Susan Moon is a writer and longtime Zen Buddhist who teaches popular writing workshops, mostly in California. She is the former editor of Turning Wheel- The Journal of Socially Engaged Buddhism. She lives in Berkeley, California.
“Moon is like a Buddhist Anne Lamott—confronting her life bravely
and unapologetically. Reading as a man in his mid-sixties, [I]
welcomed her honest ambivalence about aging. Her style is
conversational yet often beautifully vivid and clear.”
—New York Journal of Books
“A funny, honest, and deeply personal book. This collection
of confessional essays makes for absorbing reading.”
—Mandala
“Refreshingly honest and enlightening. In this sterling collection
of essays, Susan Moon looks at the rewards, blessings, drawbacks,
and challenges of aging. We are so grateful that Moon has
written this insightful book in which she passes on what all this
has meant to her.”
—Spirituality & Practice
“Gentle essays . . . long on dignity. Moon uses detail
vividly in her determination to make peace with the many failures
of brain and body (from forgetting her Social Security number to
wondering if she’ll ever have sex again). Her best writing occurs
when memory, emotion, and spirit coalesce as she recovers parts of
herself left behind in childhood or comes to terms with
solitude.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Aging is the biggest issue facing me and everyone I know. This
book is poignant, funny, and spot-on, and I am tremendously
grateful to Susan Moon for writing it. I love this book!”
—Sylvia Boorstein, author of Happiness Is an Inside Job
“This Is Getting Old is a sweet, mellow, funny, wise, sad, and
deeply affecting book. Susan Moon's essays are so disarmingly
honest, so personal and plain, that they will make you forget what
an astonishingly rare and profound achievement this is.”
—Norman Fischer, author of Sailing Home and Taking Our Places
“[Moon] does not shy away from any aspect of aging, from sore knees
to foggy memory, but also maintains a sassy sense of humor. Perhaps
if more people were as open about aging as Moon is, we shouldn’t
all be so uncomfortable with the idea. This is a great read for
anyone pondering the future.”
—Sacramento Book Review
Ask a Question About this Product More... |