Old age in America is not what it used to be
In 1994 New York Times writer Dudley Clendinenâs motherâa Southern matron of iron will but creaking bonesâsold her house and moved to Canterbury Tower, a geriatric apartment building with full services and a nursing wing in Tampa Bay. There she landed in a microcosm of the New Old Age. Canterbury was filled not just with old Tampa neighbors but also with strangers from across the country. Wealthy, middle class, or barely afloat; Christian, Jewish, or faithless; proud, widowed, or still married; grumpy or dearâthey had all come together, at the average age of eighty-six, in search of a last place to live and die.
A Place Called Canterbury is a beautifully written, often hilarious, deeply moving look at how the oldest Americans are living with the reality of living longer. Peopled by brave, daffy, memorable characters determined to grow old with dignityâand to help one another avoid the dreaded nursing wingâA Place Called Canterbury is a kind of soap opera. Likewise, it is a poignant chronicle of the last years of the Greatest Generation and their children, the Boomers, as they are drawn into old age with their parents. A Place Called Canterbury is an essential read for anyone with aging parents and anyone wondering what their own old age will look like.
"If you've ever had a mother, you will love this book."
âRoy Blount Jr., author of Long Time Leaving: Dispatches from Up South
âCanterburyâs walls rock with geriatrics who live every moment to its fullest, with tales of food from cloud-like biscuits before church, to snacks after sex and martinis with social debate. Through it all, the elegance and humor of a generation who laughed and loved through a depression and a great war, surviving to live and die with grace, will have you laughing and crying. You will love every morsel of the Canterbury tales.â
âNathalie Dupree, Television Cooking host and Cookbook Author
âClendinen has written a modern masterpiece. It isnât about old age. Itâs about all of us, a brilliant celebration of what it means to be a human being. I laughed and wept and was changed by reading A Place Called Canterbury. Iâm buying copies for my family, my friends, their parents, and all our children. It is a gift to be shared, this wonderful, wonderful book.â
âLinda Ellerbee
Dudley Clendinen is a former national reporter and editorial writer for The New York Times. He is the editor of a book of essays, The Prevailing South, and the author of the text for a book of photographs, Homeless in America. He is coauthor of Out for Good: The Struggle to Build a Gay Rights Movement in America.
Imprint: Viking Adult
Distributor: Penguin Group USA, Inc
Publication Date: 05-01-2008
Pages: 400
Measurements: 9.26in X 6.30in X 1.28in X 1.27lb