Annie Freeman's Fabulous Traveling Funeral

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Overview

For Katherine Givens and the four women about to become her best friends, the adventure begins with a UPS package. Inside is a pair of red sneakers filled with ashes and a note that will forever change their lives. Katherine’s oldest and dearest friend, the irrepressible Annie Freeman, left one final request–a traveling funeral–and she wants the most important women in her life as “pallbearers.”

From Sonoma to Manhattan, Katherine, Laura, Rebecca, Jill, and Marie will carry Annie’s ashes to the special places in her life. At every stop there’s a surprise encounter and a small miracle waiting, and as they whoop it up across the country, attracting interest wherever they go, they share their deepest secrets–tales of broken hearts and second chances, missed opportunities and new beginnings. And as they grieve over what they’ve lost, they discover how much is still possible if only they can unravel the secret Annie left them....

Editorial Reviews

From Barnes & Noble
Before Annie Freeman died of cancer at age 56, she planned a traveling funeral for herself, a cross-country junket on which her five closest friends would accompany her ashes from California to New York. The quintet she chose for the trek are disparate and, in some cases, dysfunctional, but something about their mission bring these unlikely urn bearers into a loose harmony.
Publishers Weekly
Radish's latest overwrought book (after Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn) tracks five strangers- turned-soul mates over the course of the titular funeral, posthumously organized by their friend Annie, who died from ovarian cancer at age 56. A package arrives at Katherine Givens's front door and in it are the ashes of her free-spirited, altruistic childhood friend, along with instructions for a procession that will take Annie's closest friends on a cross country trip from Sonoma, Calif., to Manhattan, sprinkling her remains as they go. Just nine days later, Annie's former university colleague Jill, women's crisis savior Laura, cantankerous neighbor Rebecca and her hospice aide Marie join Katherine on the journey during which they learn their eccentric friend's deepest secrets and share many of their own. Most importantly, these unorthodox urnbearers understand the greatness Annie saw in them and attain the courage to act on it. Windswept melodrama marks Radish's prose (e.g. "these moments were the ones Marie needed to keep the tears and gashes in her own soul from washing her out to sea"), but that will not deter readers who relish the idea of women forming bonds when their mettle is tested and finding power and self-actualization in grief, sharing and love. (Jan.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Five women honor their friend's last request with a cross-country adventure. Hypertasker attorney Katherine Givin's life changes forever when she receives a brown paper-wrapped package containing a familiar pair of red high-top sneakers. Into these shoes are packed the ashes of her oldest friend-the remarkable Annie Freeman. Before dying from ovarian cancer, Annie planned her own "traveling funeral" with designated stops for the scattering of her remains. She leaves it to Katherine to assemble her closest friends to act as pallbearers for her last hurrah. Knowing that funerals are for the living, Annie intends for Katherine, Jill, Laura, Rebecca and her saintly hospice nurse Marie (who barely know each other) to take a break from their responsibilities to celebrate life and get to know each other. The trip takes the ladies to the places that mattered most to Annie: the Florida Keys, rural New Mexico, New York City. The book is also something of a metaphysical detective story, as the women learn more about Annie in each location, including the long-held secret identity of the man who fathered her two grown sons. Along the way, the fast friends talk, drink, dance, skinny dip in an icy lake and talk a lot more. They also face their own tragedies and realize that it is never too late to dramatically transform their lives for the better. These women warriors are a funny and engaging bunch, but so similarly wise and articulate that it is sometimes difficult to differentiate them. Filled with uplifting messages of the healing power of both laughter and grief, Radish's novel (Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn, 2004, etc.) ultimately sags from too much proselytizing at the expense of the story. Alife-affirming depiction of female bonding that's often overblown and tiresome.

