Magical Journey – in paperback, and a giveaway

At the end of this post, there are details on how to win a copy of Magical Journey!

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I am republishing this review in honor of Magical Journey’s paperback release.  Please leave a comment to be entered to win a free copy!

To say that I was excited to read Katrina Kenison’s new book, Magical Journey: An Apprenticeship in Contentment, is an almost ridiculous understatement.  I read The Gift of an Ordinary Day: A Mother’s Memoir a couple of years ago in one breathless gulp, astonished to have found someone whose writing so closely – albeit more beautifully and more eloquently – mirrored the contents of my own heart and spirit.  Quickly, I read Katrina’s first book, Mitten Strings for God: Reflections for Mothers in a Hurry which moved me as well.  And then, in a twist of events that reminded me of how benevolent this universe can be, I bumped into Katrina at a coffee shop less than a mile from my house.  Although we had never met, we recognized each other immediately.  After that, we began corresponding, and I am now privileged and honored to call Katrina a teacher, a mentor, and a friend.

Reading Katrina’s writing is a unique experience for me.  It feels like a call and response chant with my own thoughts.  In her trademark sensitive, lambent prose, Katrina touches on things, topics, and feelings that are among my most fiercely-believed, deeply-buried, and profoundly-felt.  Many times as I read Magical Journey I gasped audibly, when I read lines from my very favorite poem or the description of a sentiment I know so well it feels like it beats in my own chest.  Perhaps most of all, Katrina and I share the same preoccupation with impermanence; our spirits circle around a similar wound, which has to do with how quickly this life flies by, and with how irreplaceable these days are.  Both The Gift of an Ordinary Day and Magical Journey are suffused with a bittersweet awareness of time’s passage that is keenly, almost uncomfortably familiar to me.

Magical Journey opens with enormous twin losses: Katrina’s sons have both left the house (her older son to college, and her younger son to boarding school) and soon thereafter one of her dearest friends dies after a multi-year battle with cancer.  These two events form a cloud that stands between Katrina and the sun, and the book takes place in their shadow.  Magical Journey is Katrina’s reckoning with life on the other side of these two farewells, and with entering the “afternoon of life,” when she is “aware as never before that our time here is finite.”

Though different, each of the losses that Katrina experiences are both irrevocable and life-altering.  I related to both.  I read about Katrina grieving the years when her children lived at home with tears running down my face.  She describes the particular, poignant reality of life with small children at home and I weep, because while I am in those years, right now, I am already mourning them.  No matter how I avert my gaze, I can’t stop staring at the bald truth that these days are numbered; I cry daily for the loss of the days I am still living.

At times my nostalgia for our family life as it used to be – for our own imperfect, cherished, irretrievable past – is nearly overwhelming.  The life my husband and sons and I had together, cast now in the golden light of memory, seems unbearably precious. 

I can’t read this paragraph without active sobs, because if I am aware of the preciousness of these days to the point of pain now, how will I possibly exist with their memory when they are gone?  This question stymies me regularly, and brings me to my knees with its resolute, stubborn immovability.  Luckily for me, Katrina provides a guide, lights a lamp, and has she has for several years now, shows me that there is a path forward.

Katrina’s other seminal experience, that of walking with her friend Marie through cancer and, to death, is familiar to me because my mother did the very same thing with her best friend, my “second mother,” who died at 49 of cancer.  Katrina shares with Marie the intense intimacy of late-stage cancer and death.  “Staying – in mind and body and spirit – was in itself a kind of journey, and traveling quietly at her side to death’s door was, apart from giving birth, the single most important thing I have ever done.”  Katrina’s description of the last weeks and days of Marie’s life evokes the immense power in simply staying.  This theme, of the vital importance of abiding with our friends, our emotions, our lives, recurs later in the book, when after a month at Kripalu, Katrina observes that “going away, even for a short time, taught me something about it means to stay.”

