“Like Falling Through a Cloud” Book Launch by Eugenia Zukerman

“Like Falling Through a Cloud” Book Launch by Eugenia Zukerman

 

“Eugenia Zukerman—perhaps because she is a musician and a writer—has chronicled the music of the brain in an extraordinary way. Like Falling Through a Cloud is beautiful and riveting.” —Erica Jong, author of Fear of Flying

Sunday, November 10 at 3pm
Free, reservations encouraged
Hudson Hall at the historic Hudson Opera House
327 Warren Street, Hudson NY 12534
hudsonhall.org (518) 822-1438

Hudson, NY – Hudson Hall presents Eugenia Zukerman and the launch of her memoir, Like Falling Through a Cloud, an intimate, courageous, heartbreaking, lyrical, and uplifting account of the acclaimed flutist, published novelist, and television commentator’s struggle with Alzheimer’s disease. Like Falling Through a Cloud (East End Press, 2019) unfolds in fragments and rhymes, nightmares and revelations and provides an honest and ultimately brave and affirming account of life in the face of adversity. Zukerman reads from her memoir, sharing personal stories as well as taking questions in a Q&A with Executive Director and CEO of the Northeastern New York Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association, Elizabeth Smith-Boivin. This is an amazing opportunity to get a window into the workings of personal grace in the face of one of life’s most difficult of situations. The book launch and signing takes place Sunday, November 10, at 3pm.

Hailed by the Boston Globe as “an international triple threat…a published novelist, a television commentator and, most impressively, one of the finest flutists of our time,” Eugenia Zukerman worked hard and juggled it all—performing, writing, interviewing artists, directing concert series—with ease and grace. Until, in her early 70s, she became forgetful, misplacing papers, losing her words. Concerned, her daughters insisted she get tested. Eugenia, whose mother was sharp at 103, wasn’t worried. Until her sister, the doctor, reminded her: six of their mother’s siblings suffered cognitive decline and died in their 70s. The results of her neuro-psych exam and MRI confirmed: her cognitive impairment was real, and would only get worse.        

Outraged and terrified, Zukerman vowed to do her best to handle her diagnosis “privately and purposefully.” She began to chronicle her unraveling, mostly in verse. Like Falling Through a Cloud (East End Press, November 2019) is the result—an uplifting memoir of Eugenia Zukerman’s year of finding her way through the maze of confusion and brambles of loss. “I did seek help,” she shares, “but what seems to have saved me from crumbling and falling apart was music, love, poetry, and, oddly, laughter.”

In Like Falling Through a Cloud, Eugenia opens up about her childhood and therapy sessions; her fear of exposure, vulnerability, and public failure; her initial resistance (“I don’t want to have an evaluation about my devaluation.”); and creative coping strategies (“Instead of beating myself up when I can’t find a word, I’ll let it slowly emerge like the call of a distant bird.”) Gradually, Eugenia comes to accept the reality of living her life with a debilitating condition. In the process, she discovers her own remarkable bravery and resilience. What’s more, she recognizes how her story of going from terror and turbulence to giving thanks for another day and playing on might offer comfort to the millions of people grappling with dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

Eugenia Zukerman is an internationally renowned flutist and writer, and artistic director of Clarion Concerts. She was the artistic director of the Bravo! Vail Valley Music Festival in Colorado for 13 years and the arts correspondent on CBS Sunday Morning for more than 25 years. She is the author of two novels, two works of nonfiction, and numerous screenplays, articles, and book reviews. Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1944, she graduated from the Julliard School of Music and lived in New York City for many years. A mother of two daughters and two grandchildren, she makes her home in upstate New York with her husband, two horses, three dogs, and assorted wildlife.

 

 

Hudson Hall is a cultural beacon in the Hudson Valley, offering a dynamic year-round schedule of music, theater, dance, literature, workshops for youth and adults, as well as family programs and large-scale community events such as Winter Walk. Located in a historic landmark building housing New York State’s oldest surviving theater, Hudson Hall underwent a full restoration and reopened to the public in April 2017 for the first time in over 55 years. The newly restored Hudson Hall reflects Hudson’s rich history in a modern facility that welcomes residents and visitors from throughout our local community, across the nation, and around the globe.

Programs at Hudson Hall are funded, in part, by  New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. 

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