Losing Tim: A Memoir
Book Details
Description
Losing Tim is a memoir by a mother about a soldier son who killed himself. It's not an easy read. But it's a beautiful one. Burroway, a National Book Award nominee, welcomes readers to grieve along with her, while also providing a lens into how soldiers, and military contractors, like her son, are changed by their combat experiences. Jonathan Shay, author of Achilles in Vietnam: Combat Trauma and the Undoing of Character, a highly acclaimed volume on PTSD, and a 2007 MacArthur Foundation Fellow, comments in the foreword, ''To me, the pain recalls Homer's Iliad, in which, as James Tatum puts it in The Mourner's Song, 'the beauty [of the poetry] is in the killing.'''
Praise for Losing Tim:
''This book is both an elegy and a call to action by one of our finest writers, who addresses us from the deepest place imaginable in a voice that is loving, memorable and overflowing with generosity.''
--Madeleine Blais, Pulitzer Prize winner, author of The Heart is an Instrument: Portraits in Journalism
''This book brings a piercing clarity to what it means to lose, to grieve, to give everything, and to love.''
--Marya Hornbacher, Pulitzer Prize nominee, author of Madness: A Bipolar Life
''I cannot express my gratitude to Ms. Burroway for writing this soul-searching book, a comfort to no one yet a blessing for all.''
--Bob Shacochis, National Book Award winner, author of The Woman Who Lost Her Soul










