Showing posts with label
American Association of Suicidology.
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Showing posts with label
American Association of Suicidology.
Show all posts
In honor of Suicide Prevention Day, my publisher Mike O'Mary of Dream of Things is offering free Kindle copies of my memoir, Leaving the Hall Light On: A Mother's Memoir of Living with Her Son's Suicide and Surviving His Suicide. Here's what he says:
Hello Friends!
I have a couple of updates for you...
First of all, next Monday, September 10, is Worldwide Suicide Prevention Day, and on September 8, 9 & 10, Amazon will be giving away free copies of the Kindle edition of Madeline Sharples’ Leaving the Hall Light On.
Madeline’s memoir is an informative and inspiring
story about the circumstances surrounding her son’s suicide, and about how she and her family have been affected. Here’s what Fran Edstrom of the American Association of Suicidology had to say:
"Sharples tells it like it is, baring her soul to the reader. In doing so, she allows the reader to address and ponder the usually unspoken side of coping with mental illness and suicide. I recommend this book
to suicide survivors and to mental health professionals. Sharples is much more honest about what it is like to survive suicide than most patients and clients allow themselves to be.”
Also, for those of you in the Chicago area, I want to invite you to meet Madeline and Dina Kucera, author of Everything I Never Wanted to Everything I Never Wanted To Be, when they come to Chicago on September 16 to be guests on WGN’s “The Sunday Papers” with Rick Kogan. That afternoon, they will be at Open Books in the River North area of Chicago, and that evening they will be at Waterline Writers in Batavia. The Waterline Writers event will also feature Robin Metz (winner of the Rainer Maria Rilke International Poetry Award), Adrienne Novy and Frank Rutledge in a reading/discussion titled “Loss and Profit: Writing from Personal Tragedy.”
Both events are free and open to the public. For more information, click on the following links:
Sun Sept 16, 2 pm: Open Books, Chicago, IL - info on Facebook
<http://www.facebook.com/#!/events/108587342626541/>
or Eventbrite <http://newmemoirs.eventbrite.com/>
Sun Sept 16, 7 pm: Waterline Writers, Batavia, IL - info on Facebook
<http://www.facebook.com/#!/events/259069697529406/>
or at WaterlineWriters.org <http://www.waterlinewriters.org/>
If you are NOT in the Chicago area, you can see video of the Waterline Writers event at WaterlineWriters.org a few days after the event.
Thanks!
Mike O’Mary
Thanks so much, Mike, for all that you do.
The American Association of Suicidology's Recent Reviews column posted such a sensitive and insightful review of my memoir, Leaving the Hall Light On, that I have to share it verbatim.
Reviewed by: Fran Edstrom, Editor at Winona Post in Winona, MN.
At 321 pages, Madeline Sharples’ memoir, Leaving the Hall Light On, is very readable and
well-written.
Sharples is a 70-year-old married mother of two whose oldest son died of suicide
at age 27. Her memoir recounts her son’s battle with Bipolar Disorder, the effect of his illness
on the family and on his relationships with his friends.
This is not a dispassionate account of mental illness leading to suicide. Sharples makes several
references in the narrative to her forays into poetry and prose writing after her son’s death. She
had a mentor who urged her to use her “deep” voice, and she does. There is a liberal sprinkling
of her poetry throughout the book, which some readers may find enlightening.
I imagine all survivors of a loved one’s suicide, myself included, have secret guilty ideas about
why God — or the gods — has burdened them with the suicide of a loved one. Sharples puts it
into words and wonders if the fact that she began a relationship with her husband while he was
still married to his first wife put a curse on their lives, or invited retribution from the spiritual
world that she ironically does not believe in. We do not often hear or express such guilty fears
about suicide, but we know they are there.
Sharples also avoids beatifying her son, who suffered from Bipolar Disorder. Those of us who
have to live with mental illness ourselves or have family members with a mental illness know it
is not pleasant, and often leads to resentment and sometimes visceral hatred, even though we
know that the sufferer cannot help being the way (s)he is.
In this memoir, Sharples tells it like it is, baring her soul to the reader. In doing so, she allows
the reader to address and ponder the usually unspoken side of coping with mental illness and
suicide. I would recommend this book to suicide survivors, but I would also invite mental health
professionals to read it. I would be willing to bet that Madeline Sharples is much more honest
about what it is like to survive suicide than most patients and clients allow themselves to be.
It is
a book with much to offer and educates readers about life with mental illness and life after the
suicide of a loved one. This book is one that readers will be tempted to share with others who
have lost a loved one to suicide. I did.
Thank you so much, Fran, and the American Association of Suicidology.