Marie dies only a few weeks after Katrina’s second son leaves home.  Though she returns to her own home and her own life, Katrina finds both changed and foreign.  She is reminded that “no matter how much effort I pour into trying to reshape reality, I am not really in control of much at all.”  Thus commences a dark season for Katrina, months of finding her balance in a world that looks the same as always but that is in fact utterly changed.  Her empty house swarms with memories, she watches dusk fall early over the mountains outside of her kitchen window, and she finds herself turning more and more to her long-time yoga practice.

I have to surrender all over again to the truth that being alive means letting go.  I have to trust that being right where I am really is some kind of progress, and that there is a reason I’ve been called to visit this lonely darkness.

It is literally fall and winter when Katrina enters this phase of change, of letting go, all over again.  She decides to participate in a month-long teacher training program at Kripalu, and finds herself profoundly moved by the experience.  Katrina is drawn to Kripalu by some power that she cannot name, some force that has directed all of her perambulations since Marie’s death and her son’s departure.  Of this time she writes,  “…I have been lonely and adrift, as if some current is tugging me down, pulling me beneath the surface of my life to go in search of something I have no words for.”  At Kripalu Katrina does indeed go beneath the surface: of her life, of the lives of her roommates, of her own expectations, of all that has been known.  And she emerges feeling “as if I’ve put on a pair of 3-D glasses and the whole world, instead of being out at arm’s length, is right in my face: intense, complex, exquisitely beautiful.”

Katrina begins to reimmerse herself in her “ordinary life,” one whose shimmering beauty she now appreciates more fully.  She revisits her undergraduate alma mater and has an encounter with a shop owner that reminds her of how the past continues to echo into the present.  Even when those vibrations are not consciously felt, they are there.  Katrina reconnects with college classmates and sees their connections in new ways; she and a roomful of her exact contemporaries end up in a deep, honest conversation about what it is to face this next season of life.  In keeping with Magical Journey‘s theme that letting go of what we thought allows us to touch what is, Katrina notes how differently she measures her life now than the 21 year old starry-eyed college graduate thought she might:

How could I have known that the freedom that seemed so desirable and elusive in my twenties would come not from escaping myself, but from finally accepting myself?  Or that liberation – that world we threw about so earnestly as undergraduates – would turn out not to be about grabbing the brass ring, nailing the dream job, or getting the life I always wanted, but rather about fully experiencing the startling beauty, the pain, the wonder and surprise of the great, winding journey itself?

My copy of Magical Journey is full of underlined passages, stars and exclamation marks in the margins, and indentations where tears fell, dark on the page, and dried.  I have always loved Katrina’s writing, found wisdom that makes me gasp and expressions of things I’ve long felt and held dear, and this book is no different.  Magical Journey is composed of gorgeous sentences and full of images I will never forget.

Magical Journey is a powerfully hopeful book, one that starts in a morass of loss and winds up, with a palpable sense of both peace and freedom, in a cabin in Maine.  Katrina’s journey – which is indeed a magical one – is internal, quiet, invisible to the eye.  She is grappling with nothing less than her own mortality.  Mortality – and its irrefutable handmaiden, impermanence – is the heartbeat of this book, running through every line, limning the entire volume with the piercing, and temporary, beauty of this human life.  The conclusion of the book’s titular journey is that there isn’t one.  Life, and particularly the second half of it, is about learning to embrace paradox, to release expectations, and to look carefully around so that we don’t miss a minute.

Perhaps the central work of aging has to do with starting to realize that each of us must learn how to die, that falling apart happens continually, and that our own experience of being alive is never simply either/or, never black or white, good or bad, but both – both and more.  Not life or death, but life and death, darkness and light, empty and full.  Two currents sometimes running side by side, yet often as not entwining into one, our feelings and emotions not separate and discrete but instead streaming together into a flow that contains everything together and in constant flux – all our love and loss, all our happiness and heartache, all our hope and our hopelessness as well.

I wish I could convey how powerful and beautiful this book is.  Unfortunately I don’t have the words.  I hope you will read it and see for yourself.  Happily, Katrina has offered a signed book to a reader of this blog.  Please comment and I will pick a winner on Thursday evening.

