Posts Tagged: letter-writing


22
Sep 09

REVIEW: P.S. I Love You by Cecilia Ahern

ps-i-love-you-cecelia-ahernP.S. I Love You was a best-seller in 2007 but I never thought of reading the book because it was about a young woman who lost her husband to cancer.

A young married woman myself (with a living husband), I certainly didn’t want to read about such a horrifying situation.

When my father died suddenly in 2008, PS, I Love You was the first book I grabbed from the bookstore. When you lose someone so dear and important in your life, it didn’t matter whether the protagonist in the book was a woman, a man and whether the person who died was their father or husband. I just NEEDED to read a book about someone else who’d recently lost their loved one.

P.S. I Love You is about Holly who loses her childhood sweetheart and husband, Gerry, to cancer. A few months after he dies, Holly finds a package Gerry sent to her mother’s house – it contained 12 letters for her – one to open each month!

Of course, Holly is very, very happy to grasp at this last “conversation” with her beloved Gerry, especially as her only fragment left of Gerry was his voicemail recording. When his scent starts leaving his clothes, the bedding and the apartment in which they live in, Holly looks forward to the beginning of each month when she can still “keep in touch” with the dead Gerry.

The letters really help Holly to get through the first year of Gerry’s death because they got her out of the house, focused on DOING something new and also to move forward in her life.

Reading P.S. I Love You, I could identify with:

  • her desperation to hold on to EVERYTHING that reminded her of her happy times with Gerry. Unless you’ve lost someone who died, it must seem crazy to you when one clings on to the dead person’s photos, personal items,  clothes, cigarette ashes – anything that person used, bought or used;
  • her sense of loss and confusion. Gerry was Holly’s anchor and compass in life. He motivated her, helped her to focus on what’s important and most importantly, set her on a straight path ahead. Similarly, my father’s personal values, beliefs and expectations keep our family together – even though we didn’t agree with him on a lot of things, we knew exactly EXACTLY where he’d stand on various issues in life. Losing such an anchor can really shake you to the core until you find yourself again…
  • “It’s been a year. You’re STILL grieving over him?” The most common, over-used and over-rated sentence I’ve heard said to my mother and our family is “Time will heal.” Yes, that’s right and the sentence isn’t “Time will heal in ONE YEAR.”

When someone has been an important part of your life (50-100%?) for more than 10 years, how do you expect that person to get over his death or absence in just 1 year?

I really sympathize with Holly here because she is a young widow and when she is seen with another man within a year of Gerry’s death, tongues wag and people even accuse her outright of being “unfaithful” to her late husband.

I find it really ironic that people would say, “He’s gone. Look ahead of you. Move on with your life.” but when she actually does that, people are shocked! Somehow, they expect her to continue being the Black Widow and if she does…I’m sure they’ll go tsk, tsk, tsk, “She can’t let go of the past“.

And somehow, people seem more forgiving of the depressed, grieving person even though they’ll say, “She should have moved on with her life…” when a young widow ends up alone and sad.

How many people do you know who’ll say,

“Wow, look at her now! She’s gotten over her dead husband and is moving on with a new life. A fresh start. I’m sure her husband will be comforted to know that she’s getting on well without him. She can survive.”?

Before my father died, he was worried for us and left a few last instructions (which, of course, got us all angry because it felt like he had given up hope). On hindsight, they were his last messages. And I sure wish he’d left us more because now, we’ve only got his diaries, his books, his lectures and of course, our memories.

Overall, I think P.S. I Love You is a good read for someone going through grief and loss. However, I think the book painted a rather rosy and perfect picture of “life after a death” because Holly found replacements for the various roles Gerry played in her life through her father, Gerry’s best friend, Holly’s older brother, Holly’s younger brother and her new male friends.

Real life isn’t like that at all!

Rating: ★★★★½

# Publisher: Hyperion (November 6, 2007)
# ISBN-10: 140130916X
# ISBN-13: 978-1401309169


16
Jun 09

REVIEW: The Secret Life of Amanda K. Woods by Ann Cameron

the-secret-life-of-amanda-k-woods-by-ann-cameronWhen I found this book on the library shelf, I admit that I thought it was a “flaky”, “airhead” kind of book that almost every pre-teen or teenaged girl is reading now…

I was attracted by the blurb:

“Amanda Woods is discovering that the person other people think she is and the person she really is are not the same. She doesn’t want to be like her demanding mother or her perfect older sister, and even though she feels close to her father, she doesn’t want to be like him either. But she has to start somwhere.

So she changes her name from bland Amanda Woods to Amanda K. Woods – someone who is proud and strong and sure of herself.”

…and glad that I read the book! I think The Secret Life of Amanda K. Woods is a must-read for every young girl out there who’s trying to find herself as she grows and change amidst her family, friends and community around her.