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780553382648
  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
  • Publication date: 1/31/2006
  • Pages: 352
  • Sales rank: 103,697
  • Product dimensions: 5.15 (w) x 8.25 (h) x 0.75 (d)

Meet the Author

Kris Radish
Kris Radish
Kris Radish is the bestselling author of four novels, The Elegant Gathering of White Snows, Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn, Annie Freeman’s Fabulous Traveling Funeral, and The Sunday List of Dreams. She lives in Wisconsin, where she writes two nationally syndicated columns each week and is at work on her sixth novel, The Poetry of Emma’s Salvation.

Biography

Nationally syndicated columnist Kris Radish has taken a somewhat winding road to her current status as bestselling feminist novelist, although a strong love of fiction has been in her blood since childhood. "I fell in love with words when I was a little girl (and yes I was short once) and discovered the joy of reading and hanging out with Nancy Drew," she explains on her web site. "By the beginning of eighth grade I had read every book in St. Joseph's Grade School library and knew I was going to be a writer."

Radish did not start out writing the kinds of tales she loved as a girl. She began in the more practical realm of journalism, which lead her to write her first book. Run, Bambi, Run is the true story of Laurie Bombenek, an ex-cop/ex-Playboy bunny who was sentenced to life in prison for murder. Bombenek's fascinating story—which included a daring prison break and her subsequent recapture—was adapted into an equally riveting and critically acclaimed true-crime book by Radish.

Now with her first taste of the publishing world, Radish began work on her second book. The Birth Order Effect was quite different from her debut and miles away from the fiction she would eventually pen. Instead, it is a serious but lively discussion of birth-order and how it affects human psychology and development. Ultimately, The Birth Order Effect would take ten years to see publication, putting Radish's publishing career on hold for that length of time. By the time it finally hit bookstore shelves in 2002, Radish had shifted gears again and would never suffer such a hiatus again. The same year that The Birth Order Effect saw publication, Radish published her breakthrough work of fiction The Elegant Gathering of White Snows, the mysterious, hypnotic story of eight Wisconsin women who embark upon a pilgrimage. As they travel, each woman's story is revealed and the bonds between them strengthen. The Elegant Gathering of White Snows established Radish as an important new voice in feminist fiction and there would be no turning back from there.

Dancing Naked at the Edge of Dawn, the story of a wife and mother who sets upon her own journey toward self-actualization after finding her husband in bed with another woman, followed. Next up was Annie Freeman's Fabulous Traveling Funeral, another road novel in the vein of The Elegant Gathering of White Snows. By this point, Radish had gathered quite a following of devoted readers, all of her novels having found their ways onto bestseller lists throughout the United States. The Sunday List of Dreams, her next effort, was no different. It is a funny, moving, sometimes ribald tale of a woman who reconnects with her estranged daughter, who now runs a successful sex shop in New York City.

After the somewhat tentative journey toward her current success, Radish promises that she has many more stories to tell. "I write full-time because I never, not once, let go of the dream I had to do this," she says. "To put all my manic words into sentences and then string the sentences into paragraphs so that they could become chapters and then a book."

Good To Know

Even though Radish is enjoying tremendous success as a novelist, she still writes "two nationally syndicated columns each week—for DBR Media, Inc. and a regionally syndicated column in southeastern Wisconsin for Community Newspapers," as she explains on her web site.

Along with her many literary and journalistic accomplishments, Radish is an accomplished motorcycle rider.

While getting her career in journalism started, Radish worked a huge number of odd jobs. By her own account, she worked as a "professional Girl Scout, waitress, bartender, journalist, bureau chief, columnist, window washer, factory worker, bowling alley attendant and once, honest, I crawled on my belly through a Utah mountain field to harvest night crawlers."

Some fun and fascinating outtakes from our interview with Radish:

"I've skied with Robert Redford, been shot at while flying over Bosnia, almost drowned in a flash flood in the middle of a desert, worked undercover, interviewed murderers, and covered a national disaster that buried a town."

"Once I really did crawl through a mountain field to pick night crawlers for extra money…actually it was more than once."

"When I was a working journalist someone was stalking me for a very long period of time. It was terrifying. To end it, I worked with the local police and I still have tape recordings of this person's voice."