Books: always the best gift

Books are always, without exception, my go-to gift. Christmas is coming up, so I have some stacks downstairs, but I also turn to books for birthdays, hostess gifts, and sometimes for no reason at all. Today on Great New Books, I discuss my absolute favorite book of 2013, but I wanted to also share a more comprehensive list of books I love for gift-giving. For those looking for additional book options, you might want to check out the latest offer at Shoppok. Here are my thoughts on books for young children, older children (a category I personally adore, so I think many of these work for adults, too), and for adults.

I would love to hear what books are on your lists and in your basements awaiting wrapping!

For Small Children:

Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney.  This may be my favorite children’s books of all time. We still read Miss Rumphius regularly, and it’s one of the few picture books that I have noticed remains in Grace’s bookshelf.  Almost every time, I’m reduced to tears by the  beautiful story and message that every person can find a way to leave the world more beautiful.

Roxaboxen by Alice McLerran and Barbara Cooney. This book is another one I dearly love.  It is less well-known than Miss Rumphius (and therefore, at least in my experience, often a great gift because people don’t have it).  This story is about the power of imagination and about the galloping adventure that is childhood.  Love.

Space Boy by Leo Landry.  This is another one of my most deeply-beloved books.  We also still read it.  The story, inspired by Where the Wild Things Are, tells of independence and exploration and home, of the way the bonds of love can stretch and snap back, of this great big world we live in.  I love it.

 Mole Music by David McPhail.  This is another book whose theme is the way that art (in this case music) can change the world, and it also reminds us that even acts invisible to others can have tremendous power.  The illustrations are beautiful too.

The Birds of Bethlehem by Tomie dePaola.  Last year I took a whole bunch of Christmas-themed picture books out of the library and we worked our way through them. This was easily our favorite.  The text is simple and charming, the illustrations gorgeous, and I love this book.

 For Bigger Children:

Wonder by RJ Palacio. I am giving this book, the first that Grace ever recommended to me, to a lot of children this year.  RJ Palacio’s story about acceptance and friendship and courage is one of the most powerful I have ever read.  Literally.  Told in alternating voices, with humor and honesty, this book made me cry a lot, but also reminded me of the fundamental goodness resident in most people.

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green.  As Grace recommended Wonder to me, so I recommended this to her.  Though the fundamental premise, a story about teenagers with cancer, is unavoidably sad, this is one of the most life-affirming and hopeful books I have ever read.  This is a book for everybody over 10 on your list, in my opinion: it is easily in my own list of top three books of 2013.  Alternately laugh-out-loud funny and heart-crackingly sad, this book is told by possibly my favorite narrator of all time.  Grace still refers to Hazel and Augustus all the time.  They have taken up residence in both of our heads and hearts, I suspect, permanently.

The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate.  Grace’s second recommendation to me (which Whit pushed too).  This is a book about animals in a mall zoo that somehow manages to be about the broad sweep of life’s grand pageant.  Honestly.  It made me laugh, cry, and think, and I could not put it down.  Highly, highly recommended.

 Weird But True by National Geographic.  My children, especially Whit, have a seemingly bottomless fascination with true, strange stories.  They love the Guiness Book of World Records, and have several versions of Weird But True.  I don’t necessarily understand the fixation, but I definitely subscribe to the any-reading-is-good-reading school of thought, so these will be under the tree for Whit and some other kids (especially boys) on my list.

 The Giver by Lois Lowry.  The Giver, and the other three books in the series (Gathering Blue, the Messenger, and Son) have deeply moved both Grace and me.  Grace has only read The Giver so far, but just this weekend she said to me, out of the blue, that she “keeps finding herself thinking about Gabriel.”  Oh, yes.  I know that feeling.  Spare, evocative, beautiful: I love these books.

For Adults:

Still Writing by Dani Shapiro.  While you might think this is a book about writing, I think it’s about the task of adulthood: taking where we came from and living with it, making the most of and paying attention to what is right in front of us, and the effort to live an engaged life.  I devoured this book, read it twice, and think it’s absolutely beautiful.

