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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/865289658

His oldest friend : the story of an unlikely bond

"The complexities and contradictions of the friendship between a 93-year-old wheelchair-bound woman living in a New York City nursing home and a poor, 20-year-old Hispanic volunteer charged with visiting her on afternoons is the subject of this inspirational book. Pulitzer-winning New York Times reporter Kleinfield quickly points out the cultural and generational differences between the improbable pair, as Miss Margaret Oliver and Elvis Checo, who has been hired by the woman's daughter as her companion, seek to make sense of what life and time have dealt them. Leaving his rented room in a Manhattan community known for its drug trade and crime, Elvis recognizes in Miss Oliver a kindred soul who reminds him of his ailing Dominican grandmother: both women's lives have been diminished by physical illness and the loneliness of advancing years. In a series of wise, compassionate anecdotes about this seemingly odd couple, Kleinfield forces readers to examine stereotypes about the young and the old. This is a joyous book about people talking and listening in a marvelous exchange concerning friendship, laughter and the choices that shape our existence. Like Tuesdays with Morrie, it should have no trouble reaching a broad range of readers."--Publishers Weekly.

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http://schema.org/description

  • "A teenage volunteer at a nursing home in Manhattan, a young hispanic, boy, Elvis Checo, was hired to visit a wheelchair-bound ninety year old nursing home resident. The result was a beautiful friendship."
  • ""The complexities and contradictions of the friendship between a 93-year-old wheelchair-bound woman living in a New York City nursing home and a poor, 20-year-old Hispanic volunteer charged with visiting her on afternoons is the subject of this inspirational book. Pulitzer-winning New York Times reporter Kleinfield quickly points out the cultural and generational differences between the improbable pair, as Miss Margaret Oliver and Elvis Checo, who has been hired by the woman's daughter as her companion, seek to make sense of what life and time have dealt them. Leaving his rented room in a Manhattan community known for its drug trade and crime, Elvis recognizes in Miss Oliver a kindred soul who reminds him of his ailing Dominican grandmother: both women's lives have been diminished by physical illness and the loneliness of advancing years. In a series of wise, compassionate anecdotes about this seemingly odd couple, Kleinfield forces readers to examine stereotypes about the young and the old. This is a joyous book about people talking and listening in a marvelous exchange concerning friendship, laughter and the choices that shape our existence. Like Tuesdays with Morrie, it should have no trouble reaching a broad range of readers."--Publishers Weekly."@en
  • "Provides a portrait of a friendship that spans generations, between Margaret Oliver, a ninety-year-old wheelchair-bound resident of a Manhattan nursing home, and Elvis Checo, a poor, Hispanic teenage volunteer."
  • "He was a teenage volunteer at a nursing home on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. She was a wheelchair-bound resident in her nineties."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Biography"
  • "Biography"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "His oldest friend : The story of an unlikely bond"
  • "His oldest friend : the story of an unlikely bond"
  • "His oldest friend : the story of an unlikely bond"@en
  • "His oldest friend : the story of an unlikely bond across generations"