Coffee Shop God
At 35 Thérèse has finally found herself – the long awaited college degree, the high school teaching job, the new husband, two nearly grown children, and four stepchildren. For once, she anticipates a normal life, but a middle of the night phone call changes all of that. Her younger brother, while out of town on business, is shot and killed. Steve’s death sends her life into a tailspin of grief and a crippling depression. She becomes the glue that holds her eccentric family together.

This collection of essays, set in North Carolina, follows Thérèse as she comes to terms with the untimely and violent death of her brother. Never have the shortcomings of her family been more apparent. Steve had been the balance to it all; he had been the “normal,” and now Thérèse is left with the mother who always has a joke, the father who can not show affection, the ex-drug dealing brother who now is an evangelical Christian and the talking bird she inherits from her brother.

At every turn, a barrage of childhood memories floods Thérèse who would really rather live in the past. Never has she felt so alone or so desperate for connection. The essays follow Thérèse as she questions her new reality, her spirituality, which is in direct opposition to her parents’, and her love for her brother. She tries to recreate herself in the midst of bond hearings, autopsy photos, debilitating grief, and a new marriage. The narrator wrestles to accept the family she is left with while learning to forgive the young man who killed her brother.

A chance meeting in the bathroom with the killer’s sister reaffirms her faith in humanity and her own ability to forgive. She learns to accept her life without Steve and finds the strength to forgive the man who killed him. Richard, Thérèse’s father learns to express his love before it is too late, and from her brother’s bird Thérèse is taught that the past is always comfortingly in her present. The reader is left knowing that a new journey towards meeting the killer face-to-face may well be what lies ahead.

Thérèse will narrate the second half of this story in the full length documentary film The Final Gift. The film explores a world beyond forgiveness. It chronicles Thérèse’s search to find meaning in that which befalls her and her family and that which our society has yet to make peace with – crime.
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Coffee Shop God
At 35 Thérèse has finally found herself – the long awaited college degree, the high school teaching job, the new husband, two nearly grown children, and four stepchildren. For once, she anticipates a normal life, but a middle of the night phone call changes all of that. Her younger brother, while out of town on business, is shot and killed. Steve’s death sends her life into a tailspin of grief and a crippling depression. She becomes the glue that holds her eccentric family together.

This collection of essays, set in North Carolina, follows Thérèse as she comes to terms with the untimely and violent death of her brother. Never have the shortcomings of her family been more apparent. Steve had been the balance to it all; he had been the “normal,” and now Thérèse is left with the mother who always has a joke, the father who can not show affection, the ex-drug dealing brother who now is an evangelical Christian and the talking bird she inherits from her brother.

At every turn, a barrage of childhood memories floods Thérèse who would really rather live in the past. Never has she felt so alone or so desperate for connection. The essays follow Thérèse as she questions her new reality, her spirituality, which is in direct opposition to her parents’, and her love for her brother. She tries to recreate herself in the midst of bond hearings, autopsy photos, debilitating grief, and a new marriage. The narrator wrestles to accept the family she is left with while learning to forgive the young man who killed her brother.

A chance meeting in the bathroom with the killer’s sister reaffirms her faith in humanity and her own ability to forgive. She learns to accept her life without Steve and finds the strength to forgive the man who killed him. Richard, Thérèse’s father learns to express his love before it is too late, and from her brother’s bird Thérèse is taught that the past is always comfortingly in her present. The reader is left knowing that a new journey towards meeting the killer face-to-face may well be what lies ahead.

Thérèse will narrate the second half of this story in the full length documentary film The Final Gift. The film explores a world beyond forgiveness. It chronicles Thérèse’s search to find meaning in that which befalls her and her family and that which our society has yet to make peace with – crime.
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Coffee Shop God

Coffee Shop God

by Therese Bartholomew
Coffee Shop God

Coffee Shop God

by Therese Bartholomew

eBook

$8.99 

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Overview

At 35 Thérèse has finally found herself – the long awaited college degree, the high school teaching job, the new husband, two nearly grown children, and four stepchildren. For once, she anticipates a normal life, but a middle of the night phone call changes all of that. Her younger brother, while out of town on business, is shot and killed. Steve’s death sends her life into a tailspin of grief and a crippling depression. She becomes the glue that holds her eccentric family together.

This collection of essays, set in North Carolina, follows Thérèse as she comes to terms with the untimely and violent death of her brother. Never have the shortcomings of her family been more apparent. Steve had been the balance to it all; he had been the “normal,” and now Thérèse is left with the mother who always has a joke, the father who can not show affection, the ex-drug dealing brother who now is an evangelical Christian and the talking bird she inherits from her brother.

At every turn, a barrage of childhood memories floods Thérèse who would really rather live in the past. Never has she felt so alone or so desperate for connection. The essays follow Thérèse as she questions her new reality, her spirituality, which is in direct opposition to her parents’, and her love for her brother. She tries to recreate herself in the midst of bond hearings, autopsy photos, debilitating grief, and a new marriage. The narrator wrestles to accept the family she is left with while learning to forgive the young man who killed her brother.

A chance meeting in the bathroom with the killer’s sister reaffirms her faith in humanity and her own ability to forgive. She learns to accept her life without Steve and finds the strength to forgive the man who killed him. Richard, Thérèse’s father learns to express his love before it is too late, and from her brother’s bird Thérèse is taught that the past is always comfortingly in her present. The reader is left knowing that a new journey towards meeting the killer face-to-face may well be what lies ahead.

Thérèse will narrate the second half of this story in the full length documentary film The Final Gift. The film explores a world beyond forgiveness. It chronicles Thérèse’s search to find meaning in that which befalls her and her family and that which our society has yet to make peace with – crime.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940014039154
Publisher: Therese Bartholomew
Publication date: 04/22/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 124
File size: 891 KB

About the Author

Therese grew up in Charlotte, NC and graduated from UNC- Charlotte with a BA in English and Secondary Education, and a MS in Criminal Justice. She is a writer, speaker, filmmaker, teacher, and mother. Her writing has been published in The Charlotte Observer, Emrys Journal, Iodine, Compassion, and Main Street Rag.

Therese’s memoir, Coffee Shop God, is the companion piece to The Final Gift – “the essays are the victim voice and the film, the survivor.” Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking, calls Coffee Shop God “a moving account of the author’s struggle to make sense of life, faith, and humanity after the tragic loss of her brother.”Therese speaks across North Carolina about faith, forgiveness, and restorative justice. She lives in Charlotte with her husband Douglas and four of her six children.
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