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A Music I No Longer Heard - The Early Death of a Parent (Paperback)
Loot Price: R516
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A Music I No Longer Heard - The Early Death of a Parent (Paperback)
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List price R568
Loot Price R516
Discovery Miles 5 160
You Save R52 (9%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Parents die. At any age, the loss of a parent marks a profound and
often overlooked transition in life. When the parent leaves a young
child to grow up without guidance, nurturing, goading, and love,
the event becomes a landmark, a defining moment.
When authors Leslie Simon and Jan Johnson Drantell learned of their
common experience of losing a parent at a young age, they set out
to discover the experiences and effects that unite those who have
lived through this same signal event. "Every tragedy has its before
and after," they write. "One day a child's life feels normal, the
next it feels as if the world has torn apart."
This is a rent that can never be repaired, a wound that despite the
passage of time and the coming of age never truly heals. In "A
Music I No Longer Heard, " Simon and Drantell have collected the
voices of seventy men and women who share this poignant life's
journey. "Even three or four years later," the noted filmmaker Ken
Burns remembered, "my wish would be that my mother would come back.
I think I just submerged the fact that she had died."
As life progresses, the authors point out, every new experience is
filtered through the lens of loss. The dead parent remains a
vibrant presence in these lives: "My relationship with my father
doesn't seem finished, or sealed." Or in the words of another, "I
feed myself with memories of my mother. I think about her and it is
just a wonderful feeling."
Most of all, these children of loss experience adulthood
differently, always compensating in some way when choosing a mate
or a career, in developing the ability to trust and to love, and in
the willingness to take risks and live life to the fullest. "Maybe
my dad's death, in some small way," one woman wonders, "helped me
to wake up and see what the world is, what the world could offer."
What emerges from these stories is a moving portrait of the many
and various ways that the death of a parent shapes one's life. "A
Music I No Longer Heard" will be therapeutic for those who have
lost a parent and will enable those who have not to understand the
complex emotions that surround this all too common experience.
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