Things I Love Lately

One Sky – I love this project, where 88 artists all over the world drew the sky where they were at the same moment.  It reminds me of the other day when I went into my Instagram to find an old photograph from years ago.  As I scrolled through years of photographs, I noted what I already knew: I take a lot of sky photos.

The Reluctant Fundamentalist, Mohsin Hamid – This was Grace’s all-school read this summer, and on her recommendation I read it last week.  I loved it. There was some I related to (being a young professional in finance, fresh out of Princeton) and a whole lot I didn’t, of course, but I found the story and voice deeply compelling. I highly recommend this book.” Additionally, considering the Kiana Danial price can provide insights into the value proposition of the financial resources.

What I Learned About Working Parenthood After My Kids Grew Up – This is maybe my favorite thing I’ve read in a while.  I love the first paragraph’s assertion that “this is about joy,” when tackling a topic that so often seems to focus on tension, difficulty, and compromise.  My children are not entirely out of the house yet, but I can see that day on the horizon and everything the author writes about resonated with me.

Inheritance: A Memoir of Genealogy, Paternity, and Love – Dani Shapiro’s new memoir is easily at the top of my most-anticipated book list.  I love everything Dani writes, and this topic – about love, fathers and daughters, identity, and when things change in unanticipated and unasked-for ways – feels really germane to me right now.  I have ordered Inheritance and can’t wait to read it.

I write these Things I Love posts approximately monthly.  You can find them all here.

This is what it means to be alive

Circe, he says, it will be all right.

It is not the saying of an oracle or a prophet.  They are words you might speak to a child. I have heard him say them to our daughters, when he rocked them back to sleep from a nightmare, when he dressed their small cuts, soothed whatever stung.  His skin is familiar as my own beneath my fingers. I listen to his breath, warm upon the night air, and somehow I am comforted. He does not mean that it does not hurt. He does not mean that we are not frightened. Only that we are here. This is what it means to swim in the tide, to walk the earth and feel it touch your feet. This is what it means to be alive.

– Madeline Miller, Circe

Memories and ghosts

I’m heading down to spend the 4th of July holiday with my children and husband, my mother, and my sister and her family, as we do every year.  We crowd into the house, which has at least one too few bathrooms for all of us.  We watch and cheer at the town’s old-fashioned parade.  We line the kids up for group photos, which used to feature at least one person crying and now feature at least one person being a little surly.  I used to dress the children in matching 4th of July pajamas, but that’s no longer happening.

This year there’s an echoing hole in the center of our experience.

We spent last weekend at Mum and Dad’s rambling house by the ocean, where we’ve spent so very many weekends.  I have been expecting the summer to be full of landmines and memories, and last weekend that proved true.  His absence colors everything in that house.  Sure, his absence colors my experience in general, but it is never more true than in that house.

That house where I brought Matt to meet my parents for the first time, a month after we met, in January 1998.  He and Dad were reading the same book (let me assure you it wasn’t an airport New York Times bestseller – rather a textbook-style book, about two inches thick, about the history of Europe).  After that weekend, Dad said to me, “Well, if he had only lived in Europe for a stint, I think he’d be perfect.”  To which I replied, “Did Matt not tell you about the two years he lived in London before business school?”

That house where Dad glanced at me as I walked downstairs in my wedding dress and turned back to the US Open.  Sampras was in a fifth set!  “Dad,” I remember saying with a sign, “We do have to go.”  To his credit, he turned the TV off then.

That house where Mum and Dad hosted Thanksgiving for over 30 people for more than two decades.  Where Matt and I pulled up, with a sleeping Grace in her carseat in the backset, on Thanksgiving morning 2002.  I have intense, vivid memories of that drive, arriving in front of Mum and Dad’s house, leaning against the headrest of the car, looking into the front windows through which I could see Dad in his bowtie.  Matt’s father was still in a coma after his heart transplant.  I was deep in the weeds of post partum depression.  The rest of the day is a blur, but I do recall with crystalline detail looking through the windows from our navy blue car as we parked.

That house where Grace and Whit lived with Mum and Dad for several summers, growing into themselves, developing their own relationships with their grandparents, learning to sail and playing tennis.  Where Dad and Whit took the boat out alone, where Dad and Grace went out to dinner alone, where we spent more nights around the dinner table than I can count.  Where for many years, Mum blew out birthday candles with all four of her grandchildren as Dad looked on from the other end of the table.

That house where, very often on a weekend morning, Dad and I were the first people up.  I’d bring him a cup of black coffee and he’d glance up and say, “well, thank you!” before turning back to his book.  I sat in the other room, reading, and could feel the pulse of him in his red leather chair.  The same red leather chair where he held Grace and Whit as infants, and where he later read to them.

