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Amy Wight Chapman, author of "Just Like Glass"

Amy Wight Chapman, author of "Just Like Glass" In-Person

Join author Amy Wight Chapman as she talks about her story of one year in the life of a Maine family, and a tribute to her widowed mother who raised her and her father, whose legacy was to remain a vital and immediate part of the family he left behind.

Date:
Friday, June 6, 2025
Time:
1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
Time Zone:
Eastern Time - US & Canada (change)
Location:
Meeting Room
Audience:
  Adults  
Categories:
  Author Talks     Daytime  
Registration has closed.

Just Like Glass is the story of one transformative year in the life of the author’s four older siblings and their mother, Ruth. In 1958, just as the school year is ending, Ruth’s husband, Bill, is felled by a fatal heart attack. Not knowing what else to do, she loads her grief-stricken children, ages eight to fourteen, into the station wagon with the family dog and drives north to spend the summer at their lakeside camp in western Maine. Told in the several voices of the ones who lived it, this family memoir relates how a tough-as-nails matriarch and the stillness of North Pond set them on the path to healing, even as they struggle to redefine themselves as a family unit, with one unexpected addition.

“Just Like Glass takes us to a rustic family cabin—what around here we call a camp—and shows us what it means to be rooted and constantly renewed in a place, even if the dad who dreamed it is gone. This sweet book warmed my heart, opened my eyes, and made me sing.”

—Bill Roorbach, author of Lucky Turtle, Temple Stream, and Beep

“A genre-bending book that brilliantly blends memoir with creative non-fiction, fiction, and reportage. The writing is as salt-of-the-earth beautiful as the author’s quintessentially mid-century New England family and their universal journey through hope, loss, grief, resilience—and back to hope again, eternal as always.”

—Richard Blanco, 2013 Presidential Inaugural Poet, author of The Prince of Los Cocuyos: A Miami Childhood

“A sort of We Took to the Woods meets Swiss Family Robinson, this sweet, evocative, and moving family memoir will leave you longing for a dock, a deck, and company as delightful as the Wight clan.”

—Elizabeth Peavey, author and playwright, My Mother’s Clothes Are Not My Mother

“In this unusual and affecting memoir, Amy Wight Chapman upends our expectations for how a story should be told.”

—Monica Wood, author of When We Were the Kennedys and How to Read a Book

Library Contact

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Elsa Rowe

Community Engagement Manager

erowe@scarboroughlibrary.org
207-396-6279