Losing the Garden

About The Book

<p><b>A portrait of an intense and unusual marriage and an affirmation of life after suicide.</b></p><p>In 1971 Laura and Guy Waterman left New York City for thirty-seven acres in Vermont where they would live in a hand-built cabin without running water or electricity for the next thirty years. It was a life based largely in the nineteenth century a life of hauling their own water and growing their own food of lighting candles in the evening and heating their cabin with wood from the surrounding forest. Combined with the trail tending they did in the alpine zone of the White Mountains and the books they wrote about environmental stewardship it made for a rewarding healthy and fruitful existence. But that was only part of their story. Guy's depression was another part and his ultimate decision to take his own life on the wintry summit of Mount Lafayette-a decision he made with Laura's support-was the crux a term climbers use to describe the hardest move on the climb. Being a climber herself Laura had to confront the crux. This meant taking a close look at Guy's suicide and asking herself a hard question: How or why had she come to support the decision of the man she loved? In <i>Losing the Garden</i> Laura Waterman comes to terms with her husband's long depression and the complex nature of a gifted humorous man who was driven by obsession self-absorption and a strange lack of confidence. Her account of her own marriage idyllic from the outside but riddled from within is nonetheless a love story a portrait of an intense and unusual marriage and an affirmation of life after loss.</p>
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