Book Review: A Bittersweet Season: Caring for Our Aging Parents – and Ourselves, by Jane Gross

I just finished reading A Bittersweet Season: Caring for Our Aging Parents — and Ourselves, by Jane Gross, founder of the New York Times’ New Old Age blog.  A chronicle of her mother’s last years, the book is part love story, part cautionary tale.  Jane Gross bravely shares intimate details of her family’s journey down this path while providing essential information about the late life health care system and how to negotiate each step of the way.

Having worked for years in nursing homes, I thought I knew a lot about what lies ahead in later years.  Upon reading this book, however, I realize I know a lot about nursing homes, and not so much about what life might be like before one gets there.  As someone with seven close relatives between the ages of 74 and 92, I found the book a wake-up call.  It provides a good jumping off point to start to one of those difficult, but necessary, conversations with elders who have read it too — and for elders to open the dialogue with reluctant adult children.  Beautifully written, with wit and intelligence, it passes a New York City reader’s highest standard: I was so engrossed in the book, I missed my subway stop.

6 thoughts on “Book Review: A Bittersweet Season: Caring for Our Aging Parents – and Ourselves, by Jane Gross”

  1. Thanks for this review. As one who is caring for elderly parents in my home and long distance, it sounds quite useful for me as well as my readers at SandwichINK. I'll definitely have to check it out. 🙂

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  2. Thanks for this review. As one who is caring for elderly parents in my home and long distance, it sounds quite useful for me as well as my readers at SandwichINK.

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  3. Kaye Swain and SandwichINK, I think your readers would be more knowledgeable and feel more comfortable with difficult family discussions after reading this book.

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  4. Parts of this book were helpful and interesting but it seemed to me that too much was devoted to the author talking about herself, which ultimately was not helpful.

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  5. Those looking for concrete information, Anonymous, might not find the personal parts of the book helpful, but others might be looking for a shared experience and/or to hear specifics of what it's like from someone who's been there. I found her personal details made the concrete information come alive and helped me imagine the future.

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