The book starts with 11 year old Amanda saying goodbye to her childhood friend, Lyle, who’s moving to another city. Her mother is glad he’s moving away because she never really approved of Lyle, whose family lived in a house trailer…

You can imagine what Amanda’s mother is like from these lines:

“Amanda’s mother was an elegant woman who had strong opinions about what was proper. She had made a rule that Amanda couldn’t buy comics or have any in her house. Comics weren’t literature, she said.”

Boy, she sure reminds of me of the controlling, prim-and-proper mother who:

  • dresses up her children in beautiful and expensive but impractical clothes,
  • forbids her children from playing with water, mud or getting dirty;
  • chooses EVERY one of her children’s playmates and later, friends;
  • manipulates the husband or father into submitting to her every decision with the excuse “It’s best for the children”…

At 11, Amanda’s too young to question her mother but slowly, she realizes that her mother dictates pretty much everything in her daily life and her future.

Amanda doesn’t get along with her older sister, who she sees as Ms. Perfect but later, both sisters reveal surprising truths about each other.

Amanda also gets to know her father better and is surprised to hear her father defying her mother and insists that he will be the one to raise Amanda since her mother had already done her part (or damage) on Amanda’s older sister.

The book also shows Amanda having trouble making friends at school – she thinks the “cool girls” are not worth being friends with and when she succeeds in being study partners with a nice girl, her mother’s “holier-than-thou” attitude threatens the friendship…

The Secret Life of Amanda K. Woods” also has funny episodes especially Amanda’s adventure with her French pen friend…the letters between them make interesting reading but what’s funnier is Amanda’s attempt at creating a new identity for herself.

I’d strongly recommend mothers with pre-teen girls to get this book for your pre-teen or teenage daughters. Growing up as a teenager, I also had problems with friendship, peer pressure, trying to fit in and of course, the mother-and-daughter relationship.

If you have a 9-12 year old daughter, I think reading a book about the challenges ahead may help her (and you) be better prepared for them :-)

Rating: ★★★★☆


15
May 09

REVIEW: Daddy-Long-Legs by Jean Webster

daddy-long-legs-by-jean-websterI borrowed this book from the school library when I was about 12. Reading “Daddy-Long-Legs”, I fell in love with the idea of having penfriends and the art of letter writing.

Jerusha Abbott (later called Judy) is an orphan at the John Grier Home, which is nothing like loving atmosphere of the orphanage in John Irving’s The Cider House Rules.

Already 18, Judy’s future is uncertain until one day, the matron delivers some good news:

Hearing that she’s a budding writer, a trustee will sponsor her college education and even give her a monthly allowance! However, she has to write him (addressed to a fictitious “John Smith”) a letter every month but he will never reply :-(

Mystified by these strange conditions, Judy sets herself to be a good student at college and dedicates her time well in writing her monthly updates to her trustee.

One day, she catches a glimpse of his tall, sinewy shadow or silhouette and starts calling him “Daddy-Long-Legs” instead.

The book is filled with Judy’s description of life at college, some amusing and some not so especially when she remembers her shabby background. Her letters to “Daddy-Long-Legs” fill up a good portion of her book, including cute stick drawings :-)

I could identify with Judy when I read the book because:

  • I loved to write letters;
  • I had a kind uncle who’d buy me things a young girl loved (who couldn’t afford them) e.g. pretty stationery, cool sneakers, cool t-shirts, books etc and
  • I also had strange and sometimes unfortunate escapades when I was a kid.
  • “Daddy-Long-Legs” is definitely one of my favourite books (read and re-read many times!) and reading Jean Webster’s biography, she’s my sort of heroine too!

    Rating: ★★★★★

    Jean Webster accomplished a lot both as a writer and also for the improvement of orphanages and women’s causes. I hope that I’d be able to do something that worthwhile too…

    You can read Daddy-Long-Legs, Dear Enemy, The Four Pools Mystery, Jerry, Jerry Junior, Just Patty and When Patty Went to College for FREE online (PDF and Kindle formats available!).

    About Jean Webster (taken from Encyclopedia Brittanica)
    jeanwebster
    Originally named Alice Jane Chandler Webster, she adopted the name Jean when she studied at the Lady Jane Grey School in Binghamton, New York.

    In 1901 she graduated from Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York. Webster, who was a grandniece of Mark Twain, showed an early interest in writing.

    While in college she contributed a weekly column to the Poughkeepsie Sunday Courier and at the same time started writing the stories that were collected in her first book, When Patty Went to College (1903).

    (Photo from here)

    Daddy-Long-Legs, first serialized in the Ladies’ Home Journal, became a best-seller when published in book form. It was a successful stage play (1914) in Webster’s own adaptation, and a popular Mary Pickford silent film (1919).

    Daddy-Long-Legs was not only a successful piece of fiction but also a stimulus to reform the institutional treatment of orphans. In 1914 Webster published Dear Enemy, a sequel to Daddy-Long-Legs and also a best-seller.


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