I never read nearly as much as I'd like to read—my multiple worlds are perpetually colliding, fracturing time. But I was so gratified to learn that, on this year's list of
NBCC nominees, many of the books I'd loved best and celebrated here, on my blog, are being equally celebrated by the judges. In Autobiography, there's Patti Smith's remarkable
Just Kids, Darin Strauss's deeply moving
Half a Life, and the thoughtful, provocative
Hiroshima in the Morning, by my much-loved friend, Rahna Reiko Rizzuto. In Criticism, there's Elif Batuman's
The Possessed and Ander Monson's
Vanishing Point. I'd put all five books on my Penn syllabus months ago, and here they are—proven, lifted, upheld.
A huge congratulations to them all, and, especially, to my dear friend, Reiko. I've linked to my own reflections about these books here, should you be interested in how they affected me early on.
Dignity is a word I have long associated with Darin Strauss. His refined mind and sensibilities were on display in novels like
Chang and Eng. A certain quietude pervaded interviews. When I learned that Strauss was sending a memoir into the world, a memoir entrusted to McSweeney's (and hence, in some fashion, to the multiply talented and deeply generous Dave Eggers), I knew for certain what I'd be reading next.
I read
Half a Life this morning, grateful for every white-steeped page. It is, as you must have heard by now, the story of an accidental death—the story of what happened one day when Strauss set out to play some "putt putt" with his high school friends. He was 18, behind the wheel of his father's Oldsmobile. On the margin of the road, two cyclists pedaled forward. Of a sudden, there was a zag, a knock, an "hysterical windshield." A cyclist, a girl from Strauss's school, lay dying on the road. She'd crossed two lanes of highway to reach Strauss's car. He braked, incapable of forestalling consequences.
It was forever. It was always. A girl had died. A boy had lived. Strauss spent his college years, his twenties, his early thirties incapable of reconciling himself to the facts, of entrusting them to friends. There's much he can't remember perfectly. There are gaps, white space, breakage—all of which, in this McSweeney's production, is rendered with utmost decency—the thoughts broken into small segments, big breaths (blank pages) taken in between. There is knowing here, not shouting. There is an exploration of guilt, and no bravado.
Half a Life sits now, on my shelf, beside Gail Caldwell's
Let's Take the Long Way Home—two memoirs that transcend precisely because they are so quiet, so well considered, so honorable. These books, along with Rahna Reiko Rizzuto's
Hiroshima in the Morning, give me hope that memoir, the form, is finding its center again. There may not be any sure-fired truths, but there are consequences. There may be stories, but they are always tangled. There may be ache, but there is solace, too. There may be drama, but in drama's wake, we stand. In need of understanding. In need of one another.
Oh, my - more delicious items for my to-read list...
Congratulations all around!
...A.
Ditto--more books I clearly need to look into!
And, I completely understand about the fracturing of time/too much to read/not enough time dilemma. Story of my life. :)