Laura Hayden

 

Laura spent her childhood in Brooklyn, NY, and her teens in Enfield,CT, where she went on to teach high school and freelance for regional publications. She married, raised her daughter and son through her thirties and forties, and was widowed before she turned fifty.Ten years later she began writing about this loss in a thesis that completed the requirements for an MFA in Writing at Western Connecticut State University in 2010.

Staying Alive: A Love Story

Laura B. Hayden
Signalman Publishing (2011)
ISBN 9781935991182
Reviewed by Olivera Baumgartner-Jackson for Reader Views (12/11)

Read interview with author on ReaderViews.com

Like Annie Dillard, Hayden draws on the rhythms and rituals of the natural world to explore her Brooklyn roots and New England adulthood. Wild creatures and domesticated critters, seasides and hillsides proffer comfort and understanding as she comes to realize that "no more than a hairline and no less than an eternity" separate her from the man she loved. Even with the wear and tear her faith endures, it rarely diminishes.

Her purpose "to usher her two grieving children through a difficult adolescence to a well-adjusted adulthood" resonates through her own struggle. With the precise objectivity reminiscent of Joan Didion?s The Year of Magical Thinking and Joyce Carol Oates A Widow's Story, Hayden recounts the day her husband died and the rituals and obsessions of the bereaved.

Hayden also manages to be seriously droll - in an Anne Lamott way. Never is her humor more honed than in the portrayal of her deceased spouse, whose devotion, antics, and wisdom remain ever-present to those who are staying alive without him. His death becomes not only the family's heartbreak, but the loss of a well-executed life for all who knew him or will get to know him through her memoir.

Whether Laura Hayden's writing deals with herself, her children, or her cadre of loved ones, it is clear that she, her daughter, and her son emerge from their tragic loss survivors, not victims of Larry?s death, an outcome of which he would be very pleased. In a culture of intentionally exposed and celebrated self-victimization, the story of this family may be considered a quiet triumph.