Lillian Marshall lives in a small town in Michigan.
She makes and keeps lists, lists of everything imaginable, lists not to help
her remember but to help her husband Jerry remember. Perhaps the most important
list is the one she’s worked on the hardest and longest, the one she keeps
adding to and subtracting from.
It’s the list of women she thinks Jerry could marry.
Lillian is dying of cancer.
The surprise in Lillian’s
List by Bradley Salters is that she dies fairly early in the novel, and
the story of Lillian’s List becomes
the story of Jerry and the women on the list.
After Lillian’s death, Jerry manages. He doesn’t
read the list. He doesn’t even know that’s what’s in the envelope. But he
manages. Barely. He and Lillian loved each other with an almost ferocious passion.
He goes to dinner every Friday night with his daughter Jenny and her family, to
help fill the void left by Lillian’s death.
Then Jerry begins to drink, and his life spirals out
of control.
Lillian’s
List
is a story of love, relationships, family, and what happens when the person at
the center is torn out of the family fabric. It’s a story that makes you laugh
with the recognition of the crazy things that families do and brings tears to
see the devastation brought by loss. It is not so much a story of redemption as
it is a story of endurance and overcoming.
And it’s helped along by a relatively short list.
Photograph
by Hussein Afzal via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
2 comments:
I thought at first this was going to be nonfiction. I've heard of this happening in real life.
now this book is on my list...
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