted Edition)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0345491254
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Pub. Date: November 2006
    • Condition:
    • Attributes: Dust Jacket

    Comments from the Seller: PAPERBACK Fair 0345491254 HARDCOVER. DJ shows shelf and edgewear, creasing. Tape on DJ.

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    Synopsis

    "Until that moment, I hadn't realized how much I'd been needing to meet someone I might be able to say everything to."

    They met at a party.  It was hate at first sight.  Ruth was far too beautiful, too flamboyant.  Not at all Ann's kind of person.  Until a chance encounter in the bathroom led to an alliance of souls.  Soon they were sharing hankies during the late showing of "Sophie's Choice," wolfing down sundaes sodden with whipped cream, telling truths of marriage, mortality, and love, secure in a kind of intimacy no man could ever know.  Only best friends understand devil's food cake for breakfast when nothing else will do.  After years of shared secrets, guilty pleasures, family life and divorce, they face a crisis that redefines the meaning of friendship and unconditional love.


    From the Paperback edition.

    Annotation

    From the author of Durable Goods, which Richard Bausch has called "a little gem, " comes a wise and funny novel about two women who share the closest bonds of friendship. When one is diagnosed with cancer, their conversations begin to go deeper into the truths of women's lives.

    Publishers Weekly

    Because it is rendered with such clarity, authority and feeling, Berg's novel may cause readers to forget that this story of a woman's death from cancer is fiction. Berg's ( Durable Goods ) depiction of a sisterhood of women banding together to succor a friend is never falsely sentimental. Accurately observed details and honest descriptions of the body's frailties make the narrative gripping and immediate. But intensely real characterizations, outrageous black humor and graceful prose are what render it memorable. Narrator Ann Stanley, a nurse who loves her young daughter and husband but sometimes hates the institution of marriage, recognizes a soul mate when she meets Ruth Thomas. A talented artist, Ruth is mercurial, outspoken, fearless, charming, charismatic. When she leaves her caustic, icy husband and (regretfully) her teenaged son, she is eager to embrace new experiences, to find love and artistic fulfillment. Instead, she is sidetracked by cancer, which she fights gallantly, even into its terminal phase. Ann and several other devoted friends spend days and nights by Ruth's side, helping her to die. Berg writes candidly--if ultimately a bit too schematically--about the bonds between women that transcend the male-female relationship. A celebration of intimate friendship as well as a cry of grief, this book is a weeper, all right, but its effect is cathartic. (May)

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    Biography

    Elizabeth Berg is the New York Times bestselling author of many novels, including We Are All Welcome Here, The Year of Pleasures, The Art of Mending, Say When, True to Form, Never Change, and Open House, which was an Oprah’s Book Club selection in 2000. Durable Goods and Joy School were selected as ALA Best Books of the Year, and Talk Before Sleep was short-listed for the ABBY Award in 1996. The winner of the 1997 New England Booksellers Award for her body of work, Berg is also the author of a nonfiction work, Escaping into the Open: The Art of Writing True. She lives in Chicago.

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    Customer Reviews

    A heartfelt depiction of the unyielding bond that women can share.by RoseSW

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    11/15/2009: Through the terrible diagnosis of breast cancer, one woman has been sentenced to death. She shares her darkest moments with her closest friends, as well as her small triumphs. This is a story that offers a birdseye view into the depth of womens' friendships, as well as the emotional rollercoaster that ensues when death is imminent. Ruth goes through a plethora of emotions and changes when she learns that there is no hope for her. In the end, she faces the hand that she is dealt with grace and dignity. She learns to embrace the fact that time is limited for her, and she lives like she is dying. This is a book that will put you right there with the characters. You will feel what they feel, see what they see, and shed the tears that they have shed for the impending loss of their closest friend. It will take you on a journey to a place that breeds sentiment. You will weep for these characters and for the sheer depiction of the process of death. This is a story that we can all relate to as we have all lost someone that we were close to. I can't imagine this story having been told better. So grab your box of Kleenex (you will need it) and prepare to laugh, to cry, and to rejoice in the pure and selfless love that women are capable of giving and receiving.

    I Also Recommend: Shortest Distance Between Two Women.

    Breast cancer survivorby Anonymous

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    03/06/2008: as a cancer survivor having gone through treatment this book touched my soul. there is nothing more that a woman needs than her friends during that time. i also was glad to see a husband who was not jealous of his wife offering unending time and love to a woman she loved and adored and was inspired by. great read!


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