Operating instructions

a journal of my son's first year

1st ed.
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Operating instructions

a journal of my son's first year

1st ed.
  • 3.0 (1 rating)
  • 6 Want to read
  • 3 Have read

"I woke up with a start at 4:00 one morning and realized that I was very, very pregnant." So begins novelist Aniie Lamott's journal of the birth of her son, Sam, and their first year together. She must face complicated circumstances of heroic proportions. A single mother who must support herself and her son entirely by her wit and craft, she is also a recovering alcoholic, clean and sober for more than three years. Newly and militantly on her own side, she remains dangerously close to memories of days when she "couldn't take decent care of cats." Fortunately, Lamott is one of the world's funniest people. And she desperately needs her sense of humor as she chronicles her new life with Sam. Plagued by the normal worries of all first-time mothers, she adds her concern that she is "much too self-centered, cynical, and edgy to raise a baby." One false step will turn her sweet, big-eyed boy into an ax murderer.^

And no matter how well she handles things Sam will still have to get through the seventh grade. Even in exhaustion and despair, she is buoyed up by her deepening religious faith and her somewhat eccentric extended fimily, friends who offer her great love and loyalty and are much-needed replacements for Sam's absent father. But this year of new beginnings suddenly includes the beginning of an end. Lamott's best friend since childhood, her birth coach and a daily companion to her and Sam, is diagnosed as having terminal cancer. As Lamott copes with the vexations of single motherhood, she must also accept this unimaginable loss. Facing both joy and grief greater than any she has ever known, she must find within herself the capacity to continue.^

Her courageous commentary, narrating days barely balanced between angst and strength, fills this journal of a year when "sometimes it feels like God has reached down and touched me, blessed me a thousand times over, and sometimes it al.] feels like a mean joke, like God's advisers are Muammar Qaddafi and Phyllis Schlafly." With hope and humor, she wrenches from the mundane rock-solid evidence of the power of love and the resilience of the human spirit. Her complex vision, inspired by joy, makes us laugh out loud.

Publish Date
Publisher
Pantheon Books
Language
English
Pages
251

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Operating instructions
Operating instructions: a journal of my son's first year
2005, Anchor Books
in English - 1st Anchor Books ed.
Cover of: Operating Instructions
Operating Instructions
April 21, 1997, Random House Value Publishing
Hardcover in English
Cover of: Operating Instructions
Operating Instructions: A Journal of My Son's First Year
April 12, 1994, Ballantine Books
in English
Cover of: Operating instructions
Operating instructions: a journal of my son's first year
1994, Fawcett Columbine
- 1st Ballantine Books ed.
Cover of: Operating instructions
Operating instructions: a journal of my son's first year
1993, Pantheon Books
in English - 1st ed.

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
813/.54
Library of Congress
PS3562.A4645 O64 1993, PS3562.A4645 S26 1993

The Physical Object

Pagination
x, 251 p. ;
Number of pages
251

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL1726461M
ISBN 10
0679420916
LCCN
92030540
OCLC/WorldCat
26635682
LibraryThing
35866
Goodreads
915996

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL489423W

Work Description

It seems no mother of a newborn has ever been more hilarious, more honest, or more touching than Anne Lamott is in Operating Instructions. A single parent whose baby's father is out of the picture, Lamott struggles not only to support her little family by her wits and her writing but to stay sober at the same time. Faith in God helps; so does her loyal band of helpers, from her childless best friend Pammy to her mother and "Aunt Dudu" to the folks at the La Leche League hotline. And between colic, wheat-free diets, and the triumph of solid food, Lamott learns that blessings and losses come together, and that as our capacity for joy increases, so does our capacity for grief.

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April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record