Nobody's Property: Living on the Remains of a Life in California
Gelesen von Emily Kathleen Cooke
Emily Kathleen Cooke
November 4, 1971
Jennifer Rose Cooke, a girl from California, just turned 18, goes missing in a frigid forest in West Germany. She has been hitchhiking. First she caught a ride with a trucker, then with a West German soldier. Maybe she was trying to visit a young professor she had met on the boat over from New York. On that trip, he had heard her say she might throw herself overboard.
April 28, 1972
Another girl, just turned three, lives with her parents in a house in Laurel Canyon that lets the California rain in. Her biggest fear is of the brown snails in the garden; she will not cross the brick path if one is there. It is her father's twenty-sixth birthday; on this day his sister Jenny's remains are found. Officially, she died "of exposure," although a murder investigation is begun and the file remains permanently open.
This is the tale of a relationship only half lived. I have no memories of my Aunt Jenny as a living person. For all of my younger years I knew her only as someone who had died, and the only lessons her story held for me were about death and the probability that the worst would happen. Then I began to write about her. This was the next logical step since for me she was pure story already. While I started trying to find the truth of what had happened to her, I began to see that each person in my family had a different version of the story that suited their particular worldview and satisfied their particular needs. I was no different.
In a sense, Jenny's story has become the instrument that I'm singing along to--singing about a childhood in gorgeous 1970s-era L.A., about a friendly divorce; about the changing California landscape, its violent beauty; about traveling with my dad to try to get closer to what happened; and about getting to know something about a living girl who, it turns out, preferred to be called "Rose," not Jenny.
I've left Rose alone for a few years, but now we're traveling together again.
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Chapters
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Read by Emily Kathleen Cooke
Bewertungen
By: Jennifer M. Douglas
Oh please, please, please contact me. This is just incredible. I am 59, have struggled through the past 40 years wishing I could see her again -- my Rose -- and we could ramble along together. When we were together, connecting and understanding together, everything was good. I want to ...
By: Abbie White
This story grabbed my attention right from the beginning. With the intimacy of the story, I began to feel like I had a genuine personal relationship with the family. This book is well written and read by the author. There are many profound thoughts and observations appearing throughout the story. ...
By: Emily
Abbie, you made my morning! Thank you for your thoughtful comments and questions. I find this is a story that just doesn't end for me. I guess the central struggle comes from wanting to free myself and let go, and on the other hand wanting to know about Jenny/Rose as ...
By: Jennifer M. Douglas
My contacts were wiped when my phone died.Can you call me? Send me an email and I'll send back my phone number.
By: Emily Cooke
Jenny, I'm so glad we connected.... Em