Items related to The Alchemy of Loss: A Young Widow's Transformation

The Alchemy of Loss: A Young Widow's Transformation - Softcover

  • 4.00 out of 5 stars
    510 ratings by Goodreads
 
9780771019074: The Alchemy of Loss: A Young Widow's Transformation

Synopsis

Like A Year of Magical Thinking, this powerful and touching book is both an inspirational read and a comfort to those who are looking for help in overcoming loss.

The phone rang. It was my husband Arron telling me that he was at Windows of the World in the World Trade Center. “There’s been a bomb!” he said. I had been preparing my six-year-old daughter for her second day of first grade, balancing my two-year-old son on my hip, and I was distracted. “OK . . .” I managed to say back. It was 8:49 a.m. on September 11, 2001. He never came home.

Abigail Carter is smart, funny, perceptive, and bereft. In the eyes of most, herself included, she had it all — a full life with a loving successful husband and two beautiful children. But in a horrifying instant watched by the world, it was gone, and her life and her children’s were changed irreparably. How does one learn to live again after tragedy?

The Alchemy of Loss is Abby’s moving story of answering that unimaginable question. Veering away from the trite and pat grief books, which offer one-size-fits-all solutions to this most deeply personal and unique experience, she realizes that each person must forge her own path through grief, and that there are no right answers.

Abby’s journey took her six years, in which she turned everything she knew about herself upside down in order to learn to live again. She charts this journey in the year’s most remarkable memoir. The Alchemy of Loss is her gift to us all — reminding us that life throws up roadblocks we can’t anticipate, and that we cannot live well if we live with regrets.
From the Hardcover edition.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Author

Abigail Carter was an expat Canadian living in New York with her husband and two children, when her husband was lost in the attack on the twin towers on 9/11. Following the catastrophe, Abby moved to Seattle with her children and began keeping a journal to try to come to terms with what had happened to her family. That act opened another world to her and Abby now works as a full-time writer.
From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

During the next two days, the phone rang incessantly, and I cringed at every jarring ring. Instead of answering it, I placed a green notebook half full of kids’ drawings by the phone, in which messages and important numbers were being written in the various handwriting styles of my guests. “Missing Persons, 1st Precinct, Detective Smith, Lifenet Support Line.” “Uncle Ted called. 3 min silence in uk. Work stopped in Adrian’s mine.” “Stopped by 5:30ish. Sorry to have been absent (been sick). Need extra bedrooms, call me.” “Jeff phoned from New Zealand.” “Beverley sends her thoughts and prayers (London).”

The days were full of “air pocket” talk. A neighbour told me the story of a man who had jumped from one of the upper floors of the World Trade Center, gotten caught in an updraft, and drifted peacefully down to the ground, breaking only a leg in his fall. I knew it was a myth, but I wanted to believe it. When a 110- storey building falls on you, the chances of survival are zero percent. “Pancake” was the word I dared not utter to others. Arron was like the character in a Looney Tunes Road Runner cartoon, flattened. But maybe he could pop up whole again in an instant. It was horrible to think of my husband that way, yet I found myself making light of things in supposedly inappropriate ways.

My worries became more real when the Canadian consulate put us in touch with Jim Young, a coroner from Toronto who had come to New York to help Canadian families with collecting DNA and “remains recovery.” Selena and I took turns speaking to him on the phone. He was honest and straightforward when we peppered him with questions about what the conditions might have been like that day. “Arron most likely passed out from smoke inhalation. He wouldn’t have known that the buildings had fallen,” Jim told us. He died before they fell is what he omitted from his sentence, but it was what we wanted to hear.

It was Thursday, two days after the towers fell, before I finally remembered that I could leave the house. An entourage followed me to the park and helped me push the stroller and walk the dog. I felt like an invalid. When Harley, in her own form of dog-grief, sat down at the corner of the park and refused to continue, a sprightly Marie, used to hauling Brent’s wheelchair around, simply bent down and hoisted the sixty-five-pound dog up into her arms and walked her into the park. I think my first smile in three days was the sight of this slim, tiny woman carrying a humiliated ball of yellow fur.

That night, the house was still full of people. I was giving Carter his bath, alone for what seemed the first time since that horrible Tuesday morning. As I sat on the toilet watching Carter play in the bathwater, I realized that Arron had already missed three whole days of his son’s life. The thought of this wonderful little boy growing up without knowing Arron brought my first sobs. Arron would miss Carter’s first tooth falling out. His first soccer game. He wouldn’t see Carter get married, wouldn’t have a grandchild. Carter wasn’t going to learn to laugh out loud at his father’s silly jokes, wasn’t going to learn to swing a bat with him, wasn’t going to get a goodnight kiss from him tonight. The tears
poured down my cheeks as wave after wave of sadness hit me. After a while I noticed that Carter had stopped splashing and was standing in the bath looking at me. I peeked at him through my wet hands, worried that my display might be upsetting to him.

“Mama sad?” Carter asked.

“Yes, Mama very sad,” I said.

Carter came closer to the edge of the tub with his arms outstretched. A hiccup sob escaped from me as I knelt down onto the floor to receive his dripping wet hug. It was strong and purposeful. As he held me I had the sensation that Arron was holding me, as if Arron had entered Carter’s little naked body so he could hug me one last time. My tears dripped into the tub. And then he let me go.
From the Hardcover edition.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

  • PublisherEmblem Editions
  • Publication date2009
  • ISBN 10 0771019076
  • ISBN 13 9780771019074
  • BindingPaperback
  • LanguageEnglish
  • Number of pages304
  • Rating
    • 4.00 out of 5 stars
      510 ratings by Goodreads

Buy Used

Condition: Very Good
May have limited writing in cover...
View this item

FREE shipping within U.S.A.

Destination, rates & speeds

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780757307904: The Alchemy of Loss: A Young Widow's Transformation

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0757307906 ISBN 13:  9780757307904
Publisher: Hci, 2008
Hardcover

Search results for The Alchemy of Loss: A Young Widow's Transformation

Stock Image

Carter, Abigail
Published by Emblem Editions, 2009
ISBN 10: 0771019076 ISBN 13: 9780771019074
Used Paperback

Seller: ThriftBooks-Dallas, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.

Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

Paperback. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 1.04. Seller Inventory # G0771019076I4N00

Contact seller

Buy Used

US$ 27.84
Convert currency
Shipping: FREE
Within U.S.A.
Destination, rates & speeds

Quantity: 1 available

Add to basket