Cowboy, Wills, and A Mother’s Courage
When my son Moe was diagnosed with autism, my first instinct was to read. Get on the internet, get the books, and learn and much as I could. There are so many books on the treatment of autism, and I quickly became overwhelmed with all there was to learn. I couldn’t read them all. Then there were the memoirs, famous in autism circles: Thinking in Pictures: My Life with Autism, Look Me in the Eye: My Life with Asperger’s
, The Horse Boy: A Father’s Quest to Heal His Son
. I read a little bit of these, here and there, but I found it difficult. The grief was too new and it was hard to read about how challenging life could be, even for successful adults living with autism. It took me weeks to finally watch the Temple Grandin
movie on HBO, though I knew it would be excellent. (It was, and now it’s a big Emmy winner too!)
Earlier this summer, I was approached by the publisher of the book Cowboy and Wills: A Love Story, a memoir written by Monica Holloway, the mother of an autistic boy. I’d heard of the book long before, but could never bring myself to read it. But it has been over a year since Moe’s diagnosis, and it seemed time. So I asked if we could read the book for the From Left To Write book club, and today we are writing about this book.
The first thing I noticed as I read Cowboy and Wills, is that Wills is nothing like Moe. Where Wills is incredibly verbal, Moe has very few words. Where Wills is extremely sensitive to noise and commotion, Moe seeks light and sensory input. Where Wills has anxiety and obsessive compulsive tendencies, Moe eats mud. They say that when you’ve met one autistic child, you’ve met one autistic child. Wills are Moe are very different kids.
The second thing I realized is that it didn’t matter. I felt for Wills and his struggles, and I understood Monica’s feelings of fear and isolation. I understood her willingness to do anything for Wills. In one scene, Wills bolts out of the front gate at a birthday party. She catches him and wonders what if she hadn’t been fast enough? But she knows that “I would be fast enough…even in my eighties.” I’ve had the same fears. She wishes that “love cured autism.” Me too.
Warning: Spoiler Alert. If you don’t want to know how this book ends, stop reading here! Though frankly, I wish I’d had this information before I started the book.
This book was not the book I thought it was going to be. I thought it was a book about how a dog helped bring a boy out of his shell, helping him break through his autism. And it was, at least in part. Cowboy, a golden retriever puppy, helped Wills with his confidence and with his ability to handle change. When Wills was not sure how to approach others, Cowboy would do it for him. When Wills was scared or upset, he could use the dog, saying that Cowboy was afraid or upset. Cowboy was ice-breaker, interpreter, and therapist all in one. But here is the thing nobody told me: the dog, a pet store purchase, died after only 3 years.
I was reading the end of the book, as Cowboy was getting sicker and sicker (why wasn’t I warned??), when I received a call from Moe’s teacher at school, the magnificent Mrs. M. Moe had had an accident at school. My heart raced and I imagined myself racing to an emergency room somewhere. Turns out he was fine, just fell on the playground and cut his lip, but it bled pretty badly and she wanted to let me know. He could stay the rest of the day. As I read on, crying a little out of relief but mostly because the dog was dying (are you kidding me??), the phone rang again and I had to quickly pull myself together. Moe’s teacher called back. He was pretty uncomfortable and fussy. Would I come get him? I hung up the phone, then broke down in tears.
I realized that I’m still pretty fragile. I haven’t quite come to terms with Moe’s diagnosis and maybe I never will. Hearing others’ stories will always be difficult. But I have come a long way. In the early days, I was afraid to involve myself in any support groups for fear that I’d hear too many upsetting stories. But I went to one parent meeting and found other people with humor, open ears and a lot of great advice. I was worried about what I’d see when Moe first entered school. What would the kids be like? But seeing the other kids like Moe is great. They laugh and play, and yes, occasionally have difficult times. And that is great too because then I know I’m not alone. And after reading Cowboy and Wills I realized that I need to read more autism stories. Wills has many challenges, but he’s a funny, smart boy. This book, though the dog dies (seriously??), is full of inspiration and hope. And we all can use a little dose of that.