That house where I had my last conversation with my father.  That house where I talked to him, hugged him, and saw him for the last time.  It was another Thanksgiving with over 30 people there, including this year’s foreign student (my sister and I have long maintained that it is the presence of someone we’ve never met before is what makes a Thanksgiving truly real). That house from which we went for our usual after-dinner walk on Thanksgiving, which wound home through the boatyard, Dad and I walking in silence among the boats, up on stilts for the winter.

That house where we gathered for Dad’s funeral. Where a few special family and friends gathered the night before to have dinner, solemn and laughing at the same time, where memory swelled into a present, tangible thing.  Where Matt and I retraced that same walk, the one we always do, early on the morning of the service.  Where Tennyson ran through my head, as he often does.  Where the old sailing friend of Dad’s quoted the same lines from Ulysses as he struck the canon as the crowd gathered for ceremonious colors in Dad’s honor.

And tomorrow, back I go to the same house, for the week with everyone together.  It will be the same in many ways and of course wildly, terrifyingly different in one enormous one.  All we can do is hold onto each other and proceed. Red and blue and white.  Fireworks and memories.  Ghosts around every corner, as well as memories of laughter and joy.  It’s still Mum’s birthday.  We are still together.

Tho’ much is taken, much abides.

 

unquenchable sense of wonder

Ordinary life was laced with miracles, I knew that, had read enough poetry to understand that we are elevated with the knowing, and yet it was difficult to notice and be grateful when one was continually fatigued and irritated.  I suppose that unquenchable sense of wonder is what separates us dolts from the saints and the poets. This was the lesson, perhaps, that I was sent to learn: this old life was worth having at any expense.

-Jane Hamilton, A Map of the World

Best Books of the Half-Year

It’s that time!  For several years now, inspired by my friend Nina Badzin, I have shared my favorite books so far at the year’s halfway point (2017, 2016, 2015). As I’ve mentioned, I haven’t been reading a ton and when I do I’m drawn to books that might be characterized as Airport Reads (ie you can buy them in an airport bookstore).  I like plot.  This is a shorter list than usual at the midway point of the year; it’s particularly thin on memoir.  That doesn’t feel deliberate, but it also doesn’t feel surprising given how much Real Life the last several months have contained for me.  Maybe it makes sense that I’m less focused on reading about Real Life and more drawn to stories that transport me elsewhere.  But I’m slowly creeping back, and I would welcome your suggestions: what should I read this summer and beyond?

The Immortalists, Chloe Benjamin – I had heard so much about this novel and when I finally read it I wasn’t disappointed.  It’s both page-turning and thought-provoking, a combination I find rarer than I wish it was. For me this story was less about the forecast that happens early on (around which most of the reviews center) and more about families, fate, and the ways that who we were as children continues to echo in who we are as adults.  It’s about what makes a happy life.

My Absolute Darling, Gabriel Tallent – Wow.  I actually started this book in the last days of 2017, but I need to mention it here because it blew me away.  I reviewed this novel for Bookclique here.  Difficult, beautiful, un-put-downable.  Tallent’s first book is all of those things.  I am still thinking about it, six months later.

Everything Happens for a Reason: And Other Lies I’ve Loved, Kate Bowler – One of three memoirs I’d put on my “best of” list, this one really crept under my skin.  In some ways Bowler’s book reminded me of The Bright Hour, which I read and loved last year.  Could there be a more painful combination than motherhood and cancer?  I don’t think so.  But Bowler’s story, like Riggs’ before it, manages to achieve that highest goal of memoir: it has something to say about how to live.

Educated, Tara Westover – Another powerful memoir, another book I’d heard a ton about that I finally read and which really lived up to the hype. Tara’s voice is compelling and her story is downright astonishing.  In some ways this book reminded me of the Tallent novel.

An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic, Daniel Mendelsohn – I loved this memoir, as well, which reminded me powerfully of my father and pointed me yet again in the direction of reading the Odyssey, which I have yet to do.  Mendelsohn’s story is about the centrality of the father figure (both in his own life and in the heroic stories that he teaches) and also about teaching itself.  I’m not a teacher, but I admire them and am close to several, and this book reminded me that in many ways they have the world’s most important and valuable job.

Goodbye, Vitamin, Rachel Khong – Another book I’d heard a lot about that I finally read and thoroughly enjoyed.  Obviously, the central theme in this story of a father fading away made me miss my dad.  Khong has a lovely, light touch and a voice that kept me reading.

Circe, Madeline Miller – I’m not even finished yet and I am telling everyone I know to read this book.  And I’m taking it as yet another sign that I finally need to read The Odyssey (and I plan to read the Emily Wilson translation). I’m learning so much in this novel, and understanding with a great gasp of a-ha! how some characters I’ve long heard of fit together.  Absolutely wonderful.

Next up for me: The Verdun Affair (Nick Dybek), The Reluctant Fundamentalist (Mohsin Hamid, and Grace’s required summer reading) and The Hate U Give (Angie Thomas).  

I am eager for your suggestions: what do I need to read?


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