"I answer all my own emails—which often takes hours but I do this because I have such a fabulous group of readers and if they honor me with a note—with their own stories—with something from their heart…well, I have to answer them. I just have to."

"Here are some of the things I love to do: Yoga and biking and I have recently rediscovered my passion for golf—honest—watch for the Kris Radish Open. I swim, and following a severe back injury am living with a ruptured L-5 but am kicking it in the rear end by working out at least five days a week and have recently—well, over the past five months—lost almost 20 pounds."

"I love to hike and often get some great inspiration when I am out hiking with my notebook. I adore the sounds of the outdoors and would live outside if I could—sleep with the window open year round."

"Three years ago I got my motorcycle license and after two years on a put-put bought a new Yamaha. Hope to put some more miles on it in between deadlines and books and kids and hitting the golf ball and…"

"Laughter is the key to everything. I love to laugh and drink wine and walk in the rain and I find kindness and intelligence two of the most attractive traits on earth."

"I need a glass of wine now—maybe two."

"Read Radish and live your list of dreams—just go for it, baby."

    1. Hometown:
      Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
    1. Date of Birth:
      September 18, 1953
    2. Place of Birth:
      Milwaukee, Wisconsin
    1. Education:
      B.A., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 1975
    2. Website:

Read an Excerpt

Annie Freeman's Fabulous Traveling Funeral


By Kris Radish

Random House

Kris Radish
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0553902326


Chapter One

1

There is a hole the size of a golf ball in the right side of Katherine Givins's black Bali bra.

This is the one article of clothing that has made her feel sexy for the past 3.6 years in a row, and even though the straps lie at half-mast on her fine shoulders, the elastic exploded last summer and the hooks have been pulled so many times she has actually used a needle-nose pliers on them, Katherine cannot bear to throw the bra away.

"Shit," she says, turning into the mirror and then leaning so her nose practically touches the glass to make certain there really is a hole. It's there, and getting wider every second, as she puts her finger in the middle and realizes that one wrong move could explode all of the seams and send her breasts into orbit.

Just as she grabs them and begins laughing hysterically at the long-held notion that the bra, like her lost marriage and her fabulous mother and the man she thought she loved two men ago or even the one she loves now, would last forever, the doorbell rings and makes her scream herself back into reality.

Her scream, the kind you might make when something normal--like a doorbell--flushes you from a very far-away place--reaches the UPS woman on the front step who is glad as hell that someone is home so she doesn't have to leave a note and come back the next day. In the UPS world, screams, especially those coming from anywhere in front of the brown trucks and not under the rear wheels, are very good signs. So the UPS woman waits.

Katherine does not care who is at the door immediately because she is already in mourning about the loss of her bra. The bra that held her up and saw her through when her daughter announced that she had her first kiss (3.1 years ago) and then snapped the back of her mother's Bali bra instead of performing the regulation high-five; when she found out her ex-husband Michael was about to be married (2.8 years ago) as she was sorting wash and the bra moved from her fingers and into the black depths of a dark load; when finally a man emboldened by vodka martinis put his hand down her strategically placed low-cut sweater and ran his fingers very slowly past the elastic top and curved his hand around her left breast; when her father came to her one night (2.1 years ago) and said that he could no longer care for his wife, her mother, and could Katherine "please, please, please" help him find the right place, and then leaned into her, clutched her shoulder, his sad and tired arm thumping against the metal hook; when she let Alex finally make love to her (1.8 years ago) and he turned her around, lifted her blouse and took his sweet, sexy and fabulous time unhooking the Bali and then replaced it with hands that spoke seventeen languages; when she leaned over her mother's coffin (.8 years ago), the metal from the underwire tapping against the edge of the coffin as she ran her hands through her mother's hair one last time and then wept so long and hard that the funeral started almost an hour late, and just now the hole emerging like an omen of age and change slapping her upside the head and making her wonder, "What next? What in the hell is going to happen next in this life of mine?"

