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This moving memoir documents a marriage of more than forty years between two gifted people, a long term marriage that was: "full of wonderful things, terrible things, joyous things, grievous things, but ours."
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4 primary booksCrosswicks Journals is a 4-book series with 4 primary works first released in 1971 with contributions by Madeleine L'Engle.
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I love, love, love Wrinkle. But that's it for me when it comes to L'Engle.
Short Review: I started this series looking for wisdom and assurance about life. Somewhat similar to what I have felt from reading Eugene Peterson's memoir the Pastor. I found that and much more. I started the first of this four part memoir in the spring. It has been just over six months and I have read seven books by L'Engle in that time.
This one is about her marriage as you can tell from the title. I think it is probably important to know going in that it is about her husband's death. It is a remembrance and dealing with grief. Marriage, when not interrupted through divorce, is ultimately interrupted by death. That is the normal way of life.
There is a great deal of love shown here. But also a lot of the importance of the ordinary. Her focus on always staying up for when Hugh came back from acting. (To the point when the kids were relatively young, 6 to 10, they got themselves to school because she couldn't both get up with them and stay up to be with Hugh after the theater.)
I do with there was another memoir about her life after. She lived another decade.
My slightly different but not much longer review is on my blog at http://bookwi.se/two-part-invention/