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Lost (2008)

par Cathy Ostlere

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Shortlisted for the 2009 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction In September 1995, Cathy Ostlere, her husband, and three children are visiting with the family in Calgary to celebrate her younger brother David's birthday. It had been a family tradition that no matter where in the world David might be-from Australia to India to England-he would call on his birthday to reconnect and reminisce. As they wait and wonder, a horrifying thought takes shape in Cathy's mind: knowing how their parents have worried about David in the past, he has begged Cathy not to tell them about his latest adventure-sailing his twenty-eight-foot sailboat 1200 miles from Ireland to the tropical island of Madeira off the coast of Spain with his girlfriend Sarah. The trip should have taken them two weeks. Maybe three. But after two months, she has to break her silence. With each hour that passes and still no word she defensively parries the unacceptable but bleak inevitable: something has happened. David must be dead. Thus begins Lost , Cathy Ostlere's remarkable and unforgettable journey in search of closure, and emotional redemption. From Madeira-where her search for David and Sarah begins-to Ireland and on to the Scottish island of Mull where, months later, Sarah's family has gathered to grieve, Cathy finds herself stirred by snapshot memories of David, of their life growing up together. Of family and what it means. In search of answers she finds instead only new and sometimes more troubling questions-questions that will come to have profound repercussions in her own life. How do we know our true passions? In a life defined by obligations, what are the risks? And what is the consequence for following our passion? A heartrending story of a woman's search for her missing brother, Lost is an extraordinary meditation on the meaning of family and what it is to live an authentic life. Excerpt from Lost: Today is my youngest brother's birthday. September 30, 1995. For the last seven years, David has telephoned from wherever he is in the world. He never forgets and neither do we. He sometimes calls each of us-my parents, a brother and sister in Winnipeg, and me in Calgary. We say Happy Birthday, our voices carried through deep cables across the ocean. In 1988, the year he met an Englishwoman named Sarah, he called from Brisbane, Australia. "We've sold the car and we're going to Japan." In 1990, he was in Bangalore, India. "I never used to believe in God, but perhaps I was wrong," he said, his voice crumbling into static. This morning, my parents are expecting to hear his voice from a telephone booth in the south of England. But they will be mistaken. I am the only one in the family who knows that my brother and Sarah are headed to the open Atlantic. They plan to sail from Ireland to the Azores Archipelago and then on to the island of Madeira. By the end of today, I won't have to keep their secret any longer. The waiting begins in the morning. Calgary is seven hours behind the U.K., we expect the call no later than noon. We root ourselves to the kitchen table. The Saturday newspaper is divided into sections: Spain is filing a suit against Canada over the turbot fish war, the Blue Bombers beat the Ti-Cats. My husband Sam makes fresh coffee. Cold toast is replaced with warm buttery slices. The sun moves from behind the evergreens into the open sky and heats the kitchen. The air smells of browning apple peels. My three children graze, then spin off, dancing erratic orbits throughout the house. I am silent while staring at the excess of breakfast. At ten, I lift the receiver to check for a dial tone, its comforting assurance of possibility. Who can I speak to? "Don't tell anyone where we're going," my brother instructed in his last phone call. "You know how Mom will be." I remember my own travels. She worried every minute. "Happiness is no way to live a life," I answered him jokingly.… (plus d'informations)
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I'm at lost.

It's art. It's what you make it.

But here's my interpretation because I want to:
I'm calling them Black and White. They are personally close to each other. White & Black go on their adventure together. They discover a place that is new to them and get separated. Black can't escape the 4 panels while White in another side/world is being haunted by a monster. White is pretty aggressive. Whenever he sees the creature, he punches it on the face. The unknown creature is probably his own demon. Subsequently, he was caught by a white guy with a cloudy hair. The white guy with the cloudy hair is reality. On the other side, Black encounters his people and the feeling of belongingness engulfs him. So, he stayed together with other imaginary friends left by the other Whites. Black is an imaginary friend of White. The ending shows White already grew up and reminiscing his path of childhood.

What I wrote is all bullshit. But, I encourage you to make your own and do not copy my thoughts. If we think the same, high five!


EDIT: I didn't know it's a sequel. Meh. Never mind what I wrote =.= ( )
  phoibee | Apr 23, 2017 |
In 1995, Cathy Ostlere's brother, David, set out with his girlfriend, Sarah, to sail from Ireland to the Madeira Islands. They did not make it. This book is Cathy Ostlere's own voyage, which begins at the point of having to reveal the secret of his voyage to their family - a secret he had forced on her so as not to worry their mother. Always very close to her brother, Cathy herself becomes lost in a strangely parallel way, not only as she attempts to unravel what might have happened to her brother, his beloved Sarah and their boat, but as she looks at her own life.