The doorbell.

Katherine, angry at the unseen intruder who had startled her, miffed about the meaning behind her disintegrating bra, and half-naked, lunges for the door as the terrified blonde woman drenched in brown is reaching for the doorbell for the third time.

"Jesus!" she shouts as Katherine falls into her arms the very moment the door opens.

Katherine, still angry about the intrusion, has managed to grab a kitchen towel on her run from the bedroom. It is a small towel but a towel it is and when she falls into the arms of the UPS woman the towel drops and they both watch it descend to the floor as if it may break and shatter the instant it touches earth.

Anyone lucky enough to be watching would be breathless. What next? Who will move first? Will the UPS woman find this incident funny or humiliating? Will Katherine begin screaming again? And the package . . . what in the hell is in the package?

The UPS woman, who just happens to be a kind and gentle soul who lives alone and keeps notes on all of her customers, has her arms wrapped around Katherine to steady herself. Katherine has a brief moment of clarity when she feels the warm fingers of the woman on her shoulders and this resurrects a historic moment in her mind.

She remembers that her friend Reva took her shopping the day she bought the bra. Reva stood in the center of an old-fashioned department store, hands on hips, moving from foot to foot, and said that her mother had sold bras door-to-door in rural Nevada and it was a simple gift that a woman could give to herself--the proper fitting of a bra. This was said to Katherine P. Givins, attorney at law, who had purchased every undergarment in her entire life on the fly, cups too small, elastic tight against her back, tiny dents under her rib cage from wires that should never have been put into women's clothing in the first place.

And then, the moment the saleswoman fitted her--the measuring tape sliding to the floor, her aging fingers gently lifting her breasts into this bra--this very exceptional bra--and the look on the older woman's face, a look of kind satisfaction, as she watched Katherine move and realize that "Yes, damn it, a good bra can change everything."

Their eyes meet then. The UPS woman asking with her soft green eyes what she should do next, and Katherine, not moving away, holding her there, for one, two, three seconds while she lets go--just lets go.

"It's the bra," she tells Ms. UPS. "Have you ever had a bra that has taken you through so much and held you in place like nothing else?"

The UPS woman, who was a woman way before she was UPS, does not flinch. More than once in her twenty-six-year career, a man has answered the door naked. She has walked in on clowns dancing on tables, a wife throwing meatballs at her husband's favorite television show, and so many drunk people she cannot even begin to remember them all. Katherine in her favorite bra, holding her in her bra on the porch, is nothing.

"I love jogging bras," the UPS woman begins. "In my business there is quite a lot of bouncing and jumping and although I am far from voluptuous, I need a good, solid foundation for the kind of work I do."

Katherine falls right into the conversation, wearing her favorite undergarment, a pair of faded green cotton shorts that have another story to tell, and absolutely nothing else. The UPS woman, with more than a hint of subtle and gracious poise, motions for Katherine to step back inside of the house, but the women do not stop talking. They dance backwards and Katherine, hands flailing idly as they always do when she is excited, continues to talk about the demise of her Bali.

"Well, how about just getting a new one?" Ms. UPS asks.

"I've written and called and stopped at every department store in the United States and in three foreign countries. They do not make this bra anymore."

"How sad is that."

Katherine, who is usually gracious and poised herself, has this ridiculous urge to invite the UPS woman into the kitchen for a glass of wine or a cup of coffee so they can talk about undergarments all day, but she's also a practical and usually wise woman. She knows there's a good chance Ms. UPS has to finish working but she can't quite stop herself. Undergarments, she thinks to herself, surely do strange things to one's inhibitions.

Later, when days and weeks have passed and she has time to backtrack to this very moment, she will remember it as one that she should have paid more attention to when she was asking herself about why the hole in the bra was spreading now and why she was standing in her underwear in front of a stranger and why none of it seemed out of the ordinary.

