Midwest Book Review (MBR) Bookwatch

\

Midwest Book Review

I’m very pleased to announce that the September 2020 issue of our online book review magazine “MBR Bookwatch” features a review of “Grownupedness“:

Synopsis: Pivotal events in Clarissa P. Green’s childhood altered the trajectory of her family relationships, personal life and career. Within the course of one year, her youngest sister passed away within seven months of her birth, and both her father and grandmother suffered near-fatal heart-attacks. In the 1950s, silence was considered an appropriate response to tragedy. Green writes, “my parents believed the right way to handle misfortune was to ‘turn the page.’ This meant they didn’t talk with their children about our sister’s death or any of the other awful events around that time. It’s taken me most of my life to understand how this crisis changed my family so profoundly, how it shaped my future.” It took a move from New York to Florida to bring the family back together.

In her twenties, Green was drawn to study the ins and outs of family crisis. In graduate school, and then as a professor in Vancouver, British Columbia, Green began to help grieving families regain balance — comforting the parents of premature newborns and helping families whose wives or mothers were diagnosed with life-threatening illness. Her support of these families led to a decades-long career in clinical therapy, working with aging parents and their mid-life children.

An award-winning teacher and advocate for the power of a learner’s personal connections in making theory and research meaningful, Green listened to her clients stories. As the storyteller of her own family, in Grownupedness Green weaves together her personal experiences alongside those of her clients — in humorous and touching detail — to make her deep understandings of family and aging available to all.

In Part I, Green explores what it means to be an “elderly young girl,” breaks down the anatomy of a crisis, and shows how the influence of past trauma stays with us as we age. Part II dives deeply into Green’s own personal experiences as she shares with the reader the challenges of supporting loved ones as they and their partners face growing old, illness and end of life. In Part III, Green delves into what she has learned as a daughter, a sibling, a wife, a mother, a teacher and a therapist.

Coupled with stories and lessons learned from her clients and family, she brings together stories and advice on difficult conversations — finance, dementia, touch, independence — and shares with vulnerability how she herself navigated the changing relationships with her own adult sons. Finding humor in difficult situations, Green manages to find humanity in experiences that are simultaneously personal and yet universal.

Critique: An inherently fascinating, exceptionally informative, especially thoughtful and though-provoking, “Grownupedness” is an extraordinary and ultimately inspiring read from beginning to end. While unreservedly recommended for both community and collge/university library Aging & Grief/Bereavement Management collections, it should be noted for personal reading lists that “Grownupedness” is also readily available in a digital book format (Kindle, $7.99).

Editorial Note: Clarissa P. Green has spent her life exploring and teaching how family relationships are changed by aging, illness and death. In her decades-long career as a therapist, Green has helped families reconfigure their relationships and conceptions of self in the face of trauma and aging. An associate professor emerita at the University of British Columbia, Green’s continuing-studies programs, The Widowed Journey and The Mid-Life Daughters’ Workshop, ran for more than a decade. Green was a founder of what is now the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, and she has received numerous teaching awards, including the Killam Teaching Prize from UBC and the 3M National Teaching Award. Green’s belief that personal experience is necessary for learning and growth developed naturally alongside a lifelong passion for storytelling. Green’s numerous works have been published in anthologies, Geist magazine, and The Fieldstone Review.

Helen Dumont
Reviewer


Suggested Reading

Pnina’s retirement sale

Feb 29

Yes, one of our Authors, Pnina Granirer, is retiring at the age of 89 years old. Many of you know...

Continue reading

Susan Hyatt in the Province Newsletter (Mother’s Day article)

May 4

The Home Front: Create a calm, beautiful tablescape this Mother's Day Susan Hyatt, author of Best Dressed Tables, sets the...

Continue reading

Linda Dayan Frimer @ Kelowna Golf & Country Club

Apr 28

The OJCA has the privilege of inviting Canadian artist, Linda Dayan Frimer to come join us for lunch at the...

Continue reading

Linda Dayan Frimer @ Nelson Museum

Apr 28

Linda Dayan Frimer will be at the Nelson Museum on Tuesday, May 9 from 7-9 p.m. for an artist talk...

Continue reading