My Grandma as a child outside the Taj Mahal
I’m grateful to hold some strong women as role models. And Grandma is one of them. As a young woman she escaped
an arranged engagement to a man much older than her, and fell in love and
married my Grandpa in India. He had been
a prisoner of war in a Japanese camp during WWII when he was just eighteen
years old, which Grandma said gave him a seize the day attitude.
My second book is very much inspired by my Grandma’s life
and her love of animals. She travelled with my Grandpa, their four children, a
border collie, a Pekinese and a joey kangaroo from Australia to India by boat
and land, before ending up on the Himalayan foothill I grew up on. They lived
there with Alfred. He was a painter and my Grandpa was a photographer.
My Grandma died on Friday, the same day the rhododendrons
bloomed. They were her favourite flowers. Every time I walk past them my heart
breaks, I miss her terribly. Each time, I take a deep breath and remember that she’s
here in other ways: in my heart and memories; through her stories; the people
that knew her and the kick-ass grandchildren she leaves behind.
By Jess Butterworth
@j_t_butterworth (twitter)
@jessbutterworthauthor (facebook)

4 comments:
She sounds wonderful!
A very warm and loving tribute, a delight to read.
Ah, Jess. So sorry. A beautiful tribute to an amazing-sounding lady.
What beautiful photos to have of her.
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