The book is one of the titles that booklovers should not miss at Los Angeles premier book festival.
Arvada, CO – WEBWIRE – Tuesday, February 22, 2022
Dont miss the exhibit of Eleanor Gaccettas memoir One Caregivers Journey at the 2022 L.A. Times Festival of Books.
A more colorful and exciting Los Angeles Times Festival of Books awaits booklovers and fairgoers on April 23-24, 2022, on the USC Campus. Thousands of titles will be exhibited at the festival, and one book that booklovers should check out is the caregiving memoir One Caregivers Journey (BookBaby; 2019) by Eleanor Gaccetta.
Gaccettas One Caregivers Journey will be publicly displayed at the exhibit that self-publishing and book marketing company ReadersMagnet will hold at the 2022 L.A. Times Festival of Books.
One Caregivers Journey is a must-read for anyone who is a caregiver or anticipating becoming one. The book was written over 9 1/2 years through which the author cared for her mother full-time after the latter broke her him at the age of 93 and began to show worsening signs of dementia and other age-related health issues. The book is a journal snapshot into the realities, changes, and challenges of being a caregiver.
Written with faith, humor, and love, One Caregivers Journey will have readers laughing out loud and then reaching out for a tissue next.
Purchase a copy of Eleanor Gaccettas One Caregivers Journey today through the authors website https://www.onecaregiversjourney.com/
Her second book, Generations of Good Food, a cookbook published under ReadersMagnet is also available on her website.
One Caregivers Journey
Author | Eleanor Gaccetta
Publisher | BookBaby
Published date | March 28, 2019
Paperback | $12.51
About the Author
Eleanor is a Colorado native who grew up on a small farm just outside the city of Denver. After graduating high school, she worked for the State of Colorado for 31 ½ years serving her last 7 years as a legislative analyst for the Department of Human Services. During this time, she endeavored to obtain both a Bachelors and Master Degree from Regis University. After leaving the State of Colorado she worked for the City and County of Broomfield as a policy analyst for 7 years and then returned to the State of Colorado as a private contractor. She was forced to retire from nearly 40 years as a professional employee when her mother fell and broke her hip at the age of 93. Armed with faith, humor and love she was able to navigate a caregiving journey for the next 9 ½ years. She currently lives in a suburb west of Denver and enjoys cooking, gardening and spending time with family and friends. She is also the author of Generations of Good Food.