Some Become Flowers : Living with Dying at Home

Some Become Flowers: Living with Dying at Home

Sharon Brown
$21.95

 


in 1984, when Sharon Brown's mother Betty became terminally ill with bone cancer, Sharon and her husband (writer Andreas Schroeder) brought Betty home to live her last weeks with them and their two young daughters. With the help of her family, trusted professionals and close-knit community of friends, Brown helped her mother die with dignity, surrounded by the strength of love. Her unflinching story, taken from the journals she kept during the intense last year of her mother's life, is by turns tragic and hilarious, harrowing and tender. It is must reading for anyone who has or ever will care for a cherished loved one who is dying, and for any front-line palliative care worker.
Prize(s): Winner Hubert Evans Non-fiction Award (1994) 
"As I grow old, and see how immeasurably sad life is, I depend on the kind of spirituality people achieve when they locate their best self. What you have written is beautiful."
-June Callwood
–June Callwood

"It is a love story dealing with ordinary lives made luminous through courage and caring . . . a heart-wise journey into the dark and scattered regions of illness and loss, in which a mother's death is absorbed into the intimacy of family sharing and values richly glossed."
-Sylvia Fraser
–Sylvia Fraser

 


Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781550170870
Paperback / softback
6.0 in x 9.0 in - 200 pp
Publication Date: 01/01/1993
BISAC Subject(s): SOC036000-SOCIAL SCIENCE / Death & Dying, FAM014000-FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Death, Grief, Bereavement, SEL010000-SELF-HELP / Death, Grief, Bereavement 

Description


in 1984, when Sharon Brown's mother Betty became terminally ill with bone cancer, Sharon and her husband (writer Andreas Schroeder) brought Betty home to live her last weeks with them and their two young daughters. With the help of her family, trusted professionals and close-knit community of friends, Brown helped her mother die with dignity, surrounded by the strength of love. Her unflinching story, taken from the journals she kept during the intense last year of her mother's life, is by turns tragic and hilarious, harrowing and tender. It is must reading for anyone who has or ever will care for a cherished loved one who is dying, and for any front-line palliative care worker.
Prize(s): Winner Hubert Evans Non-fiction Award (1994) 
"As I grow old, and see how immeasurably sad life is, I depend on the kind of spirituality people achieve when they locate their best self. What you have written is beautiful."
-June Callwood
–June Callwood

"It is a love story dealing with ordinary lives made luminous through courage and caring . . . a heart-wise journey into the dark and scattered regions of illness and loss, in which a mother's death is absorbed into the intimacy of family sharing and values richly glossed."
-Sylvia Fraser
–Sylvia Fraser

 

Details


Harbour Publishing
ISBN: 9781550170870
Paperback / softback
6.0 in x 9.0 in - 200 pp
Publication Date: 01/01/1993
BISAC Subject(s): SOC036000-SOCIAL SCIENCE / Death & Dying, FAM014000-FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Death, Grief, Bereavement, SEL010000-SELF-HELP / Death, Grief, Bereavement