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Ted's Urn
Indigo
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Ted's Urn
By None
Current price: $4.84


By None
Ted's Urn
Current price: $4.84
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
Eleanor Hutton is a young New Zealand General Practitioner – completely dedicated to her profession – whose ‘happiness’ is challenged by the deep and disturbing friendship that develops between her and her dying patient. The patient, Ted, in his middle sixties, is a widely travelled immigrant with an interest in ‘everything’, and his teasing and expansive vitality exposes Eleanor to the limitations of her settled life. After his death she learns, to her surprise and horror, that he has ‘gifted her’ the task of delivering his ashes to a life-long friend – a man of similar age who lives in a failed and corrupt southern African state.
Ted’s bequest is initially viewed by both Eleanor and her colleagues as preposterous – dangerous even – but, because she is ‘too good for her own good,’ Eleanor reluctantly agrees to undertake the journey. The result, which is narrated by a less-than-perfect ‘spirit’, records, through trying but comic and romantic adventure, a transformation – a transformation not only of Eleanor, but of all whom she meets. It is a transformation which endorses the discomfort of risk, and points the way towards self-awakening and fulfilment.
Eleanor Hutton is a young New Zealand General Practitioner – completely dedicated to her profession – whose ‘happiness’ is challenged by the deep and disturbing friendship that develops between her and her dying patient. The patient, Ted, in his middle sixties, is a widely travelled immigrant with an interest in ‘everything’, and his teasing and expansive vitality exposes Eleanor to the limitations of her settled life. After his death she learns, to her surprise and horror, that he has ‘gifted her’ the task of delivering his ashes to a life-long friend – a man of similar age who lives in a failed and corrupt southern African state.
Ted’s bequest is initially viewed by both Eleanor and her colleagues as preposterous – dangerous even – but, because she is ‘too good for her own good,’ Eleanor reluctantly agrees to undertake the journey. The result, which is narrated by a less-than-perfect ‘spirit’, records, through trying but comic and romantic adventure, a transformation – a transformation not only of Eleanor, but of all whom she meets. It is a transformation which endorses the discomfort of risk, and points the way towards self-awakening and fulfilment.

















