When my experience defies conventional thought, I write a book…
Well, as yet there are no online reviews of To Sam, With Love. It’s too early. The book just became available.
But I’ve received one opinion of particular interest, from an acquaintance in California who lost her spouse just two weeks before reading my book. She said she loved it!
I admit that an acquaintance “loving it” isn’t exactly a thorough critique, nor a wholly objective one. But this friend is a woman who knew her husband since they were thirteen years old. Neither one had dated more than one or two other people before marrying each other. They’d been an item for 60 some-odd years! And they were one of those couples who did almost everything together, having jointly run more than one business and having even shared most of their leisure pursuits. Proverbially speaking, Patty and Ernie were “joined at the hip.” So, perhaps I can be forgiven for deriving some encouragement from Patty’s admittedly brief assessment.
So, at this point reviews from strangers are nonexistent, and those from grieving surviving spouses who are friends and acquaintances are few and far between. But I’ve noticed something significant that I hadn’t expected.
As I am in my mid-60s, lately I have encountered a fair number of people who have recently lost their spouses, and several others who expect to suffer such a loss in the near future due to terminal illness. When I have mentioned my inspired optimism after losing Sam, and my having written a book about it, it has never failed to pique the interest of the survivor or survivor-to-be.
In every case, the person’s reaction was something like, “I must read this book! Is it available yet? How can I order a copy?”
I acknowledge there is a big difference between sparking surviving spouses’ interest in a book and having that book succeed in providing the foundation for more positive and optimistic grieving. Still, To Sam, With Love merely expands upon the topics that aroused the person’s curiosity in the first place. The subject matter I described spoke to them. So, I can’t help believing I may be onto something.
Although it would be unrealistic for any author to hope for no negative reviews whatsoever, I think there is a reasonable chance my book will achieve its goal. That is, the goal of helping other surviving spouses to grieve with optimism and an openness to opportunities for a happy and meaningful future. What a blessing it would be!