"That thing," she will eventually say to herself, "that inner voice that was tapping against my heart and asking me to pause--Damn, I should have listened. I should have paid attention because that's when everything changed."

Everything changed.

But first a wave of laughter rising from the two women who visually embrace each other as women do who can talk at the ring of a doorbell about underwear, and breasts and menstrual cycles and the way women connect and can fall into each other's lives and arms so quickly.

"This must seem ridiculous," Katherine says as the two women tip their heads and the sound of their laughter mixes and rises to the edge of high windows in Katherine's very old but lovely home.

"Well, as you can imagine, I've seen everything. I'd much rather be greeted by a woman in a black bra who has a great story than a man in black underwear who has no story at all."

Then Ms. UPS reaches inside of her brown pants pocket and she pulls out a small, soft stone that has been worn smooth and shiny by one ride after another inside the cotton pants pocket.

"You have a lucky bra, something that I imagine has carried you through some challenging and tough nights and days, and I have this rock."

She lets Katherine take the rock into her hand and feel how just holding it, like wearing a fabulous bra, can be a comfort. They don't talk about it because they are women and they know. They know about comfort and the loss of it and they know about sacrifice and change and that the ring of a doorbell, a wild call at midnight, the scent of something new, the touch of a baby or a lover's fresh face, can change everything.

They know.

"I see," Katherine says and then she gently hands back the stone, understanding its importance, but also not able to stop herself from saying, "You'll understand if I don't hand over the bra."

They laugh, which is the perfect thing to do, and then Ms. UPS says, "The package!" and goes back to the front door where she set down her clipboard and the box, wrapped in the requisite brown paper with one single and simple label.

"This is for you if you are indeed Katherine P. Givins."

"I am."

"Expecting this?"

"I have no clue."

"Well, this is your surprise and you were mine then," Ms. UPS says, smiling as she dips to pick up her sign-off sheet.

Katherine signs the metal-backed ledger and then Ms. UPS bends to pick up the box. The transfer is swift and easy and the package passes from woman to woman in a ceremony that is completed only when Katherine, who has always been way to the other side of spontaneous, bends to hug Ms. UPS one last time.

"You are a sweetheart," she tells her new blonde friend.

"Well, that's nice but it's all part of the job. I never know what is going to happen or what I might see when I ring someone's doorbell."

"I imagine you've seen more action than a pile of undergarments," Katherine says and then pauses for a second. "There's something new and exciting behind every unopened door."

"Sounds like a book title," Ms. UPS responds just before she turns back toward her waiting van. "Time to go see what's behind the next door."

There is a quick wave and then Katherine finds herself alone in the foyer of the home she has spent twelve years restoring. The home she bought with the proceeds from her first fairly huge lawsuit, which netted her $69,283 and allowed her to move from a two-bedroom apartment with her daughter Sonya following her divorce from a man whom she had once loved a great deal but had come to realize she should have never married for a variety of reasons including the not-so-obvious fact that he had never gotten over the love of his life--a woman he still saw three times a week at places like hotels, nice restaurants, and the back seat of her husband's car.

The package.

Ms. UPS is stepping into the brown van when Katherine looks for just a second at the package that is wedged against her own chest, just where the Bali touches the top of her last rib, and wonders if the shape of the box does not hint that there may be a pair of shoes inside. Her mind stops there as Ms. UPS turns, shouts, "Bye now," smiles as if she knows a wild secret and then disappears behind a sliding door that sounds like a smooth and even gunshot.

The door closes as Katherine turns to tap it with her heel, because ever since she has owned the home that is what she does to make certain that it really is closed, and when she turns she can see her reflection in the oak mirror by the door. She sees the bra hole--which is now wider than a golf ball, maybe even a tennis ball--widen to the shape of an almost ripe grapefruit.

"Damn it," she says, even though she is not prone to swearing and loathes the societal turn of events that makes a word like "fuck" commonplace. "Just damn it."

