Longtime Senior Planet contributor Erica Manfred passed away Thursday September 21 in hospice in Florida.
Erica Manfred was not one to mince words.
“That first page is a mess,” she told me about a piece of writing I sent her. “And the ending needs work.” She was a great editor who gave me fast feedback on my essays and she totally supported my writing career. I will miss her friendship and her fearless writing which appeared in her sub stack newsletter, “Snarky Senior.”
Erica never held back her opinions or her feelings and she dealt with aging and illness with incredible boldness and candor. In her last newsletter she wrote, “I’m now 80 but I feel 90. I have a couple of deadly diseases and will be lucky to get to 81. It really pisses me off that living to 90 or even 100 isn’t big deal anymore. Why don’t I get those extra years? … I reassure myself that at least I will avoid the slide into senility.”
On September 21, Erica Manfred died in Hospice by the Sea in Boca Raton, Florida . She was 80. Her daughter Tina was with her.
The Friend and Writer
Erica was my good friend for many decades. We first met when I worked as the office manager for the NY Local of the National Writers Union. A fellow member, she helped with events I had to organize. Erica volunteered to “schlepp” the wine and snacks in her car, making my job much easier.
Erica loved to gossip and give advice and recently wrote about her compulsion to offer unsolicited advice, while she admitted she was bad at it. Erica saw herself clearly with all her faults, a trait she used well in her humorous personal essays.
Whether she was writing about her lifelong struggles with weight or being a Jew going overboard decorating a Christmas tree with friends, she was funny.
In a recent essay about paranormal phenomenon, Erica wrote: “Mediums communicate with the dead, maybe because no one else will have anything to do with them. They want to let their loved ones know they’re OK. OK? How OK can you be when you’re dead.”
We last spoke on the phone on September 10. By then, she’d been in hospice care at home for several months due to advanced lung cancer. I noted that I’d see her in our writing group on September 20. During the pandemic, Erica had founded a workshop on zoom and we met every two weeks. Erica said, “Oh I’ll talk to you before then.”
Right after our call, she texted me a suggestion about how to mend a falling out I had with a gay male friend. I shot back that her idea would make things worse. She admitted, “Bad suggestion. G’nite.” I shook my head and sensed we were both laughing as we put down our phones. That was our final interaction and typical Erica.
A few days later, I learned that Erica had fallen and broken her hip, and she was admitted to a hospice facility. I thought it was eerie that her last Snarky Senior essay talked about when she fell and broke her hip years ago when she was living in upstate New York. It was almost like her last piece was a foreshadowing. She also predicted (correctly) that she would not make it to her next birthday, in December.
Life and History
Erica grew up in New Jersey, but moved to New York City right after high school and always considered herself a New Yorker. She graduated from City College and loved living in Manhattan . But after she married, she gave up her walk up apartment on the Upper East Side and moved upstate. After her divorce, she remained upstate in the Woodstock area. Erica always used her life as fodder for her writing and penned a self-help book called He’s History, You’re Not; Surviving Divorce After 40.
When she could no longer take the cold winters, Erica moved to Florida. She loved living there and swimming in the pool, but she hated the red state politics and railed against the picky rules in her apartment complex. Many of these essays are in her anthology, I’m Old So Why Aren’t I Wise?: Snarky Senior in the Sunshine State.
Erica was not just a personal essayist and humorist, she was an accomplished journalist who wrote about a wide variety of subjects- from technology to health care for a variety of magazines and newspapers and websites. Her essays and articles appeared in the Washington Post and USA Today and the New York Times. She was a technology columnist at Senior Planet for many years.
Erica kept writing up until the very end. In the last few months of her life, she published articles in Next Avenue about hiring a death doula and signing up for hospice care at home. Even as she was dying, she offered solid advice based upon research and her own personal experiences.
Erica Manfred was an original and authentic voice and she will be missed.
Kate Walter is the author of two memoirs: Behind the Mask: Living Alone in the Epicenter; and Looking for a Kiss: A Chronicle of Downtown Heartbreak and Healing. Her essays and opinion pieces have appeared in The New York Times, Newsday, New York Daily News, AM-NY, Next Avenue, The Advocate, The Village Sun and other outlets. She taught writing at CUNY and NYU for three decades and now works as a writing coach.

COMMENTS
19 responses to “Remembering Erica Manfred”
Just saw this. I remember her on our Zoom meetings for Senior Planet writers-a funny, straightforward woman! Condolences to her family and friends.
I love the memories people have of my Mom (Erica Manfred) Thank you for keeping her memory alive!
A beautiful tribute to a person whose columns and wit were always, for me, a high point of Senior Planet communications. We will miss her spark!
Wonderful tribute – thank you so much for sharing. I was so very sorry to read of Erica’s passing. She will be missed. Rest in peace.
I didn’t meet her, but through this tribute to her that let us know who she was let me feel that I already knew this wonderful woman . Rest in peace and my condolences to her family.
Thank you for this nice tribute to Erica. I didn’t know her but I think if I did, we would be good friends.
Her articles were always a great read! Periodically the email notices about them were serendipitous with the subject, a joke or comment being exactly what I needed to read at that moment.
She was the type of person I would love to have as a close friend.
I wasn’t involved long enough to have met her. She must have been wonderful, positive, and a great friend.
Thank you for this loving tribute. I recently came upon Snarky Senior and loved Erica’s, well, very snarky style. I will go back and read and reread her words of wisdom.
Thanks, Kate, for that lovely piece.
I knew Erica from her earliest days with Senior Planet and enjoyed her witty and candid approach to writing about aging. She really set a tone here and I’ll miss her contributions. I hope we continue to honor her with a dose of snark from time to time!
I was so sad to hear of Erica’s passing. I loved receiving & reading her newsletters. Loved her wit & honesty. R I P, Erica. You will be missed.
Thank you for a wonderful tribute. I admired her wit and candor.
Erica sounds like an incredible woman, journalist and writer with a good heart and soul. I didn’t know her but your tribute brought her to life. My condolences to her daughter and family.
Pat W
This was so touching. So sorry we lost her. She was talented writer and brave.
Thank you for letting us know about this fascinating woman who made her mark in the most positive way.
Way to go, Erica and thank you Joan!
That is a wonderful tribute to Erica Manfred. Very good to read it, although I did not have the pleasure to know her, it is truly inspiring.
Thank you for publishing Kate’s wonderful tribute, it helps sooth a pain in my heart. I also originally met Erica through the writers union. I admired her as a writer and especially a humorist and loved her as a friend.
Beautiful way to honor her with this piece. I love the memories – honest but loving. We will hope we will each be remembered as well on our last day. I’m sorry for her passing long before you would have hoped or thought.
Sincerely, Robyn in FL
Wonderful tribute, Kate Walter – warm, loving, and beautifully written. In 2009, I interviewed Erica about her new book, “He’s History, You’re Not: Surviving Divorce After 40”: https://joanprice.com/2009/05/hes-history-youre-not-interview-wi.html . And if readers want to know racy details about her post-divorce escapades, her personal essay, “The Wacky Iraqui, the Shaman Lover, and Me,” is in my 2013 anthology, “Ageless Erotica”: https://joanprice.com/books/ageless-erotica .
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