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The Undertaker's Wife

Dee Oliver

Paperback 2015-03-24

Publisher Description

:Deona (?Dee?) Branch married into the funeral business when she wed Johnnie Oliver, a fourth-generation funeral director, in 1984. She knew that her husband did not belong just to her; this became clear as early as their first date, when Johnnie had to scoot out ?for just a minute??and he came back with a corpse.

After Johnnie died suddenly in 2007, Dee went back to school and earned her mortuary science degree so that she could carry on his work. Barred re-entry into the family business by a jealous brother-in-law, Dee found herself fully credentialed, armed with nearly 30 years of funeral experience?and utterly jobless. None of the ?white? funeral homes would have her, for fear of alienating the venerable H.D. Oliver funeral clan. Thus it was that?despite having an iPhone full of well-connected business leaders, political luminaries, garden club mavens, and countless other very rich, very white, and very certain-to-perish friends-- Dee finally decided to cross the racial divide in perhaps, the most segregated industry in America. She accepted an internship at Riddick?s, a funeral home staffed entirely by, and for, black people.

Part memoir, part how-to book, The Undertakers Widow might also be described as The Blind Side?in reverse. Dee's insights on the common ground of grief, survival, and the ever-present faithfulness of God (to all of us, regardless of our race, religious upbringing, or socio-economic background) will help readers prepare for one of life's only certainties?and do it with wisdom, grace, and a healthy dose of joy.

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$30.99

Publisher Description

:Deona (?Dee?) Branch married into the funeral business when she wed Johnnie Oliver, a fourth-generation funeral director, in 1984. She knew that her husband did not belong just to her; this became clear as early as their first date, when Johnnie had to scoot out ?for just a minute??and he came back with a corpse.

After Johnnie died suddenly in 2007, Dee went back to school and earned her mortuary science degree so that she could carry on his work. Barred re-entry into the family business by a jealous brother-in-law, Dee found herself fully credentialed, armed with nearly 30 years of funeral experience?and utterly jobless. None of the ?white? funeral homes would have her, for fear of alienating the venerable H.D. Oliver funeral clan. Thus it was that?despite having an iPhone full of well-connected business leaders, political luminaries, garden club mavens, and countless other very rich, very white, and very certain-to-perish friends-- Dee finally decided to cross the racial divide in perhaps, the most segregated industry in America. She accepted an internship at Riddick?s, a funeral home staffed entirely by, and for, black people.

Part memoir, part how-to book, The Undertakers Widow might also be described as The Blind Side?in reverse. Dee's insights on the common ground of grief, survival, and the ever-present faithfulness of God (to all of us, regardless of our race, religious upbringing, or socio-economic background) will help readers prepare for one of life's only certainties?and do it with wisdom, grace, and a healthy dose of joy.

Koorong Code412083
ISBN0310340837
EAN9780310340836
Pages224
DepartmentBooks
CategoryGrief
PublisherZondervan
Publication DateMar 2015
Dimensions16 x 133 x 203mm
Weight0.190kg