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Between two kingdoms : a memoir of a life interrupted  Cover Image Book Book

Between two kingdoms : a memoir of a life interrupted

Jaouad, Suleika (author.).

Summary: "An Emmy Award-winning writer and activist describes the harrowing years she spent in early adulthood fighting leukemia and how she learned to live again while forging connections with other survivors of profound illness and suffering."--Provided by the publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780399588587
  • ISBN: 0399588582
  • Physical Description: print
    regular print
    x, 348 pages : map ; 24 cm
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York, New York : Random House, 2021
Subject: Jaouad, Suleika
Leukemia -- Patients -- United States -- Biography
Genre: Autobiographies.

Available copies

  • 11 of 15 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 3 of 5 copies available at Sechelt/Gibsons. (Show)
  • 3 of 5 copies available at Gibsons Public Library.

Holds

  • 3 current holds with 15 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Gibsons Public Library 616.99 JAOU (Text) 30886001087721 Adult Nonfiction Volume hold Checked out 2024-04-24
Gibsons Public Library BOOK CLUB JAOU (Text) 30886000817102 Book Club Sets Volume hold On holds shelf -
Gibsons Public Library BOOK CLUB JAOU (Text) 30886000817110 Book Club Sets Available -
Gibsons Public Library BOOK CLUB JAOU (Text) 30886000817128 Book Club Sets Available -
Gibsons Public Library BOOK CLUB JAOU (Text) 30886000817136 Book Club Sets Available -

  • Baker & Taylor
    An Emmy Award-winning writer and activist describes the harrowing years she spent in early adulthood fighting leukemia and how she learned to live again while forging connections with other survivors of profound illness and suffering. Maps.
  • Baker & Taylor
    An Emmy Award-winning writer and activist describes the harrowing years she spent in early adulthood fighting leukemia and how she learned to live again while forging connections with other survivors of profound illness and suffering.
  • Random House, Inc.
    NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • A deeply moving memoir of illness and recovery that traces one young woman’s journey from diagnosis to remission to re-entry into “normal” life—from the founder of The Isolation Journals and a subject of the Netflix documentary American Symphony

    ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: The New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, The Rumpus, She Reads, Library Journal, Booklist

    “I was immersed for the whole ride and would follow Jaouad anywhere. . . . Her writing restores the moon, lights the way as we learn to endure the unknown.”—Chanel Miller, The New York Times Book Review

     
    “Beautifully crafted . . . affecting . . . a transformative read . . . Jaouad’s insights about the self, connectedness, uncertainty and time speak to all of us.”—The Washington Post

    In the summer after graduating from college, Suleika Jaouad was preparing, as they say in commencement speeches, to enter “the real world.” She had fallen in love and moved to Paris to pursue her dream of becoming a war correspondent. The real world she found, however, would take her into a very different kind of conflict zone.

    It started with an itch—first on her feet, then up her legs, like a thousand invisible mosquito bites. Next came the exhaustion, and the six-hour naps that only deepened her fatigue. Then a trip to the doctor and, a few weeks shy of her twenty-third birthday, a diagnosis: leukemia, with a 35 percent chance of survival. Just like that, the life she had imagined for herself had gone up in flames. By the time Jaouad flew home to New York, she had lost her job, her apartment, and her independence. She would spend much of the next four years in a hospital bed, fighting for her life and chronicling the saga in a column for The New York Times.

    When Jaouad finally walked out of the cancer ward—after countless rounds of chemo, a clinical trial, and a bone marrow transplant—she was, according to the doctors, cured. But as she would soon learn, a cure is not where the work of healing ends; it’s where it begins. She had spent the past 1,500 days in desperate pursuit of one goal—to survive. And now that she’d done so, she realized that she had no idea how to live.

    How would she reenter the world and live again? How could she reclaim what had been lost? Jaouad embarked—with her new best friend, Oscar, a scruffy terrier mutt—on a 100-day, 15,000-mile road trip across the country. She set out to meet some of the strangers who had written to her during her years in the hospital: a teenage girl in Florida also recovering from cancer; a teacher in California grieving the death of her son; a death-row inmate in Texas who’d spent his own years confined to a room. What she learned on this trip is that the divide between sick and well is porous, that the vast majority of us will travel back and forth between these realms throughout our lives. Between Two Kingdoms is a profound chronicle of survivorship and a fierce, tender, and inspiring exploration of what it means to begin again.
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