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Last Things: A Graphic Memoir of Loss and Love
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Published:
Red Wheel Weiser 2017
Status:
Available from OverDrive
Description

Last Things is the true and intensely personal story of how one woman coped with the devastating effects of a catastrophic illness in her family.Using her trademark mix of words and pictures to sharp effect, Marissa Moss presents the story of how she, her husband, and her three young sons struggled to maintain their sense of selves and wholeness as a family and how they continued on with everyday life when the earth shifted beneath their feet.After returning home from a year abroad, Marissa's husband, Harvey, was diagnosed with ALS. The disease progressed quickly, and Marissa was soon consumed with caring for Harvey while trying to keep life as normal as possible for her young children. ALS stole the man who was her husband, the father of her children, and her best friend in less than 7 months.This is not a story about the redemptive power of a terminal illness. It is a story of resilience—of how a family managed to survive a terrible loss and grow in spite of it. Although it's a sad story, it's powerfully told and ultimately uplifting as a guide to strength and perseverance, to staying connected to those who matter most in the midst of a bleak upheaval. If you've ever wondered how you would cope with a dire diagnosis, this book can provide a powerful example of what it feels like and how to come through the darkness into the light.

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Format:
Adobe EPUB eBook, Kindle Book, OverDrive Read
Street Date:
05/01/2017
Language:
English
ISBN:
9781633410596
ASIN:
B06XD2SS12
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Citations
APA Citation (style guide)

Marissa Moss. (2017). Last Things: A Graphic Memoir of Loss and Love. Red Wheel Weiser.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Marissa Moss. 2017. Last Things: A Graphic Memoir of Loss and Love. Red Wheel Weiser.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Marissa Moss, Last Things: A Graphic Memoir of Loss and Love. Red Wheel Weiser, 2017.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Marissa Moss. Last Things: A Graphic Memoir of Loss and Love. Red Wheel Weiser, 2017.

Note! Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2022. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.
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Needs Update?:
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Date Added:
Jun 12, 2018 15:41:27
Date Updated:
Jul 15, 2022 05:57:44
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Last Metadata Change:
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      • value: Caregiving
      • value: health
      • value: ALS
      • value: autoimmune disease
      • value: Death
      • value: psychology
      • value: Inspirational
      • value: lou gehrig's disease
      • value: graphic memoir
      • value: Ice Bucket Challenge
      • value: positive living
      • value: loss of spouse
      • value: last things
      • value: amelia's notebook series
      • value: catastrophic illness
      • value: children and parent dying
      • value: loss of family member
      • value: reclaiming happiness
      • value: story of resiliance
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      • role: Author
      • fileAs: Moss, Marissa
      • bioText:

        Marissa Moss has written more than seventy books, from picture books to middle-grade and young adult novels. Best known for the Amelias Notebook series (over 5 million sold), her books are popular with teachers and children alike. Her picture book,Barbed Wire Baseball, won the California Book Award, Gold medal. Marissa is also the founder of Creston Books, an independent childrens publishing house. Visit her at marissamoss.com.

      • name: Marissa Moss
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fullDescription

Last Things is the true and intensely personal story of how one woman coped with the devastating effects of a catastrophic illness in her family.Using her trademark mix of words and pictures to sharp effect, Marissa Moss presents the story of how she, her husband, and her three young sons struggled to maintain their sense of selves and wholeness as a family and how they continued on with everyday life when the earth shifted beneath their feet.After returning home from a year abroad, Marissa's husband, Harvey, was diagnosed with ALS. The disease progressed quickly, and Marissa was soon consumed with caring for Harvey while trying to keep life as normal as possible for her young children. ALS stole the man who was her husband, the father of her children, and her best friend in less than 7 months.This is not a story about the redemptive power of a terminal illness. It is a story of resilience—of how a family managed to survive a terrible loss and grow in spite of it. Although it's a sad story, it's powerfully told and ultimately uplifting as a guide to strength and perseverance, to staying connected to those who matter most in the midst of a bleak upheaval. If you've ever wondered how you would cope with a dire diagnosis, this book can provide a powerful example of what it feels like and how to come through the darkness into the light.

reviews
      • premium: True
      • source: Publisher's Weekly
      • content:

        May 15, 2017
        Deeply affecting and harrowing, Moss’s narrative of her husband’s struggle with Lou Gehrig’s disease begins with Harvey feeling a little out of breath while walking with his wife and sons in Rome, then races through a description of his awful deterioration over the next seven months. An uninformed or uncaring medical establishment doesn’t know how to help Harvey cope, leaving his wife to assimilate the physical and emotional changes in their lives. This is not a sentimental story of how suffering ennobles people. Harvey shuts off human contact, desperate to finish the art history research that has been his life’s work; Moss is distracted, clinging to her own sanity but horrified to realize how their mutual trust and tenderness are disappearing bit by bit. Moss’s deliberately naive drawings effectively accompany her painfully direct text. The fact that the family does endure is impressive, and this book demonstrates how art can transmute suffering into literature.