The package is wedged under her bra and Katherine does not realize that it is the package that is now holding the bra in place. She does not see that there is a dwindling span of threads the size of three toothpicks that is holding together the left side of her bra and that the minute she sits or moves too fast the bra will fly open and be lost to her forever. She doesn't see this but she is thinking about it. She is thinking about the miles of highway that the bra has seen her over and the heartaches and the laughs and then, because she harbors a secret, a very old and almost forgotten desire to write children's books, she wonders if anyone has ever written a story about a girl's first bra. She is also thinking about the mysterious box and the who, what, when, where and why of its existence.

Katherine settles into the rocking chair just beyond the edge of the front hall, the box pushed tight against her chest, and rocks for one, two, three minutes wondering if Ms. UPS will race home and call someone to tell the story of the wild woman with the ancient bra who answered the door just past noon.<

Continues...


Excerpted from Annie Freeman's Fabulous Traveling Funeral by Kris Radish Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Reading Group Guide

1. Annie Freeman's Fabulous Traveling Funeral opens with the dilemma of Katherine's disintegrating Bali bra. What does this situation tell us about her personality? In what way does it set the perfect tone? What enables the UPS driver to be so empathetic?

2. What were your first impressions of Annie G. Freeman after reading her obituary? How did you envision her by the end of the novel? What made her such a tireless champion for so many overlooked realms of humanity?

3. What did Annie mean in her instructions when she wrote, "Honor me now and you will honor yourselves"?

4. Did Annie's friendship with Katherine change very much from the time they were teenagers? How did "Katie" respond to Annie's suicide attempt? What were the greatest comforts they gave to each other over the years?

5. When Annie becomes Jill’s protégé in Chapter Five, she says that she does not want to be challenged irresponsibly or tricked, and "I don’t want to have to stand on my head to get a promotion." She also asks to be mentored and trained. What would it take to make such on-the-job negotiations the norm, full of candor and benevolence?

6. What transformations does Laura make during the traveling funeral? What is the significance of her prophetic feelings? Why was she the ideal lifeline for Annie on the night she was attacked?

7. What do Annie and Rebecca teach each other about control? What was at the heart of their initial struggle to get along as neighbors?

8. In what way is Marie distinct from the other women? What is the source of the special traits that make her a gifted hospice worker? What was the effect ofher intangible presence on the trip, by cell phone and memory?

9. What do all of Annie's friends have in common? How does the theme of rescue and healing play out in their traveling funeral? What variations did you notice in the thoughts and responses recorded in the journal?

10. Discuss the men in Annie's life, ranging from John and their sons to the mysterious ex-husband who observes them in Manhattan. How was she able to balance love and independence? How would you characterize her life: bittersweet? Exhilarating?

11. Compare each of the destinations on Annie's itinerary. How do the landscapes form a complete portrait of her? What aspects of her life are captured by the various "guides" encountered on the trip?

12. Do you agree with the airport anthropologist's theory that the death of a loved one can restore other relationships in our lives? How have your friends, family, and community traditionally responded to grief? Why does the traveling funeral resonate with so many strangers near the end of their journey?

13. Discuss Balinda's presence. What is the role of spontaneity and improvisation in the traveling funeral? How do Balinda's plans for her mother convey the new perspective rippling throughout the travelers?

14. In Chapter Twenty-eight, Annie's friends express their anger–toward her, toward her death, and over the end of their beautiful time together. What healing comes from this anger?

15. If you were to plan your own traveling funeral, who would your "pallbearers" be? What places would you want them to visit together? What untold chapters of your life would you like them to discover along the way?

16. What common threads does Annie Freeman's Fabulous Traveling Funeral share with Kris Radish's previous novels? What makes each book's circle of friends unique?

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 3
( 54 )

Rating Distribution

5 Star

(15)

4 Star

(13)

3 Star

(6)

2 Star

(7)

1 Star

(13)

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See All Sort by: Showing 1 – 20 of 54 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted July 3, 2008

    Bad, bad, bad

    This was a book club pick and I would have stopped reading after the first chapter if I could. The bra was driving me crazy and most of our group wanted the whole traveling funeral to die in a plane crash. What a disappointment and a waste of time.

