I Will Do Better
A Father's Memoir of Heartbreak, Parenting, and Love
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4.0 • 4 Ratings
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
By turns comical and heartbreaking, I Will Do Better is the remarkable journey of two defiant and wounded people, and their personal growth in the name of love.
Named one of the Best Books of the Year by The New Yorker and Kirkus Reviews
Named one of the Best Books of the Fall by Oprah Daily and People
"A uniquely forthright and powerful addition to the literature of fatherhood.” (Kirkus)
The novelist Charles Bock was a reluctant parent, tagging along for the ride of fatherhood, obsessed primarily with his dream of a writing career.
But when his daughter Lily was six months old, his wife, Diana, was diagnosed with a complex form of leukemia. Two and half years later, when all treatments and therapies had been exhausted, Bock found himself a widower—devastated, drowning in medical bills, and saddled with a daunting responsibility. He had to nurture Lily, and, somehow, maybe even heal himself.
I Will Do Better is Charles’s pull-no-punches account of what happened next. Playdates, music classes, temper tantrums, oh-so-cool babysitters, first days at school, family reunions, single-parent dating, and a citywide crippling natural disaster—were minefields especially treacherous for Charles and Lily because of their preexisting vulnerability: their grief.
Charles sought help from friends, family, and therapists, but this overgrown, middle-aged boy-man and his plucky child became, foremost, a duo—they found their way together.
This frank and tender memoir of parenting his infant daughter in the wake of of his wife's untimely death is "bracingly honest [and] tender," commented Publshers Weekly. "Single parents will find much to identify with in this warts-and-all account.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Novelist Bock (Alice & Oliver) offers an unvarnished account of raising his daughter, Lily, after his wife, Diana, died of leukemia. Days before Lily's third birthday party, a very ill Diana died, confusing Lily and making Bock, then 42, panic about the future. Overcome by grief, with "no full-time job, no investments, no retirement account, barely a pot to piss in," he considered sending Lily to live with Diana's family in Tennessee but decided against it, choosing instead to tackle childcare, preschool, and Lily's tempestuous emotions by himself. With dry humor, Bock recounts the pitfalls ("The male's capacity to feel sorry for himself is bottomless"), including his failed attempts to ignite new romances and an accident in which he broke his elbow when Lily was a toddler. He's bracingly honest about his flaws, sharing his therapist's observation that he "spent a considerable amount of adult history avoiding responsibility," but the self-incrimination is offset with tender recollections of his and Diana's courtship and his palpable love for Lily, who, by 13, is "radioactive hell on wheels... in the best way." Single parents will find much to identify with in this warts-and-all account.