Married at a young age to an older man, neither he nor she doubted that he would predecease her; but she discovers that there is no preparing for the loss a beloved. Their marriage was a passionate 35 year love affair, as if the odds against its longevity engendered a rare intensity. She discovers that love has no boundaries, grief is not eternal and ?her husband's motto Life is a love story is so very true.
Ascher writes passionately about her unlikely marriage, her husband's illness and death and her ensuing sorrow. A witness to the insanity that grief visits upon its victims with a seeming determination to destroy, she gazes straight into the eye of grief and does not blink. In time she moves beyond that grief - her voyage out.
Ghosting is, by turns, moving and funny, tender and brutal .
The wonder of Ghosting is that Ascher, like Montaigne, calls forth Everyman.
About previous books:
Pat Conroy on Dancing In The Dark:
One of those books that wakes you up to the life you have failed to live, ...What a wonderful book.
Publishers Weekly on The Habit of Loving: ?
With her sharp, unflinching eye, she discovers wonder and truth at our very doorsteps.
Boston Globe on Landscape Without Gravity:
Her honesty touches the reader's heart, opens the scars of old wounds, and helps heal them...wrenching, insightful...compelling
Eudora Welty on Playing After Dark:
Barbara Ascher has a serious mind and the gift of a light touch.