Without her A chronicle of grief and love

Rebecca Spiegel

Book - 2024

"Rebecca Spiegel is working as a teacher in New Orleans when she learns of her sister's suicide. Only after the funeral does shock give way to grief--and to many questions. How could Emily do this to herself? How could she have abandoned all those who loved her? And what could have been done differently to prevent this devastating loss? In the days and weeks that follow, Spiegel embarks on a search for answers. She unpacks family history, documents the last traces of her sister's life, and questions what more she could have done to prevent her death. What she finds instead is that there is no narrative on the other side of grief like this. There is no answer, no easy resolution--only those that leave and those that keep livin...g. Unflinchingly honest, visceral, and raw, this courageous elegy lays bare the hard realities of surviving the loss of a loved one"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Personal narratives
Published
[Minneapolis, Minnesota] : Milkweed Editions 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Rebecca Spiegel (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
246 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781571311962
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Spiegel is teaching in New Orleans when her reality shatters: her sister kills herself, her body found in a car on campus. Shellshocked, Spiegel breaks the news of Emily's death to her family and flies home to Philadelphia. It is not until the funeral that she succumbs to her grief. In free-flowing, almost dreamlike prose, Spiegel attempts to piece together a portrait of her sister. She visits Emily's dorm room and reads her journals and emails and includes several of those entries in the book. She replays their last days together in New Orleans. She traces their family's long, complicated history with depression, eating disorders, and other mental illnesses. She combs through each memory, lingering on possible signs of what was to come. Without Her is an untethered exploration of sorrow, including its consequences. Entangled in her mourning, Spiegel breaks up with her boyfriend and confronts a fraying relationship with her parents. And as she tries to shed light on her sister's suicide, she hopes to also find a path forward for herself.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Spiegel debuts with a staggering account of the aftershocks from her younger sister's suicide. While teaching in New Orleans in her early 20s, Spiegel received a phone call informing her that her 21-year-old sister, Emily, had been found dead in her car on her Colorado college campus. Spiegel immediately returned home to Philadelphia, where she was thrust into funeral preparations. Shaken, Spiegel rekindled a relationship with an ex-boyfriend; after the pair took a months-long international vacation, she broke up with him and applied to creative writing MFA programs, where she began work on a memoir about Emily's death. With remarkable force and precision, Spiegel untangles her family's history with mental illness, eating disorders, and suicidal ideation ("Yesterday I went to the railroad tracks to lie in front of a train but when it came I couldn't stay there," wrote one of Spiegel's aunts, who died by suicide 30 years before Emily, in a diary Spiegel uncovers). Meanwhile, she weaves in haunting dispatches from Emily in the form of Google chats, artwork, and excerpts from her old letters and writings, including a sixth-grade assignment where Emily wishes "good health" to her future self. The results, while not exactly cathartic ("How naive I had been to believe... enough time might mean something different is possible for me," Spiegel writes), make a major impression. This is stunning. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

First-time author Spiegel documents her experiences and anguish after her sister Emily died by suicide at the age of 21. Spiegel, three years older than her sister, was teaching in a special education classroom in a high school in New Orleans when she got the call that Emily, then in college in Colorado, had died on campus. She records her own responses and actions over the next hours, days, and weeks with rigor, precision, and compassion, as she flies to Philadelphia to make funeral arrangements with the parents who had split up when she was six and their current spouses. The memoir follows the author through the first few months after her sister's death with occasional looks back at Emily's childhood and adolescence to reveal the mental illness that afflicted her, which manifested as severe eating disorders (which the author had also experienced) and bipolar disorder. It moves back to the year before Emily's death, before moving into the present. The description of the last year Spiegel and Emily had any time together, mostly consisting of occasional brief visits and calls and long chains of emails, is quietly devastating and guilt drenched, as the author wonders what she could have done differently. As the years go by and Spiegel remains locked in grief--dropping job after job, one boyfriend and then another, before enrolling in graduate school to write the story published here--the memoir, perhaps inevitably, loses a certain amount of focus. To the author's credit, she doesn't force her experience into a narrative arc. Although years after the death she is coping, she is still devastated on a frequent basis by the loss of "the person I loved the most in the entire world." A stark study of grief and a touching tribute to a beloved sibling. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