The story covers approximately a full year and moves through several stages of grief to a final acceptance, however hard, by the family that David won't be coming back. I don't normally read this kind of book but the opening paragraph drew me in, particularly the sentence "We are a prairie family - there is a certain dryness to us.", so I knew this wouldn't be a maudlin wallow but something thoughtful, different. It was. Her writing is beautiful, raw, honest. It was also philosophical, exploring how we live and the meaning of life, as she shows us David's approaches to things, comparing it to her own and others in her family. Never preachy, always deft, although the reality of the tale at the heart of this book is one of extraordinary sadness and loss, the book itself is paradoxically very beautiful. The best way I can sum it up is to say that it is a uniquely writer's way of dealing with her loss: by writing. Her words roll like the waves which took her brother as she attempts to grapple with the grief of death, but also the grief of of living, while still contained by that "certain dryness". Not a particularly easy read emotionally but recommended.
  tiffin | Nov 1, 2008 |
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For my children In memory of David Ostlere and Sarah Heald
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We sit around the kitchen table, waiting.
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Shortlisted for the 2009 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction In September 1995, Cathy Ostlere, her husband, and three children are visiting with the family in Calgary to celebrate her younger brother David's birthday. It had been a family tradition that no matter where in the world David might be-from Australia to India to England-he would call on his birthday to reconnect and reminisce. As they wait and wonder, a horrifying thought takes shape in Cathy's mind: knowing how their parents have worried about David in the past, he has begged Cathy not to tell them about his latest adventure-sailing his twenty-eight-foot sailboat 1200 miles from Ireland to the tropical island of Madeira off the coast of Spain with his girlfriend Sarah. The trip should have taken them two weeks. Maybe three. But after two months, she has to break her silence. With each hour that passes and still no word she defensively parries the unacceptable but bleak inevitable: something has happened. David must be dead. Thus begins Lost , Cathy Ostlere's remarkable and unforgettable journey in search of closure, and emotional redemption. From Madeira-where her search for David and Sarah begins-to Ireland and on to the Scottish island of Mull where, months later, Sarah's family has gathered to grieve, Cathy finds herself stirred by snapshot memories of David, of their life growing up together. Of family and what it means. In search of answers she finds instead only new and sometimes more troubling questions-questions that will come to have profound repercussions in her own life. How do we know our true passions? In a life defined by obligations, what are the risks? And what is the consequence for following our passion? A heartrending story of a woman's search for her missing brother, Lost is an extraordinary meditation on the meaning of family and what it is to live an authentic life. Excerpt from Lost: Today is my youngest brother's birthday. September 30, 1995. For the last seven years, David has telephoned from wherever he is in the world. He never forgets and neither do we. He sometimes calls each of us-my parents, a brother and sister in Winnipeg, and me in Calgary. We say Happy Birthday, our voices carried through deep cables across the ocean. In 1988, the year he met an Englishwoman named Sarah, he called from Brisbane, Australia. "We've sold the car and we're going to Japan." In 1990, he was in Bangalore, India. "I never used to believe in God, but perhaps I was wrong," he said, his voice crumbling into static. This morning, my parents are expecting to hear his voice from a telephone booth in the south of England. But they will be mistaken. I am the only one in the family who knows that my brother and Sarah are headed to the open Atlantic. They plan to sail from Ireland to the Azores Archipelago and then on to the island of Madeira. By the end of today, I won't have to keep their secret any longer. The waiting begins in the morning. Calgary is seven hours behind the U.K., we expect the call no later than noon. We root ourselves to the kitchen table. The Saturday newspaper is divided into sections: Spain is filing a suit against Canada over the turbot fish war, the Blue Bombers beat the Ti-Cats. My husband Sam makes fresh coffee. Cold toast is replaced with warm buttery slices. The sun moves from behind the evergreens into the open sky and heats the kitchen. The air smells of browning apple peels. My three children graze, then spin off, dancing erratic orbits throughout the house. I am silent while staring at the excess of breakfast. At ten, I lift the receiver to check for a dial tone, its comforting assurance of possibility. Who can I speak to? "Don't tell anyone where we're going," my brother instructed in his last phone call. "You know how Mom will be." I remember my own travels. She worried every minute. "Happiness is no way to live a life," I answered him jokingly.

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Cathy Ostlere est un auteur LibraryThing, c'est-à-dire un auteur qui catalogue sa bibliothèque personnelle sur LibraryThing.

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