Book Feature: Insomnia by Jack Hawn

by | Mar 7, 2023 | Book Feature, Memoir, Nostalgic Feeling | 0 comments

Insomnia is a terrible thing. Tossing and turning on your bed, unable to even get a wink of sleep, is exhausting and maddening. In the book titled Insomnia by Jack Hawn, he perfectly captures what a battle between a person and sleeplessness truly is.

In an excerpt from the book itself, Hawn explains:

“It was so many years ago when I first met her, but almost like yesterday. Charlene, the love of my life, dominated my thoughts deep into the night and early morning hours. After six and a half years, I still grieved like a lost puppy missing its mom. Insomnia can be dreadful and incurable in some cases, I suppose. Married sixty-three years, Charlene left me looking as beautiful as the day she stepped into my life on her way home from high school to say hello to Onalee, her next-door girlfriend.”

Losing the love of your life is, for lack of a better word, devastating. Insomnia by Hawn tackles his sadness and grief at the passing of his wife, Charlene, but the pain isn’t the only thing haunting Jack. Memories from yesteryear also keep him up at night, and though the truth that his wife is now gone cripples him, the visions of their past are a bittersweet pill that makes things somewhat alright.

The Story of Jack Hawn’s Battle with Insomnia

The author was still mourning and missed his dear Charlene after seven years. He knows how terrible and sometimes incurable insomnia can be, and he displays all of it in Insomnia by Jack Hawn.

Jack, who was on his first army tour while dressed in his Army uniform, realized he had wanted to spend more time with this stunning woman, but Charlene made it apparent that wouldn’t happen.

Insomnia by Hawn describes how insomnia can occur and how challenging it is to handle. Sleep problems may disrupt a person’s lifestyle, and no amount of bedtime stories can alleviate them. The voyage into the past that Jack takes in the book Insomnia.

The Good Traits About the Book

Readers will likely appreciate traveling down memory lane with Jack Hawn as they learn about his life, which is undoubtedly full of fun, love, spontaneity, and friendship. The author’s peculiar ability to describe events in a way that takes you to the times he wrote about, whether it was his contact with personalities like Muhammad Ali or his first sexual experience as a confused fifteen-year-old, speaks volumes about his abilities as a sportswriter.

One distinguishing quality in Insomnia by Jack Hawn was his sense of humor, which could be found in any circumstance, whether favorable or unfavorable. There were many funny moments in the book, including his funny suspicions that his first wife and her ex-boyfriend were kissing on the day of his wedding, alluding to his second spouse, Mary Beth, as his buddy as he prepared to publicly propose, forgetting about her birthday, uploading an image of himself with a black eye and titling it, “the drywall won in a near knockout.”

Another plus is that we only noticed eight typos while reading, suggesting that Insomnia by Hawn was carefully edited. The book is quick, with over 150 pages and some amusing parts. We recommend this book if you like memoirs because it has some interesting characteristics.

Jack Hawn is undoubtedly a talented writer, not just in sports but also in sharing stories of his life and how insomnia took hold of him for many years. There’s not quite another book like Insomnia: Two Wives, Childhood Memories and Crazy Dreams, and there are not a lot of authors who are as honest as Jack is. Be sure to get his book by visiting his website, and prepare for a riveting read that will last for hours.

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