The Gift of an Ordinary Day by Katrina Kenison.  I think anyone with children in grade school or middle school needs to read this book immediately.  I’ve never given it to someone (and I’ve given it to a lot of people) without hearing later that it entirely changed how they think about this particular rich, exhausting, blessed season of life.  Every time I read Katrina’s writing I cry, which is how I know it touches something deep, essential, and inchoate inside of me.  I can’t recommend this book highly enough.

New and Selected Poems by Mary Oliver.  For anyone who is new to Oliver, enamored by the natural world, or just beginning to tiptoe into the world of poetry: this is the perfect gift.  I have given this book to countless people, and have always heard back from the recipient that Oliver’s work is both powerful and accessible: the combination that, for me, marks truly great poetry.

Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner.  My passion for this book is well-documented.  It’s among the very, very short list of books I’ve read three complete times (that list in its entirety: Harry Potter books 1-4, CTS, and, now, Gilead).  Stegner’s short, gorgeously-written book reveals something new to me each time I read it.  The most recent time I was struck by how it is a love letter to couple friends, to long marriage, to midlife, in all of its confounding complexity and breathtaking beauty.

When Women Were Birds: Fifty-Four Variations on Voice, by Terry Tempest Williams.  I found this book intoxicating, challenging and outrageously gorgeous in equal measure.  Williams’ work reads to me like prose poetry.  A book about being a woman in this world, about the natural terrain of the united states, and about what it means to find your voice.  Wonderful.

Disclosure: these are affiliate links

 

The HerStories Project

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My friends are vitally important to me.  I’ve written about them ad nauseum, from examination of which points in life are the most fertile for making friends to love letters to my sister, my first friend.  I write less about the messy moments in my friendships, but rest assured, I have those too.

I am both delighted and honored to be a part of the HerStories Project.  My essay, A Friendship Forged in the Crucible, about the “friend who walked beside me through some of the most difficult months of my life,” was published on the site and is now included in the book, The HerStories Project: Women Explore the Joy, Pain, and Power of Female Friendships which is released today.

Female friendship is a topic of great interest to me.  Friendship between women contains infinite textures, heartache and deep affection, identification and separation.  Through the prism of friendship, we can see love in most of its grand and many-colored manifestations.  This book explores this fertile and varied terrain with honesty and humor.  I loved every essay.  This would make a great holiday present.  I hope you will check this wonderful anthology out at the link below.

Disclosure: this is an affiliate link

 

 

Women At Risk

Minimalist-Parenting-BookIt’s been a pleasure to meet many online friends in real life.  One of my favorites is Christine Koh, whose site Boston Mamas I am happy to contribute to.  Christine and I are the same age, we live in the same city, we have daughters who are contemporaries, and she is just all-around fantastic.  She just ran a half-marathon and she also gave me a container of “magic salt” with which my children are obsessed.  Need that recipe!

It’s my pleasure to share that Christine and Asha Dornfest are donating 100% of royalties from their book, Minimalist Parenting: Enjoy Modern Family Life by Doing Less, purchased via http://bit.ly/helpwomenatrisk to WOMEN AT RISK, an Ethiopian organization that helps women lift themselves out of prostitution.

I hope you will consider buying Minimalist Parenting through this special Amazon link: http://bit.ly/helpwomenatrisk.  I personally can’t wait to read Christine’s book, and this sounds like an extraordinarily deserving and important cause.

Find out more at http://minimalistparenting.com/helpwomenatrisk.

Ready for Air – and a giveaway!

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I dove into Kate Hopper’s Ready for Air eagerly, knowing already that I love her voice and fascinated to read about her experience delivering and mothering a preemie, and I was not disappointed.  The fact that Kate makes so specific a story universally relatable speaks to her power as a writer.  She uses her personal story to illuminate the grand pageant of motherhood and in so doing had me nodding, giggling, and crying more than once.

Ready for Air opens as Kate’s pregnancy turns from uncomfortable to threatened.  Within the first few pages she is admitted to the hospital with preeclampsia and, quickly, induced.  Her daughter, Stella, is born at 3 pounds, 6 ounces.  Under the flourescent lights of an operating room, disoriented by an array of drugs, scared but grateful, Kate’s journey as a mother begins.

