Publication

2005 - Shoemaker & Hoard, Washington, D.C, District of Columbia

Language

English

Word Count

68,750 words, Guess

Page Count

275 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • Goodreads427061
  • LibraryThing1471618

Classifications

  • DDC306.872/09743
  • LCCCT275.W32225 A3 2005

Description

"In 1971 Laura and Guy Waterman decided to give up all the conveniences of life and homestead - living on the land, for the land - in a cabin in the mountains of Vermont. For Nearly three decades they created a deliberate life, eating food they grew themselves, using no running water or electricity. It was an extreme that most of us can only imagine sustaining for a week or two." "The end of their marriage came on a frigid day, February 6, 2000, when Guy climbed to the summit of Mount Lafayette in New Hampshire's White Mountains and sat down among the rocks to die. Losing the Garden is the memoir of a woman who was compelled to ask herself "How could I support my husband's plan to commit suicide?" It is an intimate examination of intricate and dark family histories and a marriage that tried to transcend them." "In Losing the Garden, Laura Waterman comes to terms with her husband's long depression and the complex nature of a gifted, humorous man who was driven by obsession, self-absorption, and a strange lack of confidence. Her account of her own marriage, seen as idyllic but riddled from within, is nonetheless a love story, a portrait of an intense and unusual marriage, and an affirmation of life after loss."--Jacket.

First Sentence

THE MORNING Guy leaves would seem like any ordinary winter morning to someone looking in the window of our small cabin in the clearing.

Subjects

Topics

MarriageBiographyOutdoor lifeMountaineersSuicide victimsVermont, biographyVermont -- Biography.

People

Guy WatermanLaura Waterman

Genres

  • Biography.

Other Editions

  • Losing the garden: the story of a marriageShoemaker & Hoard2005-01-01

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