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No More Fridays - by Lesley Choyce (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- During Elliott's last year of high school, his mother dies of ALS, a neurodegenerative disease that progressively robs motor skills.
- About the Author: Lesley Choyce is the author of more than 100 books of literary fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction and young adult novels.
- 126 Pages
- Family + Relationships, Death, Grief, Bereavement
Description
About the Book
A witty, humorous and slightly magical novel about navigating the end of high school after losing a parent to ALS.
Book Synopsis
During Elliott's last year of high school, his mother dies of ALS, a neurodegenerative disease that progressively robs motor skills. Now his whole family is adrift and floundering. Elliott's only friend, the uber-intellectual and socially maladaptive Riley, tries to help but needs to set boundaries so she can deal with her own family stuff. Then, some technically impossible but inescapably real events start to change everything.
Strange things happen in your darkest moments.
No More Fridays is about a young person's struggle to cope with alienation and grief through philosophy, science, nature, and relationship. It reminds readers: a mind open enough can accept that the death of a loved one is never the end of the story.
Review Quotes
Choyce has a feeling for the young and dispossessed, for the terrible angst of adolescence and the rituals of rebellion."-- "The Globe and Mail"
Stunning originality and lyrical brilliance.-- "The Vancouver Sun"
There are few names as beloved in Atlantic Canadian literature as Lesley Choyce, a true renaissance man of the written word and a cultural icon. For decades he's been inspiring generations of readers with stories that crackle with authenticity and heart. His books have been translated into many languages, proof that East Coast storytelling knows no borders." ---James Mullinger, author of Brit Happens
About the Author
Lesley Choyce is the author of more than 100 books of literary fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction and young adult novels. He runs Pottersfield Press and has worked as editor with a wide range of Canadian authors. Choyce has been teaching English and creative writing at Dalhousie and other universities for over forty years. He has won the Dartmouth Book Award, Atlantic Poetry Prize and Ann Connor Brimer Award and has been short-listed for the Governor-General's Award. His books have been published in Danish, German, Spanish, French, Swedish and Slovenian. He was the founding member of the Canadian poetry-rock band, The SurfPoets. In 2022 he was awarded the Atlantic Legacy Award for his "lasting contribution to the development of the literary arts in Atlantic Canada." He surfs year-round in the North Atlantic.