Early in my pregnancy, people told me that when I first saw my baby, I would experience a love that called into question all the other loves in my life … And I’m ready for that, for the love to pour out of me when I see Stella.

I was told this, also, and though my experience was worlds different from Kate’s, I similarly did not feel the wave of incredible love and identification I’d been told to anticipate.  I stared at Grace and thought: who are you?  Kate looks at her baby, alone on a table in the NICU, and thinks “This cannot be my baby.  This is not how it’s supposed to happen.”  This moment in the NICU, when Kate falls into the lacuna between expectation and experience, introduces one of the main themes in the book.  There are as many roads to motherhood as there are mothers, and to overly emphasize the myth of an immediate, all-encompassing love disenfranchises, or, worse, terrifies, women for whom the experience is different.

“I could never have imagined a place that contains at once so much hope and so much fear,” Kate writes of the NICU, but it is an apt description of her first weeks of motherhood more broadly.  Stella’s time in the NICU is not without setbacks and challenges, and many days hold tears.  Even so, love takes hold.  At one point, when Stella has taken a turn for the worse and developed an infection, Kate stands by her isolette and watches as her chest “rises and falls, rises and falls.  There is an ache in my own chest, and I realize that this is how it feels to have my heart break…. I had started to fall in love with my daughter.”

Fear swirls throughout Ready for Air, animating and defining the first weeks and months of Stella’s life.  Just as she describes the NICU as a place of hope and fear, Kate notes when Stella is a month old that “fear and gratitude seem to coexist for me in a way they never have before.”  Bringing Stella home, which Donny and Kate had anticipated would be the beginning of a peaceful, joyful time, instead ushers in another, even more difficult phase of parenthood.  There is exhaustion and depression and loss of identity and more and more fear.

The most successful memoirs make of deeply personal, highly granular stories large statements about being human.  Ready for Air accomplishes this.  Through the tiniest details of her experience and of Stella’s new life, Kate expresses the universal.  At one point she notices Stella’s “tiny nose, her ears, thin as paper, each the shape of a continent.  In the coil of one ear is Africa and in the other, South America.”  Later,  as she and a nurse feel the unevenness of Stella’s skull they observe that the bones are “like tectonic plates.”  The world itself is contained in the face and bones of this three-pound premature baby.  Even in days fraught with ambiguity and peril, when their bond seems both tenuous and attenuated, Kate feels wonder while gazing at her daughter.  It is this strand of awe that pulls her through all the long and difficult first months of Stella’s life.

Fear beats through Kate’s first months as a mother like a pulse, but it is uncertainty that she learns to breathe like oxygen.  One of the central lessons of Ready for Air is that nothing is ever guaranteed.  As I read I remembered my own disorienting, destabilizing first months of motherhood, felt again that exhaustion so deep it seemed like I had sand in my eyes and vague, constant thrum of an inchoate panic.  But I also remembered the way I gradually fell in love with my daughter, the intoxicating smell of her baby head, the waves of peace that sometimes – only sometimes – swept over me as I rocked her in the middle of the night in the nightlight-lit twilight of her room.

So much of Ready for Air is universal.  Though Kate speaks of an experience I cannot image, she plays chords I know by heart.  Motherhood is profoundly individual, and we need to honor the myriad colors in which it comes, but it is also shot through with emotions as essential as the air of the title.  Ready for Air powerfully evokes the fear and ambiguity of one woman’s difficult season, but it is also full of a parent’s abiding love, and the deep, bewildering wonder that is at the heart of motherhood.

I have a giveaway copy of Kate’s marvelous book to give to a lucky reader!  Just leave a comment here and I will choose one at random on Friday evening this week.  You will love Ready for Air.

University of Minnesota press is going to donate 15 copies of Read for Air to neonatal intensive care units in the US and Canada.  We would welcome suggestions of hospitals that you think should be considered.  Please put the details in the comments, including an address and to whom the book should be sent.  When Kate’s blog tour is over, she will draw 15 hospitals and send each a signed copy of her book.  You can read more about this giveaway here.