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New Life, No Instructions

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Saturday, October 18, 2014

New Life, No Instructions: A Memoir Hardcover – Deckle Edge, April 1, 2014

Author: Visit Amazon's Gail Caldwell Page | Language: English | ISBN: 1400069548 | Format: PDF, EPUB

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New Life, No Instructions: A Memoir – Deckle Edge, April 1, 2014
Download electronic versions of selected books New Life, No Instructions: A Memoir – Deckle Edge, April 1, 2014 for everyone book mediafire, rapishare, and mirror link

From Booklist

Getting old, as they say, is not for sissies, and no one would call Pulitzer Prize winner Caldwell (Let’s Take the Long Way Home, 2010) a wimp. Yet time and loss were taking their toll as she suffered the deaths of her mother and her two best friends, one human (the writer Caroline Knapp) and one canine (her beloved Samoyed, Clementine). As Caldwell moved forward, she adopted a new puppy and immediately began to doubt the wisdom of this decision. The polio that had plagued her since childhood and left her with a perceptible limp was becoming increasingly painful, making life with an endlessly energetic and preternaturally strong dog difficult. When it was finally determined that Caldwell required a total hip replacement, the diagnosis was both a relief and a challenge for a middle-aged, single woman. There may not have been a road map for the life-changing trip Caldwell was about to take, but, as this memoir makes clear, given her indefatigable sense of commitment and community, at the very least Caldwell realized she had the power to endure. --Carol Haggas

Review

“Brimming with insights and wisdom . . . As far as I’m concerned, Caldwell can write about whatever she pleases. . . . Unabashed dispatches from lifelong single women are a fairly recent phenomenon. Caldwell has so much more to teach us.”—Kate Bolick, The New York Times Book Review

“Gail Caldwell offers the kind of wisdom and grace you’d wish a friend, sister, or mother might deliver. . . . Fans and new readers alike will find comfort in Caldwell’s voice.”—The Boston Globe
 
“Quiet but powerful . . . an absorbing meditation on grief and rebirth in midlife.”—More
 
“Eloquent and uplifting . . . [a story] to inspire you.”—Good Housekeeping
 
“Graceful and reflective.”—USA Today
 
“[Caldwell] confronts, with pluck and fortitude, the hurdles that life throws her way.”—Publishers Weekly
 
“An uplifting journey . . . This book celebrates finding support where you least expect it.”—Woman’s Day
 
“[A] beautifully written memoir.”—Parade
 
“[A] thoughtful, wide-eyed view of the world . . . [Caldwell] ably explores the shifts of our hearts.”—Kirkus Reviews
 
“Getting old, as they say, is not for sissies, and no one would call Pulitzer Prize–winner Caldwell a wimp. . . . There may not have been a road map for the life-changing trip [she] was about to take, but . . . Caldwell realized she had the power to endure.”—Booklist
 
“New Life, No Instructions shows us how a lot of little things . . . add up to something much more significant: a new life, embarked upon and embraced.”—BookPage

“New Life, No Instructions is beautifully written, lucid, and wise. We come of age again and again during the course of our lives, and need those who have traveled the path before us to shine a light, to lend a hand. Caldwell’s story is moving and gripping. I found myself feeling that I had indeed been given a valuable set of instructions for how to proceed with eyes and heart wide open.”—Dani Shapiro, author of Devotion and Slow Motion
 
“In Gail Caldwell’s New Life, No Instructions we see a Pultizer Prize winner once again go out and earn the title. It is a meditation on how seemingly faint winds can blow us wildly off course; on how spending time with a beloved animal can benefit our basic humanity; and on what it means to overcome, at middle age, a multitude of blows. It is lyrical and smart and triumphant and you won’t read a more honest memoir in your life.”—Darin Strauss, author of Chang and Eng and Half a Life
See all Editorial Reviews

Download latest books on mediafire and other links compilation New Life, No Instructions: A Memoir Hardcover – Deckle Edge, April 1, 2014
  • Hardcover: 176 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; First Edition edition (April 1, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400069548
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400069545
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #10,170 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
    • #63 in Books > Crafts, Hobbies & Home > Pets & Animal Care > Dogs
Gail Caldwell is one tough woman. Having survived polio as a baby in Texas (she didn't walk until she was two and a half.) she rallied and had a sports-free childhood at a time when girls weren't expected to be athletic anyway. She went on to raise serious hell in the sixties and settled down later to an impressive career in journalism in Boston.

Along the way she put aside the drinking that was jeopardizing her life. She learned to row on Massachusetts' Charles River. And through it all, she had a series of cats and dogs that she loved probably more than the men she took up with and parted from. Having reconciled to the idea she'd never be a wife or mother, she suffered a series of losses over six years in her fifties--her closest woman friend to cancer (the topic of a previous memoir I haven't read), then her parents' deaths one after another, and finally, her beloved Samoyed sled dog, Clementine. It nearly did her in.

It makes sense that aging will be difficult for the generation that never trusted anyone over 30, and Caldwell is part of that generation. At her lowest point, she takes a leap by adopting a new Samoyed, and shortly afterwards, she confronts pain in her polio-damaged leg that makes it difficult to keep up with her growing pup. A fortunate visit to a doctor who figures out that one of her hips is in need of replacement turns the tide against all this loss.

As a storyteller, Caldwell is more distanced than her fellow Texan memoirist Mary Karr. She tells of very intense struggles at safe remove. And yet I admired the way she slogs along, slaying one dragon at a time.
Gail Caldwell's beautifully written memoir "New Life, No Instructions" is informative, wise and uplifting.
She calls the polio she contracted when she was a couple of months old her "base line." It's the "wall" she pushes against and says everybody has one.
Although she doesn't believe in miracles she says, "I do think you need to be listening when the thunder cracks, because that way you get to be there for the light show that follows."
Over a ten year period she lost her best friend, father, mother, and Clementine, her beloved Samoyed dog. Also the polio she contracted as a baby had begun to reduce her walk to a painful limp and it was getting worse.
Everything changed when a new doctor said she needed a hip replacement and that her leg could be lengthened. Her recovery began when she, for the first time, no longer saw her body in decline and realized she could live pain free.
After surgery and during her brutal rehabilitation Gail was stunned by the outpouring of support and love from her friends and community. They even helped take care of Tula, Gail's new Samoyed puppy. During her recovery Tula sometimes poked her head inside the shower curtain to lick her wounded leg. Also, after a decade of living in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Gail said she was on a first-name basis with half the people on her city block. She believed her neighbors reached out because she lived alone and because the solitude made her stretch her heart.
Gail began walking without crutches after three months and regained her confidence after six. She marveled how even in pain and in training she could walk faster and better than she had in years.
She said she does not resent her regular doctors failure to find the source of her pain for a decade.

New Life, No Instructions: A Memoir – Deckle Edge, April 1, 2014 Download

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