I was given a copy of the book Cowboy and Wills free of charge by the publisher, with no obligation, as part of the From Left To Write book club. Jen also writes at her personal blog, Anybody Want A Peanut?
Cowboy & Wills by Monica Holloway – A From Left to Write Book Club
A boy and a dog, a dog and a boy. Do you have a pet that has changed your family? Although we, as parents, all face challenges with our kids, some are more profound. What gets your through? Read the stories the From Left to Write bloggers are sharing today, inspired by book Cowboy & Wills: A Remarkable Little Boy and the Puppy that Changed His Life by Monica Holloway.
Special thanks to Jen Bush from Anybody Want A Peanut? (a journal of life, love and early intervention) for sourcing this book and for leading us off here on From Left to Write with her post about Cowboy, Wills and a mother’s courage.
- Nicki from Suddenly Single Journey thinks about pet parenting
- Elaine from Connor and Helen Grow Up! counts milestones
- Neena from Hooey! Critic is an animal lover
- Emily from West of the Loop discusses allergies and social situations
- Jennifer from Ramblings of a Semi-Conscious Mastermind Mommy is at a loss for words
- Meghan Harvey from Meg’s Idle Chatter writes about all the pets she’s loved before
- April from It’s All About Balance related to the feeling of “how did we get here?”
- Jen Bush from Anybody Want A Peanut? has a mother’s courage
- Alma K from Marketing Mommy is finding the right classroom for her child
- Michelle from Honest & Truly! has a piece of the puzzle
- Lisa from Grandma’s Briefs muses about a dog by any other name
- Sharon from Channeling Ricky remembers her 4th grade teacher
- Melissa from Life with Sophia has transformed from teacher (of kids with autism) to mother
- Elena Sonnino from C.Mom asks: do you believe?
- Brenda Bartella Peterson from brendabartellapeterson.com reflects on owning a pet
- Amy from Occupation: Mommy feels for a friend whose daughter has autism
- Emily from Mama Sick says that sometimes the right pet is waiting to find you
- Cristie Ritz King from The Traveling Circus tells a dog love story or three
- Robin from mylifeasitis thinks about the power of limitless love
- Lisa from Hannemaniacs treasures her family dog
- melanie from tales from the crib writes about so much more than “just” an education
- Mommy Max from the French Mommy born in California just keeps swimming
- Linsey from Me Too You has a Christmas puppy who is growing up with her family
- Kristine from Mommy Needs Therapy or a Bottle of Wine discusses the “marked” child
- Helen P. from I want a book deal is scared about autism
- Michele Spring Fajeau from Read Out Loud describes her mama motto “Be kind”
About the book:
In this exceptionally touching memoir, critically acclaimed author Monica Holloway shares the extraordinary, deeply moving story of Cowboy, the golden retriever puppy who changed her son’s life.
The day Monica learns that her lovable, brilliant threeyear- old son, Wills, has autism spectrum disorder, she takes him to buy an aquarium. It’s the first in a string of impulsive trips to the pet store to buy animals as a distraction from the uncontrollable, crushing reality of Wills’s diagnosis. But while Wills diligently tends to the growing menagerie, what he really wants is a puppy. And one Christmas, when Wills is six, Cowboy Carol Lawrence joins their family.
Like all dynamic duos, Cowboy and Wills complement each other perfectly. Wills is cautious, fastidious, and irresistibly tenderhearted. Cowboy, a rambunctious golden retriever, is overeager, affectionate, and impulsive. And from the moment Cowboy enters their lives, Monica sees her son step a little farther into the world.
Soon, the boy who could barely say hello to his classmates in kindergarten is sharing stories of his new “sister” Cowboy during morning circle. Children crowd around them at the park, and instead of running away, Wills, holding Cowboy’s leash in his sweaty fist, proudly answers all of their questions. With Cowboy, he finds the courage to invite kids over for playdates, overcomes his debilitating fear of water to swim along beside her in the family pool, and, after years of gentle coaxing, Wills finally sleeps in his own bed with Cowboy’s paws draped across his small chest. Through it all, Cowboy is there, dragging him toward other children, giving him the confidence to try new things and the courage to face his worst fears. And when Cowboy turns out to need her new family as much as they need her, they discover just how much she has taught them—about devotion, about loyalty, and about never giving up.
