Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Shelved: A Memoir of Aging in America
Shelved: A Memoir of Aging in America | Sue Petrovski
2 posts
Sue Petrovski has always been capable, thoughtful, and productive. After retiring from a long and successful career in education, she published two books, ran an antiques business, and volunteered in her community. When her mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and until her death eight years later, Petrovski served as her primary caregiver. She even cared for her husband when he also succumbed to dementia. However, when Petrovski's husband fell ill with sepsis at the age of 82, it threw everything into question. Would he survive? And if so, would she be able to care for him and manage the family home where they had lived for 47 years? More importantly, how long would she be able to do so? After making the decision to sell their house and move into a senior living community, Petrovski found herself thrust into the corporate care model of elder services available in the United States. In Shelved: A Memoir of Aging in America, she reflects on the move and the benefits and deficits of American for-profit elder care. Petrovski draws on extensive research that demonstrates the cultural value of our elders and their potential for leading vital, creative lives, especially when given opportunities to do so, offering a cogent, well-informed critique of elder care options in this country. Shelved provides readers with a personal account of what it is like to leave a family home and enter a new world where everyone is old and where decisions like where to sit in the dining room fall to low-level corporate managers. Showcasing the benefits of communal living as well as the frustrations of having decisions about meals, public spaces, and governance driven by the bottom line, Petrovski delivers compelling suggestions for the transformation of an elder care system that more often than not condescends to older adults into one that puts people first--a change that would benefit us all, whether we are 40, 60, 80, or beyond.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
blurb
jpmcwisemorgan
post image

#cockygate appears to be the gift that keeps on giving. There‘s now a bot on Twitter that scans trademark fillings. I think this is how #rebelliongate was found. I‘m not even gonna try to keep up with that one.

blurb
jpmcwisemorgan

A final (maybe) #cockygate update. Books are being restored as this is litigated/reconsidered. As for reviews with the word cocky in them - as far as I can tell it was with one author and it may not be at all related. And it might not have been Amazon/Goodreads but the person who left the review. I know I‘ve updated a Goodreads review so I‘m guessing I could delete it too. So I‘d take that with a grain of salt.

Richryan52 I fail to understand how she was granted a trademark for a word. Her series is Cocker Brothers not Cocky Brothers. Someone should be taken to task for this. 7y
jpmcwisemorgan @Richryan52 Based on my limited understanding we‘re taking about a federal office that is understaffed and overworked, and there‘s a tendency to grant things and let the courts sort it out. It‘s the best system, as we‘re seeing, but this is what happens when you don‘t provide resources. (edited) 7y
Richryan52 That I can understand and believe. Why can‘t we just get it right the first time? Thanks for the clarification 7y
See All 6 Comments
Richryan52 Are you a reviewer at all? 7y
jpmcwisemorgan @Richryan52 Book reviewer? I‘m terrible at reviews! I do it on occasion if I‘m moved to and if I‘m given an ARC. 7y
tpixie @Richryan52 exactly cocky is not the same as cocker. And cocky is way to general 7y
32 likes6 comments