Grief and Grits (Memoir) | Marsha Gray Hill | ⭐⭐⭐⭐
At once heart-warming, evocative, reflective and almost conversational, Grief and Grits, while at its core is a daughter's homage to her departed mother; also poses some tough questions for us to ponder on.
This one's like a most heartfelt, hard-hitting and intimate rendezvous with a long lost friend, which makes you feel an entire range of emotions and leaves you with so many thoughts.
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Adeline Gray has lived a full life. A charitable, upright, truly Christian woman; with children, grand children and great grand children in double digits. She has beaten cancer, has been ravaged by dementia, has lost her loving husband of 51 years and still remains ever gentle, graceful and loving.
As age creeps up on her, her loving daughter has meticulously planned her last days to be happy, comfortable and even her funeral to be a grand sendoff. However, COVID sweeps in to destroy all plannings and calculations, and leaves frustration, grief and remorse in its wake.
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Through funny, relatable anecdotes; Marsha Gray does a wonderful job of painting us a portrait of a most extraordinary woman, her mother, Adeline.
While this would itself have been enough for a great read, Marsha, powered by her many experiences, also poses some very pertinent questions that surely need our collective attention:
The plight of the elderly, the medical system, as a whole, which treats the elderly as disposable.
How we, as a community, are still too traumatized by COVID and are afraid to have conversations about it and how that affects all of us, one way or the other.
While we don't really like thinking about and talking about old-age and death, these are but inevitabilities we need, as a society, to think and act upon, before we, ourselves, are rendered unwanted and expendable by the existing system.
I may not be able to convince you, but Marsha Gray surely can.
If nothing, you will find a good friend in the form of a book and find yourself a little bit less lonely in your battle against grief, loss, trauma and the COVID experience.