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BETH TAYLOR, THE PLAIN LANGUAGE OF LOVE AND LOSS: A QUAKER MEMOIR

07/01/2009 7:00 pm
Location: 
Street:
Village Books
Additional:
1200 Eleventh Street
City:
Bellingham
,
Province:
Washington
Postal Code:
98225
Country:
United States

 

On November 16, 1965, Beth Taylor's idyllic childhood was shattered at age 12 by her older brother’s suicide. Raised in an "intentional community" north of Philadelphia--a mix of farm village, hippie commune, and suburb--she and her siblings were instilled with nonconformist values and respect for the Quaker tradition. With the loss of her beloved sibling, Taylor began her complicated journey to understand family, loss, and faith.  Touching on the timely issues of bullying, child rearing, and non-conformity, as well as religious heritage, patriotism, and pacifism, Taylor offers a rare look at growing up Quaker in the tumultuous 1960s that shows the more sober side of the decade's counterculture.  Beth Taylor says that she learned many things from her childhood, in particular that history is alive--and shapes how we judge ourselves and choose to live our lives. She comes to see that grief can be a mask, a lover, and a teacher.  Beth Taylor teaches in the Nonfiction Writing Program at Brown University.
$19.95
ISBN-13: 9780826218452
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: University of Missouri, 4/2009
On November 16, 1965, Beth Taylor's idyllic childhood was shattered at age twelve by the suicide of her older brother Geoff. Raised in an "intentional community" north of Philadelphia--a mix of farm village, hippie commune, and suburb--she and her siblings were instilled with nonconformist values and respect for the Quaker tradition. With the loss of her beloved sibling, Taylor began her complicated journey to understand family, loss, and faith. Written after years of contemplation, The Plain Language of Love and Loss reflects on the meaning of death and loss for three generations of Taylor's family and their friends. Her compelling portrait of Geoff reveals a boy whose understanding of who he was came under increasing attack as he was harassed by schoolmates for being a "commie pinko coward" and tried to appease fellow Boy Scouts after he abstained from a support-the-troops rally. Touching on the timely issues of bullying, child rearing, and non-conformity, Taylor offers a rare look at growing up Quaker in the tumultuous 1960s that shows the more sober side of the decade's counterculture. Taylor tells how each stage of her life exposed clues to the subtle damage wrought by tragedy, even while it revealed varieties of solace found in friendships, marriage, and parenting. As she grapples with understanding the complexities of religious heritage, patriotism, and pacifism, she weaves the story of her own family together with the larger history of Quakers in the Northeast, showing the importance of family values and the impact of religious education. Beth Taylor says that she learned many things from her childhood, in particular that history is alive--and shapes how we judge ourselves andchoose to live our lives. She comes to see that grief can be a mask, a lover, and a teacher.