Used Kayaks For Sale
Two and a half years after the death of his daughter, Amy, author and
essayist Rosenblatt still found himself lost in grief and anger. He took
to his kayak in search of peace and found a way to ponder grief, if not
lose it. Rosenblatt is poetic in remembrances from his career and
personal life—many of Amy as child, as wife, as mother, as healer. He
offers small observations on life and waterways and the careful
navigation of both. The quiet moments on Penniman’s Creek lend
themselves to recollections of literary allusions, as do the more
perilous or spectacular adventures on water in Rwanda, Latvia,
Galápagos, and Wyoming. Mostly, he struggles with his anger and longing
for Amy as he copes with grief, admitting that writing Making Toast
(2010) offered only temporary relief. Skeptical of the solace others
offer in beliefs in the afterlife, he finds solace instead in quiet
mornings alone in the kayak, drifting in the creek and coming to terms
with the fact that Amy lives in his love of her. A beautiful
contemplation on love and grief. --Vanessa Bush
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