Saturday, May 10, 2008
Books I Like

Pat Gaudette

While the majority of books that are sent to me to review deal with relationship issues, I also enjoy fiction and non-fiction books on a wide range of topics.

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The Oldest We’ve Ever Been

The Oldest We've Ever BeenThe Oldest We’ve Ever Been: Seven True Stories of Midlife Transitions contains essays gathered by Maud Lavin, from people of varied backgrounds, both men and women, who have made it to midlife. The writers, Allan deSouza, Calvin Forbes, William Davies King, Kim Larsen, Ellen McMahon, Peggy Shinner, and Maud Lavin together with Locke Bowman, not only talk about that part of their life but also things that have affected them as they’ve grown to middle age.

Excerpt from “Nothing Gained” by William Davies King:

I’ve read accounts of those people who one day just give away everything, purging themselves of material association. They report feeling liberated. It’s a Buddhist or Gnostic or Henry David Thoreau experience. I suppose the moment of my divorce might have been a good moment for me to do something like that. As I started into the garage, I did not like what I saw. During the twenty years in which I had lived with my wife, two decades of steady accumulation, I had found ways of inserting my collections carefully into the assemblage of our life together, mostly concealed. Removed to the garage, however, arranged in heaps, not carelessly but also not artfully, the things could be seen as symptoms of hoarding, which is a diagnosis, not a hobby. On that hot summer day, I took a moment to ask myself if my collecting could be a disease. Or could it be an art? I could not say, so I laboriously conveyed the cumbersummation of me to a new residence. It seems I had to keep the array in order to catch myself somewhere on the web.

How To Survive Your Husband’s Midlife Crisis

In 2003, Perigee, a division of Penguin/Putnam, published How to Survive Your Husband’s Midlife Crisis: Strategies and Stories from the Midlife Wives Club. Gay Courter and I wrote the book. To date, the book has been translated into Chinese and Polish.

The Irritable Male Syndrome

Jed Diamond is one of the leading authorities on male midlife crisis. His books have helped countless men and women deal with an issue that, until it happens to you or someone you love, seems like a weak plot for a comedy. There is nothing humorous about male midlife crisis as too many families find out when it happens to someone they love. Read more… »

Boomers’ Guide to Online Dating

In today’s world of online dating, it’s nice to have a resource that cuts through the mystery of dating for those people who thought they would never have to worry about looking for love once they’d met and married their once true love. Unfortunely true love seems to have shorter expiration dates in today’s world and for the man or woman who is looking for love at middle age, it can be daunting. I think this book by Judsen Culbreth is a good starting point to help take a lot of the mystery out of using the Web as a resource to find true love. Read more… »

The Breaking Point

There have been books written about female midlife crisis but few of them have caused the stir or the media attention that The Breaking Point by Sue Shellenberger has generated. Perhaps much of the reason for this book being so popular is that so many middle-aged women are making decisions that women of previous generations were reluctant to make. Read more… »