Sometimes it’s what you don’t know to hope for that saves you. For Monica, her husband, Michael, and their son, Wills, salvation came in the form of a puppy with pale blonde fur, chocolate brown eyes, a fondness for chewing the crotch out of underpants, and a limitless capacity for love.
Visit Monica Holloway’s website and the publisher’s website.
Fan Cowboy & Wills on Facebook.
Purchase your copy of Cowboy & Wills by Monica Holloway.
Check out other From Left to Write upcoming book clubs and follow the From Left to Write Google Calendar to keep up to date on all of the book club events and dates.
This Is Not The Story You Think It Is by Laura Munson: A From Left to Write Book Club
Can you choose happiness? Even in the midst of a very unlikely time to be happy? Read the stories the From Left to Write bloggers are sharing today, inspired by the book This Is Not the Story You Think It Is by Laura Munson.
- Elaine from Helen and Connor Grow Up remembers a comment from a friend “babies are not good for marriages“
- Alma Klein from Marketing Mommy says there are limits of unlikely happiness
- melanie from tales from the crib wonders whether to complain or not to complain
- Michelle from Honest & Truly! pushes through the unexpected
- Nicki from Suddenly Single Journey finds herself at a crossroads in her life
- Jen Bush from Anybody Want A Peanut? is finding the end of suffering
- Zen Mama Wannabe from Zen Mama Wannabe considers the aftermath of a crisis
- Meghan Harvey from Meg’s Idle Chatter tears up while reading about choosing happiness
- Darryle from I never signed up for this…. loves reading the Sunday New York Times Modern Love essay
- Sharon from Channeling Ricky connects the story to things beyond our control
- Neena from hooey!critic ponders the phrase “I don’t buy it”
- Kristine form Mommy Needs Therapy or a Bottle of Wine says this is not the life lesson you think it is
- Thien-Kim from I’m Not the Nanny determines that yes it is possible to choose to be happy
- Melissa from Life with Sophia wants to not want
- Lisa Hanneman from Hannemaniacs is sure this is not the post you think it is
- Roxane from Rox and Roll remembers verses about love
- Cristie Ritz King from The Traveling Circus made a decision to be happy
- Rachel from a little each day has waking dreams
- Linsey from Me Too You get schooled by her 4-year-old on taking actions to choose happiness
- Heidi from Coast 2 Coast Mom considers relying on other people for happiness
- Brenda Bartella Peterson from BrendaBartellaPeterson.com discusses controlling things in your control
About the book:
When Laura Munson’s essay was published, The New York Times was so flooded with responses that they had to close down the comment feature. Readers wrote in saying that they had sent the column to all of their friends. Therapists wrote Munson to tell her that they were passing it out to their clients.
What did Munson write that caused such a fervor?
Laura detailed what happened when her husband of more than twenty years told her he wasn’t sure he loved her anymore and wanted to move out. And while you might think you know where this story is going, this isn’t the story you think it is. Laura’s response to her husband: I don’t buy it.
In this poignant, wise, and often funny memoir, Munson recounts a period of months in which her faith in herself-and her marriage-was put to the test. Shaken to the core after the death of her beloved father, not finding the professional success that she had hoped for, and after countless hours of therapy, Laura finally, at age forty, realized she had to stop basing her happiness on things outside her control and commit herself to an “End of Suffering.” This Is Not The Story You Think It Is… chronicles a woman coming to terms with the myths we tell ourselves-and others-about our life and realizing that ultimately happiness is completely within our control.
Purchase your copy of This Is Not the Story You Think It Is by Laura Munson here.
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Full Disclosure: From Left to Write bloggers received complimentary copies of the book This Is Not the Story You Think It Is for use and participation in the From Left to Write Book Club. They were not obligated to write about this book.
