Calumet Editions

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The High Cost of Flowers

The hardest part of living was watching Katherine die.

Rachel Kemper Kelsey, a psychologist, gets a late call: her parents’ crisis has exploded. Her controlling mother, Katherine, estranged from Rachel for years, is declared a vulnerable adult and removed from home as dementia advances. Rachel’s father, Art, turns to her, while her alcoholic, narcissistic siblings fight to bring Katherine back. As Art rebuilds a bond Katherine once forbade, the family fractures toward tragic consequences. The High Cost of Flowers is a sharp, recognizable portrait of suburban, multigenerational confrontation and loss.

A study of a family adrift, anchored only to itself by the individual memories of a shared past.

—Charles Locks, author of Greater Trouble in the Lesser Antilles

Description

Rachel Kemper Kelsey was fourth on her parents’ emergency contact list so an evening phone call from their physician signals a major calamity. Her mother Katherine, who rigidly controls family communications, has avoided contact with her older daughter for years.

As the family crisis deepens, Katherine is declared a vulnerable adult and removed from the home. Rachel’s father, Art, increasingly leans on Rachel to make the transition work. But Rachel’s brother and sister, two alcoholic narcissists, fight to bring their mother home.

Rachel, a psychologist and author of self-help books for families, has the respect of her father and the medical community, but is resented by her mother and siblings. As Katherine slowly slides into dementia and failing health, Art renews his relationship with the daughter his tyrannical wife had banished from their home years ago, causing a family rift with tragic consequences.

With characters as rich as those in stories by Anita Shreve, Pat Conroy or Sue Miller, The High Cost of Flowers is an American story as classic as suburbs, working parents, and multi-generational confrontation. The characters are people who readers will recognize in their neighborhoods, their kids’ schools and their own families. The hardest part of living is watching Katherine die.

Product Details

PublishedDecember 27, 2022
ImprintCalumet Editions
LanguageEnglish
Print length310
ISBN-13978-1959770763
Dimensions6 x 0.7 x 9 inches

The author realistically portrays what happens when a family crisis strikes and how the world you have known before, even if imperfect, is gone forever and those you love are changed forever. I enjoyed sharing this journey with the family, even when the emotions were painful and was sorry to say goodbye to the Klempers when the story ended.

—Michele, verified review on Amazon

Cynthia Kraack gives an insiders look of family abuse paired with dementia. Art and Katherine have been married five decades. On the outside, they are a picture-perfect couple who have raised three wonderful children. But after her stroke, Katherine’s health grows progressively worse and with the family coming together to choose the best health plan for their mother, old skeletons come out of their closets.

—Cynthia, verified review on Amazon

A brilliant look at the hidden depths of people that aren’t often observed until life throws them a challenge. Dementia is a difficult issue and can compound even the healthiest of family dynamics. This author does a masterful job of helping us to understand the complex and not always pleasant issues that arise in families in times of such challenge. It took me back to my own family’s struggle when my stepmom was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

—L. Johnson, verified review on Amazon

The characters are carefully drawn and believable, so it’s easy to get caught up in their lives on the page. Even when I wasn’t reading, I found myself wondering about them. Although readers may think they know where a story about dementia is headed, they will discover that it is never so simple. The story is realistic, but nuanced, and its power resides in the truths it reveals about family dynamics.

—Ellen S., verified review on Amazon

This book totally captivated me. Several of the characters strongly resembled people in my own family. The author not only captured the tensions, emotions and concerns of the family members watching the family matriarch, Katherine, slowly succumb to the disease, but she also described how the grip of Alzheimer’s was experienced from Katherine’s vantage point.

—Johanna M., verified review on Amazon

An extremely well told tale, beautifully written. Is there redemption for the collective soul of a family? A dysfunctional family that is dying a slow death over decades, gives us their poignant, individual (bit by painful bit) accounts of life with and without the mother each knew.

—MaryDon E Beeson on Amazon