PART 1 It was March 26, a Wednesday. I was at work and it was the sixteenth birthday of one of my students: she brought in a cake covered in white frosting, pink sugar, and black stars, and I gave her a hug and a dollar, which--as is custom in New Orleans--she added to the other bills pinned to her school uniform hoodie. She left my classroom shortly before the lunch period ended; my cell phone rang. I glanced at the screen, rolled my eyes. It was my sister Emily's college friend Z. The last time she'd reached out to me was to ask if I'd heard from Emily, but that was two months before, a few days after my sister was admitted to an inpatient program at a psychiatric hospital. "This can't be good," I said quietly to my co-teacher. I stepped out into the hallway, dragged my fingers across dips in painted cinderblocks, took the call. "Hello?" "Have you heard from Emily at all? I can't get hold of her." That same question--she was panicked. "No--not for the past couple days. I sent her a G Chat message on Monday, but she never answered." I wasn't alarmed. This wasn't new. My sister was a bit slippery, hard to keep track of. Especially lately. "People are saying a body was found in a car on cam- pus, and I keep trying to call Emily, but her phone keeps going to voicemail and I'm freaking out." "Okay. Okay. Hang on. Let me try to figure out what's going on. I'll call you back," I said. I was calm and direct, but I could feel my thinking begin to cant. I'd graduated from the same college in Colorado two years earlier, and I still had the school chaplain's number saved in my phone. I don't know why it didn't occur to me to try to call Emily. The chaplain picked up, said, "Hello?" "Hi, this is Becca Spiegel." Before I could say another word, he said, "Becca, I'm so sorry . . ." I heard words like "dead" and "family" and "legally, can't initiate contact." Flooded by hot disbelief and cold certainty, I asked him if I could tell my parents to call so he could tell them what he'd just told me. Asked him to tell Emily's friend Z. I hung up, walked straight down the hall, through two doors, outside, sat down at a perforated picnic table, sur- rounded by concrete and aluminum, chain-link fence and rubber track, high school bleachers, 1.32 acres of artificial grass. I sent two identical text messages: one to my stepfather, one to my dad. "I need you to call the college chaplain here is his number xxx-xxx-xxxx." The aim was neutral urgency. The shock split through my body, my mind was almost blank. Time hovered over earth like a fog. I called J. We'd begun dating during our senior year of college, then shared a home in New Orleans until he'd moved back to Colorado with his band two months ago, to finish writing an album and grow a vegetable garden. When I hung up, I had a missed call and new text message from Z: "The chaplains couldn't tell me anything and she's still not picking up. They said the parents might know though. I'm really sorry for calling like this." I wrote back: "No it's OK. Thank you for calling me. I asked the chaplain to tell you. It was her in the car. I'm so sorry." My next thought was the flight to South Carolina I had scheduled for the next day, to run a 200-mile race from Columbia to Charleston as a member of a twelve-person relay team. I had been looking forward to the trip. I called the captain of the team. Tried to leave a voice- mail, but erased it accidentally. Sent a text instead: "I do not think I can get on a plane tomorrow. I will explain more, but I just found out my sister died. Please tell the team I am so sorry to pull out." I went back inside the school building, straight to the windowless office of a school social worker with whom I worked closely, Ms. A--big heart, quick wit, no-bullshit attitude. She called everyone baby in the way many Louisianans do. My discussions with her were usually about how to best support the students we shared, but sometimes we talked about her own sister's mental health history, and Emily's. I knocked. Ms. A called for me to enter and I opened the door. She was wrapped in a cheetah-print Snuggie. (The school building was air-conditioned far too effectively.) Between us was a wide mess of desk: stacks of IEPs, framed photos of her two kids, potted plants. Tall, light gray file cabinets where all the paperwork would end up eventually. A lamp instead of the harsh, fluorescent lights. I couldn't speak. I began to heave. "What's wrong?" she asked. "It's my sister . . . She's dead." She let out a breath and hugged me. She directed me to  take a seat; her office became a concrete block-and-tile sanctuary. My stepfather called. He found a way to perform calm and steady. I asked if my mother knew yet, and he said yes. I asked if I should look at flights that would get me home that night. He said to find one that worked best for me and not to think about the price. Ms. A let me use her computer, then left to tell our principal. She returned with a gentle, well-mannered colleague and friend of mine named KC, who volunteered to take me to the airport even though it was her birthday. I accepted the offer but would not let either one of them drive me home. Insisted I was okay. Returned to my classroom, tried to shield my face from my co-teachers and the students they were helping, grabbed my bags and left. At the intersection of North Claiborne and Franklin, the light was red. To the left was a station that sold fresh meat, fried chicken, and discount gas. To the right, thin rectangles of fencing and wood siding in old, tired shades of yellow, white, or red. The lid of one black garbage can was propped open by too much trash. On another was written "Thou Shall Not Steal." The weather was cloudy, 55 degrees, mild wind. Bland. The ring of my phone startled me. I didn't want to answer, but I had to. It was my dad. His voice was low and flat. He sounded tired. "What's up? I assume it's Em?" "Did you call the chaplain?" "No, not yet . . . What's going on? Did she try to kill herself again?" I said, "No, Dad. She's dead." He said, "Seriously?" I said yes and that's all I know. Please, please call the  chaplain. I made it home. I don't know how. I can't believe I convinced anyone I could drive. And yet I was lucid. Absent-minded  but thinking in tasks, in lists, in practical matters. I walked up three steps, turned a key, flipped a light switch. It would be a few hours still before I could crumble, and even then, that's not the right word or metaphor. It's not a falling apart, either. Closer to disintegration or the chair you're sitting in breaking, giving way to the floor, but the floor's not there either, and then you're not even falling, because that's too predictable, logical--you're just existing. It's not pressing pause, but nothing is playing. It's not blank, but there is nothing there. It's knowing you're boarding a plane to go home in a few hours but having no idea for how long--knowing you'll have to dress for a funeral, but what could you possibly wear? I stuffed a bag: a black dress, boots and bras, leggings. Sneakers and headphones for the runs I assumed I'd need. A blue shirt with white embroidery that I first wore in a fitting room shared with Emily, bodies bumping in a full- length mirror as arms moved in and out of sleeves. I put on a necklace she'd gifted me and packed a pair of earrings she'd made. Toothbrush, sweatshirt, socks. All so obvious and normal, so practical and not at all. Excerpted from Without Her: A Chronicle of Grief and Love by Rebecca Spiegel All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.