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Just finished "Being Mortal" By Atul Gawande. It is book club selection for April- my 1st thought was this is going to be boring and who choose it. As it turned out it was very interesting- about how we warehouse the elderly today, how nursing homes and assisted living came about and a lot about hospice care.
Having my life turned into being a full time care giver for my mate for the past nine months, I think I need to read this book. I have been paraded through more hospitals, nursing homes and medical facilities that I can count and need to make some serious decisions in the very near future. Thanks for the recommendation.
Great read that dispelled some conventional perceptions about end of life medicine. He calls traditional nursing homes a prison and says its ok to want to be alone and not participate in group activities and/or want your privacy. As average life expectancy is moving into the 80s, being disabled or infirm for long periods of time is more and more common. Just a century ago the average length of life was into the early 50s, now we are living 30 years longer. Are we just warehousing people until they die? Etc. Essential information for aging and dealing with complex choices for ourselves and our spouses.
Just picked it up, rapa... thanx for the recommendation...
I finished the Union Street Bakery by Mary Ellen Taylor a couple of days ago and really enjoyed it:
Daisy McCrae's life is in tatters. She's lost her job, broken up with her boyfriend, and has been reduced to living in the attic above her family's store, the Union Street Bakery, while learning the business. Unfortunately, the bakery is in serious hardship. Making things worse is the constant feeling of not being a "real" McCrae since she was adopted as a child and has a less-than-perfect relationship with her two sisters.
Then a long-standing elderly customer passes away, and for some reason bequeaths Daisy a journal dating back to the 1850s, written by a slave girl named Susie. As she reads, Daisy learns more about her family - and her own heritage - than she ever dreamed. Haunted by dreams of the young Susie, who beckons Daisy to "find her," she is compelled to look further into the past of the town and her family.
What she finds are the answers she has longed for her entire life, and a chance to begin again with the courage and desire she thought she lost for good.
I did the entire alphabet on Grafton a few years back. I'm sitting on X right now, seeing what Y and Z will bring. Grafton is in her mid-70s and will probably place her last two book in a nursing home, with "Z is for Zero Books I Have Left to Write" finishing off the series. It has been a fun romp through Kinsey Millhone's PI career as you meet her ex-husbands and quirky relatives and friends.
As the month ends, I look back on some excellent reads but my pick of the month is "Truman's Spy: A Cold War Thriller" by Noel Hynd. It has all the elements of intrigue with Sen. Joe McCarthy, J. Edgar Hoover and a compliment of American and Russian agency characters at the dirty game of spying and accusations. There is the classic struggle between the FBI and CIA, real and imagined planted Soviet agents, Truman and his enemies and bad actors in the Hollywood crowd that make the novel irresistible. Mix in a love story and enjoy.
Finished, Killing Reagan by Bill O'reilly. It gave me a new perspective of Reagan, as well as his wife, Nancy.
Starting The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto.
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