    3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 28, 2009

    The book needs a traveling funeral!

    I got this book on CDs from my local library. After listening to just an hour I was so bored and totally aggravated by it (especially the non-stop talk about the bra) that I just gave up and returned it. So glad I didn't spend any money on it. I think the idea of the story is a good one, but perhaps another author could have done it better justice.

    2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 24, 2008

    great read

    I could not wait to turn the pages and see what would happen next. Was so sorry when I finished the book.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted December 9, 2008

    more from this reviewer

    intriguing character study

    When fifty-six years old Annie Freeman dies from ovarian cancer she sends her ashes inside her red shoes via UPS to her friend Katherine Givens. Annie¿s instructions are to lead around the country funeral procession of her closest pals starting at Sonoma, California to Albuquerque, the Keys, Manhattan, Lake Superior and an island near Seattle, at each site her best friends are to sprinkle her remains. Katherine would do almost anything for the woman who understood her better than anyone. --- After a reluctant start and a bottle of courage labeled as Shiraz, Katherine begins to put together the odyssey of the last request of the San Francisco State University English professor. Under two weeks later, Katherine joined by Annie's university colleague Jill Matchney, women's crisis worker Laura Westma, neighbor Rebecca Carlson and hospice aide Marie Kondrinsky trek along Annie¿s given route. The women bond sharing secrets of their late zany pal who not only lived life to the fullest and encouraged others to do likewise, but she was also there to help the downtrodden do so. --- Using flashbacks to when Annie first met each of her pall bearers, readers obtain an intriguing character study inside a sisterhood bonding. The story line reflects mostly on Annie, but also provides insight into the greatness that she saw and supported in her cronies. Though the tale at times turns too melodramatically angst-laden, contemporary fiction readers will want to journey around the country tossing the ashes of a fine person. --- Harriet Klausner

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 4, 2012

    If you have loved and lost,,,,,,,read this!

    GREAT BOOK I could not put it down. I think the "bra" chapter was hilarous and so real to me. If you have every lost a loved one or close friend...this book is the one!

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted December 12, 2011

    more from this reviewer

    Recommend

    This was my first Kris Radish book and also my most favorite! It is a story of friendship.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 11, 2011

    Best book I have read in a long time

    Reading this book was so timely as I was dealing with the deaths of several wonderful women in my life. Not being able to be part of the memorials bothered me, but after reading this book I felt like I could have my own memorial for them and celebrate the great and fun things about them. Read and enjoy the fun these women had learning about a friend they thought they knew.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 2, 2009

    I couldn't make myself read it!

    I started the book, but it was so painfully descriptive and slow, that I had to give up! I got through about 1/3 of it and then I stopped reading. FYI: I don't remember the last book I didn't finish. I will see it in the theater if it becomes a movie.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 3, 2008

    Hmmmmm, oh really?

    This was our chosen book-club selection. Of the 9 women in our group, only two managed to get through the book. The rest of us just couldn't stay interested and finally gave it up. The characters are non-inspiring for the most part and the personalities seem contrived...would not recommend it.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted May 7, 2012

    more from this reviewer

    Good read. About friendship, love, understanding and death.

    Really enjoyed reading this book. And easy read, a great book to kick back with a cold glass of lemonade or wine by the pool and relax with.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted January 14, 2012

    Highly Recommended

    I enjoyed the traveling funeral. This books reminds us to take time out of our busy days and enjoy time with your family and friends.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Posted April 22, 2011

    Discover Kris Radish!

    This was the first book I read by this author, and I have sought out most of the rest of her writings. As unlikely as it sounds, a traveling funeral is a fine beginning for a great road trip.

