THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD By Elizabeth Alexander

the light of the world
“I keep paying his cell phone bill for a year and a half afterwards, because I don’t want to lose the text messages, but I don’t have the heart to read and transfer them. The phone goes dead and gets lost somewhere in the house.” The “afterwards” is the sudden death of Elizabeth Alexander’s husband at the age of 50. The Light of the World–Alexander’s world–was her husband, Ficre. Ficre was a chef and a painter. He loved books and bookstores. He loved his two sons. But Ficre really, really loved Elizabeth Alexander. His love for her springs off the pages of this book. Alexander falls in love with Ficre at first sight. I’ve read Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking and Joyce Carol Oates’ A Widow’s Story, two moving memoirs of the loss of a spouse. The Light of the World may well be the most heart-felt of them all. Diane recommended this book to me after she read it. I’m glad she did.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
I
“Last Night on Earth”
II
Honeycomb
III
“The Edges of Me in the Hands of My Wife”
IV
Ghost of All Bookstores
V
The Plum Blossom

11 thoughts on “THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD By Elizabeth Alexander

  1. Deb

    I read an excerpt/essay in The New Yorker and it was excellent: poignant, sensitive, with a wonderful sense of who her husband was. This book is on my tbr list right now.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Patti, I found THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD to have a different tone from Didion’s and Oates’ books. Sad, but not depressing.

      Reply
  2. Jeff Meyerson

    I read the Didion and will probably read this, now that I know about it, although I can’t promise how that will go.

    Reply

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