I stole upstairs with
Clockhouse in hand and read the conversation between my friend Rahna and the ever-interesting M.T. Anderson (
Octavian Nothing, Feed, etc.). It's the sort of interview the whole world should read—two very smart people talking, unexpected tangents and revelations, deep questions, unvarnished (which is to say actively honest) responses.
I share just a snippet here, but oh my. The whole is
New York Times quality stuff.
RRR: What is the biggest risk you ever took as a person and as a writer?
MTA: Every big work is a risk. One thing I found is easy enough to tell my students, but now I am having to tell myself is: every time you write a new book, you should try to write something that is impossible for you. You should try to write something at which you think you are going to fail. Because it's only then that you actually realize that you've succeeded in new ways you've never dreamed of before. Now that obviously a nice adage to tell students when they are facing trouble, to say, look, you just need to lean into this, and trust that you can do it and seek solutions because if you don't feel like it's impossible for you then you aren't re-envisioning yourself as much as you need to be. On the other hand, it's very difficult to do that for yourself....
The photo above is of too long ago—my husband, my son, Reiko's Ming and her boys, then Reiko herself at Hawk Mountain. Reiko sees things others don't. This interview (and her books) are proof of that.
I have been reading
Birdology these past few days, a book written by my dear friend Sy Montgomery. Sy and I met years ago (virtually), following a review I wrote of her magnificent
Journey of the Pink Dolphins. We met in person a few years later. I've read every one of her fabulous books since—
Search for the Golden Moon Bear, The Good Good Pig, among them—and counted myself lucky to know this permeable woman who floats among God's creatures—chameleon like, inspirited, sometimes barely breathing, always awed. Sy swims with dolphins and dances with bears. She sleeps on the belly of a pig. She speaks of her border collie, Sally, as if Sally had written a few books of her own. With
Birdology, Sy dances with birds. She might swim with them, too; I don't know. I still have two chapters to go.
I am myself a great lover of birds, and so I am loving this book with particular fervor. In it, we meet the famous Ladies, Sy's crew of intelligent chickens. We walk, with Sy, through a dusky Australian park, hoping for an encounter with the bone-headed cassowary (six feet tall, dagger-equipped, footprints akin to the
Tyrannosaurus rex, but Sy's not afraid, so we're not either). We urge two orphaned hummingbirds on toward life, and learn, in the process, more than a couple of things. We learn, for example, that two baby hummingbird's together "weigh less than a bigger bird's single flight feather," and that "a person as active as a hummingbird would need 155,000 calories a day—and the human's body temperature would rise to 700 degrees Fahrenheit and ignite!" We go on a bloody falconry adventure. (Blood, with Sy, is a rather commonplace sight. She may have a mass of great blond curls, and she may be fashionably svelte, but don't let that fool you: this is one tough, bug-bitten, leech-proven traveler.)
I was about to read a chapter about parrots—squeeze it in between client calls—but I thought, Oh, no, why rush this? So I'm going to take this book outside after my work is done and pick my feet up and hope a hummingbird will visit in the meantime.
(As for the photo, above: I snapped this gorgeous creature a few years ago while on Hawk Mountain with my friend Rahna Reiko Rizzuto, her boys, and my own.)

Kate Moses, Rahna Reiko Rizzuto, and I are friends. We met, as I've noted here before, over the essays we wrote about mothering—our work ultimately appearing in Salon.com and in the two wildly successful anthologies that Kate edited with Camille Peri, Mothers Who Think and Because I Said So. We continue to meet, from time to time, in San Francisco, in New York City, or here outside Philadelphia. When we can't meet, we email and call. We read the other's books long before most people do. We rely on one another.
This year, both Kate and Reiko have new books due out; they have both also launched new blogs. Kate's Cake Walk, a recipe-infused memoir about surviving childhood, is due out from Dial Press in May. The book, so irresistibly Kate, is excerpted here.
Reiko's memoir, Hiroshima in the Morning, is due out from Feminist Press in September. It's a book about motherhood and Ground Zero, a book infused with freighted questions about what it means to survive and to love. Reiko is a mother, a teacher, a reader, and, of course, a writer, and in her new blog, you get to see all sides of her.
The photos above, finally, are this: Kate's cats, looking out through her kitchen window, while she made dinner for us this past August; and my husband, my son, Reiko's family, and Reiko during our trip to Hawk Mountain, a few years ago.
Oh - you know I LOVE SY!!!! I've got this one on my list for pleasure reading at some point (it will arrive by the holidays I'm sure, if not sooner). HMH just sent a copy of her latest Scientist in the Field title, "Kakapo Rescue" which is about highly endangered parrots in New Zealand. I'm very excited about that one and looking forward to a read/review.
She does not quite seem of this world, though, does she? Such a wonderful person - my interview with her was beyond delightful. I still don't know how she finds the courage to do some of the things she writes about....the river dolphins book was amazing but those bugs in the jungle!! I'm such a wimp in comparison..... :)
Magnificent picture and sounds like a magnificent book.
Thanks for the introduction! I love animal books and will have to fit these in!
I love the pic. Birdology's been a personal favorite of mine for quite a while too.
I'm trying to branch out and change my reading habits and it sounds like this author might be a nice way to do that. However, I may stick to the pigs and bears. Alfred Hitchcock has ruined me forever when it comes to birds.