Rating 4.75 stars.
Biographies when well done are some of my favorite reading. The Lois Wilson Story: When Love is Not Enough testifies to a well done biography - informative, fascinating, engaging, and entertaining. This one has it all.
William G. Borchert writes beautifully with facts, anecdotes, and balance. The writing carried me along and never once got in the way of the beauty of the story. These words from Lois’s mother are telling for the support Lois had in her “A man who does this kind of terrible thing to a wife and family he loves has to be a very sick man who needs a great deal of love and help himself.”
I’ve been on a tear watching and reading many things about Bill and Lois Wilson. This one about Lois was thorough - delivering her timeline and also some of her inner thoughts from her own memoirs and interviews. Seeing the progression for the founding of Al-Anon was interesting. More interesting was her progression and healing from codependency and her “addiction to Bill”. The lessons shine through and the tone is story based and never preachy. Wilson’s humility and honesty are beautiful.
Here is an example. “Lois later recalled slumping to her knees, leaning over her husband, and pounding him on the chest and arms, lightly at first, then harder and harder. She grew hysterical, saying, ‘I lie for you. I cover up for you. I can’t even look my own father in the face because of you. Every time you get drunk, I’m the one who feels guilty. Like it’s my fault. Because I couldn’t have children. That I’m not a good enough wife. But it’s not my fault! It’s not my fault! You can go to your bootleggers, your speakeasies. Where can I go? Tell me! Where can I go?’”
If you have any connection to an alcoholic (we all do) or any interest in biographies, I highly recommend this book.