I am an inveterate re-reader. This is, in some ways, a handicap for a bookseller and would be a
real problem for me if I sold only new books, because, as people sometimes ask, “How can you
keep up?” and the answer is that I can’t. A quick search for book reviews here
since the first of the year will show that I do not ignore new books; on the
other hand, reaching for old ones keeps me from being familiar with all the
current best-sellers. For instance, I have yet to read The Kite Runner, let alone the author’s latest
book, a single glaring example that should serve to illustrate my point without a long,
embarrassing-myself list.
So
there’s my “Books Read” list, and there’s Ellen Airgood’s South of Superior again, read for the third or
fourth time. There’s a Barbara Ehrenreich title read twice already this year
(and the year less than half gone). There are titles by Ernest J. Gaines that
came out years ago – these not re-read but discovered by me for the first time
and only because I do not read only new books. Already I yearn to re-read
Bonnie Jo Campbell’s Q Road and Once Upon a River and the indescribably vivid short
stories of Katey Schultz in Flashes of War.
Valerie
Trueblood has a new book coming out very soon, her third. I have it
back-ordered but meanwhile, while waiting impatiently, I began re-reading her
first book, Seven Loves (2006), a nonlinear novel. The novel tells the life of the main
character episodically rather than chronologically, and what strikes me on this
re-reading, since I already know the “end” of May’s story, is the poetic
economy of the writing: nothing is missing, and nothing is extraneous. I am in
awe of flawless writing that proceeds so quietly and modestly.
Many
fiction readers seldom if ever read poetry. There must be devotees of poetry
who miss a lot of new short story collections, too (Trueblood’s upcoming publication
is a collection of short stories), and a lot of people who love novels don’t
give short stories a chance. But is there a reader alive, I ask myself, any
lover of writing excellence, who could resist Seven Loves? It’s hard for me to dog-ear
books any more, and I’ve kept my copy of Seven Loves pristine for all the years I’ve
had it, but the other night, well into the book (p. 130), I finally gave in to temptation.
“That
was all right. That was as it must be. Eventually the past went from being
cards laid face down to cards not held at all.”
“The
gait, all her own, with which Jackie now advanced, awkward yet delicate, like a
loaded camel led on a bridle.”
“When
Nick died, her way back was as slow as the arrow that never arrived because the
distance it was traveling could still be cut in half.”
“Twenty
years had taught her to sense the approach of a given scene by its aura, and to
stop the drift toward certain occasions of the past. Almost always, if they
stirred in their fog she turned back.”
Only a small sample --. The
thoughts and impressions of one mind, at different times of life, a rather
ordinary life – but oh, how extraordinary the life of that mind’s
expressions! May was a teacher for years and after her stroke is thinking back
to papers her students wrote. One perennial favorite topic, she recalls while
looking through an old encyclopedia, was bees.
She studied the head-on enlargement of the worker bee’s face, the giant badge eyes, blind-looking, innocent. Poor hunched compelled undesiring female. No student had written about that, the sadness of the facial configuration of the bee.
The
phrase takes my breath away: “the sadness of the facial configuration of the bee.”
As
author and bookseller, Trueblood and I have been in off-and-on e-mail
communication since her first book appeared. I seem to remember asking her if
she wrote poetry, certain that the answer would be yes, and receiving a
negative reply. Well, in this novel we have May’s entire life, not merely one
hushed, distilled moment, set in the middle of a page with wide margins around
it -- and yet I read many poems in May’s responses to life.
How
many poems are born and die unwritten and unacknowledged in a single mind?
Trueblood’s gift to readers of this novel is the preservation of unique moments
in her fictional central character’s life.
There was also Marry or Burn between then and now, and you can follow the link to my review of that book. You see why I am impatient for the new one?
Yes, of course I read new books, too: Every book, if ever to be re-read, must first be
read for the first time.
1 comment:
You might enjoy "Bee Movie" if you like that sort of thing. Plenty of sad put-upon bees in that one.
But come to think of it, I think so many of the average worker bees in it were male. Including Jerry Seinfeld.
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