Cover image for Still life at eighty [text (large print)] : the next interesting thing :a memoir
Title::
Still life at eighty [text (large print)] : the next interesting thing :a memoir
First Author value, for Searching:
Thomas, Abigail, author.
General Note:
Regular print version previously published by: Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, LLC.
Format:
Large print
Abstract:
"While reflecting on the past, Abby accepts the shape of her present. No more driving, no more dancing, mostly sitting in a comfortable chair in a sunny corner with her dogs for company-as well as the birds and other critters that she watches out her window. Only this beloved writer could generate so much enthusiasm over what might seem so little. Vivid memories fall like confetti, as time contracts, shoots forward, loops and suddenly she is back in her twenties in New York City, drinking, sleeping with strangers, falling in and out of love, believing in a better world. Sometimes dread or grief arrives, inhabits her body like a shadow, and all she can do is write it away, paying close attention to what catches her eye, sticks in her brain, keeps her in the moment."-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Being this old -- Stay-at-home order -- Wisteria -- A few thoughts about writing.
Subject:
Authors, American -- 20th century -- Biography.
Aging.
Memory.
Large type books.
Vieillissement.
Livres en gros caractères.
large print books.
Essays.
Autobiography.
Thomas, Abigail.
Summary:
"While reflecting on the past, Abby accepts the shape of her present. No more driving, no more dancing, mostly sitting in a comfortable chair in a sunny corner with her dogs for company-as well as the birds and other critters that she watches out her window. Only this beloved writer could generate so much enthusiasm over what might seem so little. Vivid memories fall like confetti, as time contracts, shoots forward, loops and suddenly she is back in her twenties in New York City, drinking, sleeping with strangers, falling in and out of love, believing in a better world. Sometimes dread or grief arrives, inhabits her body like a shadow, and all she can do is write it away, paying close attention to what catches her eye, sticks in her brain, keeps her in the moment."--
Number Available:
1