
A Place Called Canterbury: Tales of the New Old Age in America
Dudley Clendinen$20.40
$24.00
An "affectionate, touchingly empathetic" (Janet Maslin, The New York Times) look at old age in America today Welcome to Canterbury Tower, an apartment building in Florida, where the residents are busy with friendships, love, sex, money, and gossip-and the average age is eightysix. Journalist Dudley Clendinen's mother moved to Canterbury in 1994, planning-like most the inhabitants-to spend her final years there. But life was not over yet for the feisty southern matron. There, she and her eccentric new friends lived out a soap opera of dignity, nerve, and humor otherwise known as the New Old Age. A Place Called Canterbury is both a journalist's account of the last years of the Greatest Generation and a son's rueful memoir of his mother. Entertaining and unsparing, it is essential reading for anyone with aging parents, and those wondering what their own old age might look like.
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Books
Published: 06/01/2009
ISBN: 9780143115304
Pages: 400
Weight: 0.74lbs
Size: 8.38h x 5.48w x 0.88d
Review Citations: New York Times Book Review 08/16/2009 pg. 20
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Books
Published: 06/01/2009
ISBN: 9780143115304
Pages: 400
Weight: 0.74lbs
Size: 8.38h x 5.48w x 0.88d
Review Citations: New York Times Book Review 08/16/2009 pg. 20
