Author Anna Byrne' s close friend Mary Morgan spent her life looking for community. As a youth, the pain of Mary' s mother' s death is made more difficult by her family' s silent grief, financial problems and disapproval of her identity as a lesbian. At 17, Mary leaves her troubled home in Toronto to live among the Guna peoples of Panama-- an adventure that ignites four decades of social justice work in war-torn countries around the globe. Flying kites with Bedouin children, smoking with Bosnian men, and resisting the Guatemalan Civil War alongside Maya women offers Mary a powerful salve for her yearning to belong: Chosen family-- communities based on mutual values and support.When faced with a terminal diagnosis while living in a remote British Columbian town with few resources, Mary brings the heart of her life' s work-- the power of ordinary people to effect change-- to bear on her dying. In addition to Anna, she asks two other friends-- Jules, and Laurie-- to be her " dying team" and help her to die at home. Over 16 months, until her death with Medical Assistance In Dying (MAID), the team embarks on a profound experiment to curate Mary' s vision of a death steeped in beauty, ceremony, and practical support through building a casket, hosting a home vigil, and transporting her body for a green burial. The journey to bring tenderness and creativity to one person' s suffering emerges as an antidote to the urgency, scarcity, and loneliness that seek to define our lives-- and deaths.
Anna Byrne' s The Last Caravan offers a new paradigm for deathcare by returning it to the hands of the community.