If You Knew Suzy by Katherine Rosman: A From Left to Write Book Club
What would you find out about your parent when they die? What would your kids find out about you? A new thing or two might be learned, would it not? Read the stories the From Left to Write bloggers are sharing today, inspired by the book If You Knew Suzy: A Mother, A Daughter, A Reporter’s Notebook by Katherine Rosman.
The Twitter hashtag for the From Left to Write book club is #left2write. Follow From Left to Write at @fromleft2write. Follow Katie Rosman at @katierosman.
- Helen P from I Want a Book Deal is motivated to make a call to her mother’s childhood friend and from Milf Alert says don’t join this club
- Emily from West of the Loop bought a famous Coach beach tote
- Jennifer aka Mastermind Mommy from Ramblings of a Semi-Conscious Mastermind Mommy remembers a woman who meant so much to her, but whom she knows little about
- Melissa from Life with Sophia writes a letter to her late mother-in-law
- Elena from Cara Mamma describes good patients and bad patients
- Melanie from tales from the crib tells her kids some things she wants them to know about her
- Sharon from Channeling Ricky describes the difference between needs and wants
- Pamela Gold from 2 Much Testosterone thinks about the lengths she would go for her mother
- Lisa Carpenter from Grandma’s Briefs recalls her mom and music
- Cristie from The Traveling Circus asks if we only knew you better, what more could we be?
- Brenda Bartella Peterson from BrendaBartellaPeterson.com, a memoir writer herself, thinks about different approaches to memoirs
- Grace Duffy from Formerly Gracie thinks about if any of us only knew…
- Travel Mommy from The Travel Mommy tells the story of her baby boy’s Hebrew name as a force of strength
- Emily from Mama Sick was hit too close to home, but was inspired nonetheless
- Lisa from Hannemaniacs wonders if her son will know Lisa
- Thien-Kim from I’m Not the Nanny relates that being a stay at home mom was never her goal
- Rachel E. Ayers from A Little Each Day is reminded that this life is oh so precious
- Paige Bayer from Canning with Kids had this book come to her at just the right time
- c2cmom from Coast to Coast Mom examines the curse and privilege of having a daughter
- Darryle Pollack from I never signed up for this…. tells her kids a little bit about their grandmother, Marcy
- Linsey Krolik from Me Too You thinks about the missing pieces
- Michelle from Wife and Mommy wonders what her daughter would eulogize about her
- Rebekah from Mom-in-a-Million brings her Grandmom to life
- Samantha from temporarily me dot com reflects on her rebellious teenage relationship with her mother
About the book:
Faced with the loss of her mother, Suzy, to cancer at sixty, Wall Street Journal reporter Katherine Rosman longs to find answers to the questions that we all wrestle with after losing someone we love. So she does what she does best: she opens her notebook and starts investigating.
Thumbing through her late mother’s address book, Rosman begins to discover a woman whose life was intricately connected to a host of characters her daughter hardly knew. Her reporting skills at the ready, she embarks on a cross-country odyssey, tracking down total strangers from whom she hopes to learn about a woman she once thought she couldn’t know better. Venturing into the heart of some colorful communities, Rosman interviews friends and acquaintances of her mother’s, as well as people whose relationships with her were more complex though no less potent—among them a former golf caddie, a legendary Pilates instructor, an eBay glass collector, and an immigrant doctor at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. As Rosman attempts to fill in the blank spaces that may explain her mother’s motivations and philosophies in building a life and in facing death, she comes to understand this woman as she never imagined she could.
Blending humor, honesty, and old-fashioned reporting, Rosman grapples with the bittersweet reality that sometimes we can’t truly know someone until after she is gone. At once comforting, candid, and very funny, If You Knew Suzy is a heartfelt memoir against which readers can consider themselves and the lives of all those they love.
Author website:
http://www.katherinerosman.com
Publisher website:
http://www.harpercollins.com/books/If-You-Knew-Suzy-Katherine-Rosman/?isbn=9780061735233
Purchase your copy of If You Knew Suzy by Katherine Rosman here.
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Full Disclosure: From Left to Write bloggers received complimentary copies of the book If You Knew Suzy by Katherine Rosman for use and participation in the From Left to Write Book Club. They were not obligated to write about this book.