    I like her characters and the ways that she relates to women's issues...both large and small. Not deep reading, but fun and thought-provoking at the same time.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Posted August 4, 2010

    Above average

    I liked the premise of the story. I felt that the writer tried a bit too hard to make it an overly sentimental book. The characters were similar and sometimes hard to differentiate. I read this for a book club and did somewhat enjoy it. It was a bit too depressing for me.

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  • Posted March 21, 2010

    A fun read that got us thinking..

    I had been hearing about this book for about a year and when a book club decided to discuss it, I decided to read it. Now I know what all the fuss was about! Before I proceed with a review, this book is for and about women. men might gain some insight but probably wouldn't come out of a reading thinking it was fun, let's be truthful.

    Women in the book club were of various ages, I'm more the age of the women in the book, but we could see parts of ourselves in all the characters. Annie Freeman was a bit larger than life but having lost 3 family members, 2 of them to cancer, those we love become that way very quickly when they pass away. There was realism in there with the caricatures of the characters.

    The writing style can be a bit stream of consciousness within stream of consciousness but still works. Reading it caused me to question, laugh and cry sometimes all at once. Baby Boomer women should definitely read this book!

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  • Posted February 21, 2010

    Don't bother...

    This book was recommended to a member of our book group as a good discussion book. Unfortunately, it was a huge let down. The characters lack development, it rambles, the story is told too much in the narrative instead of through dialog. I learned nothing and thought it was cheesy. Don't bother...

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 22, 2009

    Obnoxious

    My husband and I often buy books for each other for birthdays and Christmas and then exchange them when we're finished. Bless his heart, he bought a book just for me that he truly thought I'd enjoy. Unfortunately, this "women's bonding" book turned out to be the most mindless drivel I think I've ever read - or have ever attempted to read. It was ridiculous starting on the first page and continued to get worse. I got about a third of the way through and just couldn't take it anymore. Trying to read this book was like trying to listen to and take seriously a very drunk person who keeps repeating themselves over and over. Maybe the author was drunk when she wrote it. This book went directly into the recycling bin. It was so bad I wouldn't even donate it.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted July 12, 2009

    Repetition, Repetition, Repetition

    I really wanted to like this book and I read it to the end, but it was the same thing over and over. The same lines from the characters at each location of the trip about Annie. I liked the variety of characters and thought the basic idea behind the storyline was good, but the delivery was not the greatest. I am all for the strong female characters but it was a little overboard on the "live life to the fullest" message which was on just about every page! If you are debating over this selection and another at the bookstore, pick the other! Sorry!!!!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 1, 2009

    It ia a great read and something to be shared with your SisterFriends and Family.

    I absolutely loved the book. I listened to it on audio and could not stop. I plan to purchase it again in hard copy and to pass it around. I want it to be circulated amongst my friends and I plan to have them sign it as a rememberance.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Anonymous

    Posted September 16, 2008

    fabulous

    I am usualy NOT a book reader and when I read the back of the traveling funeral, I told myself I HAD to read it, and I did, in 2 days! I love this book, it's inspiring and made me open my mind to new possibilities, thanks you for writing this fabulous book! I have told everyone I know to read it and they can't wait to start!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 12, 2008

    Interesting reading for a man trying to understand women's perspectives

    I found this book to be a refreshing story about bounding of women in friendship. At first I found reading this book a test of my self-disciple. On the other hand, this book caused me to reflect about myself and my wife. Do we really care about our clothes the way Katherine was attached to her bra? Personally, I don't like reading material with four-letter words because I don't want to accidentally use those words at work or at home in front of my children. Reading how these women bonded causes me to reflect on whether such bonding is realistic, whether men bond in a similar way or not. (I wish men could.)The lack of conflicts between the women causes me to question how realistic their behavior is. In all, I recommend this book because it is thought provoking and causes me to reevaluate my relationships with others and hopefully helps me to understand better how women think because I work in a job in which I must teamwork with predominately women employees. Stephen Jackson

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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See All Sort by: Showing 1 – 20 of 54 Customer Reviews

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