      • premium: True
      • source: Library Journal
      • content:

        April 1, 2017

        Moss ("Amelia's Notebook" series) and her children are in Rome with her husband, medievalist-on-sabbatical Harvey Stahl, when Harvey begins to tire easily. Back home in Berkeley, CA, he starts a frustrating regimen of medical tests, ending after two months in diagnosis: ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), or Lou Gehrig's disease. Only seven months later, Harvey is dead at age 61. Moss had expected that she and Harvey might grow closer in fighting the illness together. But her formerly warm, loving husband retreats into hostile denial. Feeling distraught and emotionally abandoned, she must cater to his escalating medical needs as well as keep the lives of their three boys relatively normal. Moss uses simple line drawings with ink-washed grays for this poignant account. She reveals medical and social details that do not typically appear in patient information materials or in the press, from diagrams of Harvey's breathing equipment to frank descriptions of patient denial and stigma. VERDICT Perhaps the first graphic memoir about a spouse's death, this personal human drama touches on experiences that everyone has sooner or later. An eye-opener for adults and teens concerned about health care.--MC

        Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

      • premium: True
      • source: School Library Journal
      • content:

        January 1, 2018

        This graphic novel follows one family's struggle with ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease. Harvey, a university professor, enjoys traveling and has a loving wife and three sons. He typically takes charge of things at home, but when he is diagnosed with ALS, life changes dramatically for everyone. Though the story is told from the point of view of Harvey's wife (Moss), who becomes his primary caretaker while juggling work and childcare, readers gain tremendous insight into how everyone, including extended family members, deals with the diagnosis. Moss's illustrations convey the intensity of the decisions and occurrences, painting a picture of this trauma that words alone cannot. Additional graphics, such as charts and lists, shed light on the reality of life with ALS. VERDICT A valuable offering for anyone preparing for or coping with the loss of a family member to disease.-April Sanders, Spring Hill College, Mobile, AL

        Copyright 2018 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

      • premium: True
      • source: Kirkus
      • content:

        February 15, 2017
        A graphic memoir by an author best known for her children's books details the devastating effects of her husband's amyotrophic lateral sclerosis on her entire family.Though Moss has sold millions of books--particularly the Amelia's Notebook series--she explains in the acknowledgments that "this book wasn't easy to sell. Many agents and editors felt it was too dark or sad." It is both of those, as the author subverts the stereotype of the noble caregiver and the patient whose fatal illness teaches everyone about the true meaning of life. Moss offers no cliched heroism. "We're told that major illness deepens us, makes us grateful for our lives," she writes. "But for me, ALS doesn't work that way. I'm not a bigger, nobler person and neither is [my husband] Harvey." When Harvey received his diagnosis and quickly saw his health decline, he seemed to resent his wife's attempts to help him or be closer to him. And she resented him back, not only for the impositions his illness made on her and his lack of appreciation, but for the way it altered the dynamic of the entire family. "But it's not his disease," she maintains, after he decreed that he would notify their children. "It's rotting away at all of us," writes Moss. "First it killed our marriage. Now it's destroying our family. And then Harvey will die. What will be left of us?" Instead of the concern for Harvey that one would expect as a focus, the author is brutally honest about how hard she took his illness and how it affected her. There are brief flashes of a return of intimacy and connection between them--and sessions with a therapist provided some perspective--but it seems that only after his death could she truly reconnect with the husband she loved.When Moss writes, "this isn't how it's supposed to be," other readers who aren't feeling what they're supposed to be feeling could well find comfort in a kindred spirit.

        COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      • premium: True
      • source: Booklist
      • content:

        April 15, 2017
        Moss, famous for the children's series, Amelia's Notebook, here turns to decidedly adult matters. Readers are invited into her home during one of the most intimate and turbulent times in her family's history, her husband's quick decline and untimely death from ALS. As Harvey starts fading, Moss rises to the occasion of becoming his caretaker, a single parent, and a patient advocate battling insurance and medical equipment companies. She is honest about her failures and shortcomings in each role and candid about the horrors of losing her partner to such a visceral decay. Her signature, playful artistic style offers a much-needed dose of hopefulness when presenting images of sterile hospital recovery rooms and pictures of Harvey breathing through a ventilator plugged into the wall of a gas station after the car battery dies on a long drive home. Moss fully exposes herself as a selfish, sentimental, and wildly resilient human being. The confessional, warts-and-all honesty of Moss' heartbreaking story gives an empowering glimpse into the realities of unexpected loss.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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shortDescription

Last Things is the true and intensely personal story of how one woman coped with the devastating effects of a catastrophic illness in her family.

Using her trademark mix of words and pictures to sharp effect, Marissa Moss presents the story of how she, her husband, and her three young sons struggled to maintain their sense of selves and wholeness as a family and how they continued on with everyday life when the earth shifted beneath their feet.

After returning home from a year abroad, Marissa's husband, Harvey, was diagnosed with ALS. The disease progressed quickly, and Marissa was soon consumed with caring for Harvey while trying to keep life as normal as possible for her young children. ALS stole the man who was her husband, the father of her children, and her best friend in less than 7 months.

This is not a story about the redemptive power of a terminal illness. It is a story of resilience—of how a family managed to survive a terrible loss and...

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Last Things A Graphic Memoir of Loss and Love
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publisher
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      • description: Health & Fitness / Diseases & Conditions / Immune & Autoimmune