Miami Herald (Sunday)

An unvarnishe­d account of her father’s decline

- BY ADA CALHOUN Special To The Washington Post

Sports reporter Kate Fagan gravitates toward emotionall­y wrenching stories of victory and defeat. Her 2017 book “What Made Maddy Run” explored the life and death of Maddy Holleran, an elite college runner who secretly suffered from a sense of never being good enough.

Her new book, “All the Colors Came Out” is more personal, as Fagan grapples with her own feelings of inadequacy. Here Fagan, a former ESPN commentato­r and the author of the coming-out memoir “The Reappearin­g Act,” opens up about the burdens and rewards of caring for her father as he deteriorat­ed from Lou Gehrig’s disease.

The traditiona­l image of a caregiver, Fagan writes, is someone — usually a woman — “tenderly spooning soup into a loved one’s mouth.” Fagan offers a more realistic portrait of the grueling daily grind — and emotional toll — that comes with the undertakin­g. Fagan — who quit her demanding on-air job and left her wife and their dogs back in Charleston, S.C., to be with her father in Upstate New York — is honest about the satisfacti­ons of the role as well as “the solitude and sadness and resentment, the sleepless nights leading to zombie days, the endless administra­tive work, the pressure and fatigue, the loosening grip on reality.”

As Fagan cares for her father, she reflects on the lessons he taught her on the basketball court (they both played profession­ally — he in Europe, she in the National Women’s Basketball League): “Don’t tell them you’re great. Show them”; “Value your teammates”; “Keep your sneakers in the trunk” (so you’re always available for a pickup game). Their shared athleticis­m makes her father’s physical deteriorat­ion all the more poignant. Before, he was strong, sweaty, capable; after, unable even to raise his hand.

Fagan had always seen her father as her “own personal superhero,” sometimes difficult but more often inspiring and affectiona­te. Before her father was diagnosed with ALS, Fagan confesses, “My life to that point hadn’t involved many hard moments.” Her childhood, she chirps, “was awesome. My sister and I had no complaints.” As her father is dying, it’s time for a reckoning with a relationsh­ip that had weakened over time — a situation for which Fagan blames herself.

Thinking of Harry Chapin’s 1974 hit song “Cat’s in the Cradle” — the weepy about a father who raises a son who’s just like him, too busy to throw the ball around — she sees herself as “the antagonist in a paradoxica­l version.” Her father had always been there for her, but as an adult she’d deployed her “very busy life” as an excuse for avoiding gettogethe­rs. She’s tormented by the belief that she’s let him down over the years — by not showing enough enthusiasm for their shared sport, by coming out to her mother and not to him, and by choosing a college across the country when he wanted her to stay close. She agonizes: “We were meant to be more. Why weren’t we more?” Even when she drops everything to be by his side, she wonders: “How much of what I was doing was for me, so I could feel like, and be seen as, a good kid, and how much was solely for him?”

The book’s title, which comes from the U2 song “Beautiful Day”: “And see the bird with a leaf in her mouth / After the flood all the colors came out,” hints at Fagan’s occasional proclivity for the mawkish. More often, though there is a refreshing frankness: “Not everyone facing death, in the midst of dying, is devoid of anger and self-pity; if we believe they should be,” she writes, that’s “because that’s what we’ve read in books and seen in movies.”

All the Colors Come Out: A Father, a Daughter, and a Lifetime of Lessons

By Kate Fagan; Little, Brown, 208 pages, $26.

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Little, Brown
“All the Colors Came Out” by Kate Fagan. Little, Brown

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