A Bittersweet Season, Jane Gross
A Bittersweet Season, Jane Gross
List: $22.99 | Sale: $16.09
Club: $11.49

A Bittersweet Season
Caring for Our Aging Parents---And Ourselves

Author: Jane Gross

Narrator: Kate Reading

Unabridged: 15 hr 35 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 04/26/2011


Synopsis

In telling the intimate story of caring for her aged and ailing mother, Jane Gross offers indispensable, and often surprising, advice for the rapidly increasing number of adult children responsible for aging parents.

Gross deftly weaves the specifics of her personal experience—a widowed mother with mounting health problems, the attendant collision of fear and ignorance, the awkward role reversal of parent and child, unresolved family relationships with her mother and brother, the conflict between her day job and caregiving—with a comprehensive resource for effectively managing the lives of one's own parents while keeping sanity and strength intact.

Packed with information, A Bittersweet Season explains which questions to ask when looking for a nursing home or assisted living facility; how to unravel the mysteries of Medicare and Medicaid; why finding a new general practitioner should always be the first move when relocating an elderly parent; how to weigh quality against quantity of life when considering medical interventions; why you should always keep a phone charger and an extra pair of glasses in your car; and much more. It also provides astute commentary on a national health care system that has stranded two generations to fend for themselves at this most difficult of times.

No less important are the lessons of the human spirit that Gross learned in the last years of her mother's life, and afterward, when writing for the New York Times and The New Old Age, a blog she launched for the newspaper. Calling upon firsthand experience and extensive reporting, Gross recounts a story of grace and compassion in the midst of a crisis that shows us how the end of one life presents a bittersweet opportunity to heal old wounds and find out what we are made of.

Wise, unflinching, and ever helpful, A Bittersweet Season is an essential guide for anyone navigating this unfamiliar, psychologically demanding, powerfully emotional, and often redemptive territory.

About Jane Gross

Jane Gross was a reporter for Sports Illustrated and Newsday before joining the New York Times in 1978. Her twenty-nine-year tenure there included national assignments as well as coverage of aging. In 2008, she launched a blog for the New York Times called The New Old Age, to which she still contributes. Jane has taught journalism at the University of California-Berkeley and Columbia University and was the recipient of a John S. Knight Fellowship. She lives in Westchester County, New York.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jill on May 06, 2011

The worst nightmare of most adult children is that their parents will die a lingering death, suffering a drawn-out and humiliating series of losses and depleting all financial reserves. Yet somehow, we think, “It won’t happen to OUR family.” Wrong! In Jane Gross’s important new book, she reveals that......more

Goodreads review by Karen on August 05, 2011

I heard the author of this book, Jane Gross, on the American Public Radio show "Being" and realized she had gone through what I am going through now. My mother is 90 and living in an assisted living facility. She is in a wheelchair, but reasonably cognizant. Certainly not on death's door, but one ha......more

Goodreads review by Ann on August 01, 2011

I heard Jane Gross on NPR, and she has a blog on old age ("The New Old Age") on the New York Times web site. This book is about the complexities of caring for aging parents. She explains why "aging in place," everyone's ideal situation, isn't possible for very many; how many of the very old (85 plus......more

Goodreads review by Deborah on June 27, 2011

About a third of the way into 'A Bittersweet Season: Caring for Our Aging Parents--and Ourselves,' Jane Gross recalls a conversation with Dr. Rosanne Leipzig, a geriatrician at Mount Sinai Medical Center, that ended with her "crying in regret for all the now-obvious things I could have done differen......more

Goodreads review by Sarah on November 27, 2024

I listened to this as not a middle-aged child of an elderly parent, but as a 27 year old grandchild of a near 90-year-old grandmother. I don't have the resources Jane and her brother had, but I empathize with her experience. The section about Medicare was a little overwhelming, but it was interestin......more