Alison Jean Lester

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Alison Jean Lester

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Born
The United States
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October 2013

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Alison Jean Lester was born to a British mother and an American father, who met on an airplane when she was a Pan Am stewardess and he was coming back from participating in the first American expedition to Mount Everest. She has variously studied, worked, and raised children in the US, the UK, China, Italy, Taiwan, Japan and Singapore, and now lives in England with her husband and their miniature schnauzer. Her first novel, Lillian on Life, was published in 2015, and her second, Yuki Means Happiness, came out in July 2017. Her memoir of her mother's amazing approach to the end of her life, Absolutely Delicious: A Chronicle of Extraordinary Dying, was published on 22 October, 2020. ...more

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Average rating: 3.55 · 1,009 ratings · 256 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
Lillian on Life

3.45 avg rating — 748 ratings — published 2014 — 12 editions
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Yuki Means Happiness

3.75 avg rating — 182 ratings — published 2017 — 3 editions
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Glide

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3.96 avg rating — 27 ratings2 editions
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Absolutely Delicious: A Chr...

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4.05 avg rating — 19 ratings3 editions
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The Sound of It

3.94 avg rating — 16 ratings3 editions
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Lillian, das Leben und die ...

3.60 avg rating — 5 ratings2 editions
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Restroom Reflections: How C...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2011 — 5 editions
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[(Present for Success )] [A...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings2 editions
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Babysitting

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LA VIE DE LILLIAN, MODE D'E...

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More books by Alison Jean Lester…
Quotes by Alison Jean Lester  (?)
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“Here's what I want you to learn from this: Never let someone answer a question for you. Jump in with anything at all to make sure hat you're the one talking. Say, 'That's an interesting question', or 'I'm glad you asked that question,' or 'Oh goody, my favorite subject.' Say anything that will guarantee that you're in the conversation about yourself and not out of it like a teenager standing next to her mother at a cocktail party.
You must tell your own story, never let someone, even someone as familiar to you as your sister-in-law think she knows you better than you know yourself. She only sees what you do, she doesn't' see who you are inside. If I regret anything when I look back, it's how often I allowed people to think what they wanted to thing. I should've stopped them sort. I should've laughed at their assumptions. I should've hooted with laughter, 'Hoo hoo hoo,' and followed with twinkling, mischievous smile just to throw them off, just to keep them guessing,
The problem is they watch what you do, who you love, how you cook, what you read and what you don't read, and they decide what it means, and sometimes you're not there to stop them, or you get the timing wrong. I've always wondered why people look so much to action for meaning. When people tell you a story, something that happened to them, something important, don't ask them what they did , ask them what they wanted to do, what they want to do is who they are. Actions are whispers compared to dreams.”
Alison Jean Lester, Lillian on Life

“You know what I remember most vividly from that hospital? There were creases in the pillowcase.
"I was in pain when they brought me in. They'd bandaged me up before transporting me, but they hand't had anything to deaden that kind of pain. So I wasn't clear in my head. I don't remember who was holding the stretcher, anything like that.
"But when they lifted me up, and I looked at the cot I'd be transferred to, even as they tipped me onto it, I noticed the creases in the pillowcase, and it was everything I could do not to cry. You get used to things being dusty and gritty and oily, you really do, but then, when there's something clean, something that's been folded carefully, and unfolded carefully and it's there for your head, it's like your heart, it's like I don't know, I can't describe it.”
Alison Jean Lester, Lillian on Life

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