This book literally moved me to tears on at least a few occasions.
Having lost someone as close and dear to me as the author did, I could
relate all too well to the magnitude of all encompassing seesaw of
emotions and existential questioning that follows. I enjoyed reading how
Sankovitch transformed her pain with the healing salve of her most
reliable of "saviors:" books. I can wholeheartedly identify with the
healing power of books, which has always been my most comforting of
friends during not only the best times of my life but also during
painful times, lonely times, and times of challenging transitions.
Sankovitch takes readers on a one year journey, reading one whole book
for each day of the year. As she reads, she also reflects and finds
connection that leads her to a place of gratitude, joy, and a sense of
purpose.
With that said, I highly recommend this book to
everyone (especially bibliophiles) and leave you with the following
quotes that really spoke to me:
"For years, books had offered to
me a window into how other people deal with life, its sorrows and joys
and monotonies and frustrations. I would look there again for empathy,
guidance, fellowship, and experience. Books would give me all that, and
more."
"The world shifts, and lives change. Without warning or
reason, someone who was healthy becomes sick and dies. An onslaught of
sorrow, regret, anger, and fear buries those of us left behind.
Hopelessness and helplessness follow. But then the world shifts
again--rolling on as it does--and with it, lives change again. A new day
comes, offering all kinds of possibilities. Even with the experience of
pain and sorrow set deep within me and never to be forgotten, I
recognize the potent offerings of my unknown future. I live in a weird
world, shifting and unpredictable, but also bountiful and surprising.
There is joy in acknowledging that both the weirdness and the world roll
on but even more, there is resilience."
"Words are witness to
life: they record what has happened, and they make it all real. Words
create the stories that become history and become unforgettable. Even
fiction portrays truth: good fiction IS truth. Stories about our lives
remembered bring us backward while allowing us to move forward."
"The
only balm to sorrow is memory; the only salve for the pain of losing
someone to death is acknowledging the life that existed before."
"The purpose of great literature is to reveal what is hidden and to illuminate what is in darkness."
"Sharing
a love of books and of one particular book is a good thing. But is is
also a tricky maneuver, for both sides. The giver of the book is not
exactly ripping open her soul for a free look, but when she hands over
the book with the comment that it is one of her favorites, such an
admission is very close to the baring of the soul. We are what we love
to read, and when we admit to loving a book, we admit that the book
represents some aspect of ourselves truly, whether it is that we are
suckers for romance or pining for adventure or secretly fascinated by
crime."
"In reading about experiences both light and dark, I would find the wisdom to get through my own dark times."
"Maybe that is what love is: the taming of desire into something solid and sustainable."
"We
all face mysteries--'Why did that have to happen?'--that we will never
be able to understand. But we can, and we do, find order somewhere,
whether it be in our books, our friends, our family, or our faith. Order
is defined by how we live our lives. Order is created by how we respond
to what life dishes out to us. Order is found in accepting that not all
questions can be answered."

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