essays
Showing posts with label essays. Show all posts

This is the Story of a Happy Marriage by Ann Patchett

Buy This Book from Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Hi Ann, it was so lovely to visit with you.

About This is the Story of a Happy Marriage: Ann Patchett’s novels have been feats of imagination—from the tale of an opera singer held hostage inside a vice presidential mansion, to a forgotten tribe along the banks of the Amazon river—she has created entire worlds for the reader to inhabit. Now, with her new book, she puts fiction aside and invites us into the very real world of her own life.

This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage is both wide-ranging and deeply personal, overflowing with close observation and emotional wisdom. Stretching from her tumultuous childhood, from a disastrous early marriage and a later happy one, she charts the hard work and joy of writing, and the unexpected thrill of opening a bookstore. Patchett shares stories of the people, places, ideals, and art to which she has remained indelibly committed. Brimming with thoughtful advice and emotional wisdom, this collection brings into focus the large experiences and small moments that have shaped her as a daughter, wife, writer, and friend.  An irresistible blend of literature and memoir, This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage is a unique examination of the heart, mind, and soul of one of our most revered and gifted writers.

My two cents

Let's meet Ann - writer, daughter, good friend, dog lover, married, not married, in love, re-married, owner of a bookstore, unlikely advocate of the independent bookstore ... and, believe it or not, she can jump over walls!

I am in love with Ann and her writing. This is a wonderful set of essays, collected over the course of her career, and appearing in various magazines. I've only read her Bel Canto, but now I feel like I know better as a writer ... and as a lovely human being. This book feels like plopping down next to her on the couch with some tea and just chattering the afternoon away with an acquaintance ... and coming away with a new friend.

The title is deceiving. This isn't just about Ann Patchett's happy marriage from which the title was derived. This is about Ann's deepest loves and her greatest commitments in her life.

This subject matter is varied but it is a solid collection with a unifying thread. Ann touches upon her first naive and disastrous marriage and, essays later, how she eventually finds love once again, but not without much with much trepidation of getting hurt once again. She recounts how she was compelled to write yet stresses that writing takes great discipline and commitment (even if it means working in dead-end jobs to support herself). She shares her writing successes and disappointments. She talks about Truth and Beauty and her friendship with Lucy Grealy which is the basis of that book, and her response to the criticism of this bookand even more hurtful insinuations of this friendship. She talks about her policeman father's desire for her to succeed, leading to her taking the exams for the police force (and learning to jump over walls in the process!). She waxes poetic over her longtime companion,  her dog destined for the pound who she rescues as a pup.

(I've only just touched on a few essays so I encourage you to get a copy because at least one essay is bound to resonate.)

Ann talks about her life in an honest and matter-of-fact way, with introspection, with seriousness but never taking herself overly seriously. Never preachy, Ann's voice has such a wonderful accessibility and warmth. I feel privileged to have gotten to know her through these essays.

This is such a beautiful read, one essay at a time ... don't rush it.

Verdict: An intimate look into the life of a renowned writer, in an eclectic collection of essays about life, love, and commitment. A must-read for Patchett fans, for readers and writers alike. Sit and stay awhile and enjoy your visit with Ann! 
 

About Ann Patchett

Photo credit Heidi Ross
Photo credit: Heidi Ross
Ann Patchett is the author of six novels: the New York Times bestselling State of Wonder and Run; The Patron Saint of Liars, which was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year; Taft, which won the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize; The Magician’s Assistant; and Bel Canto, which won the PEN/Faulkner Award, the Orange Prize, the BookSense Book of the Year, and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.

She is also the author of two works of nonfiction: the New York Times bestselling Truth & Beauty and What now? Patchett has written for many publications, including the Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s Magazine, Gourmet, the New York Times, Vogue, and the Washington Post. She lives in Nashville, Tennessee.

Check out Ann Patchett's website. Or follow Ann's Blog on Parnassus Books (the bookstore Ann co-owns), or on Twitter.


Check out the rest of the tour here.
I received an Advance Reader Copy of this book from the publisher via TLC Book Tours in exchange for an honest review.


 

Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Harper (November 5, 2013)

This Mobius Strip of Ifs by Mathias Freese

Reflect, ruminate, feel, re-read. Repeat.

Serious synopsis of This Mobius Strip of Ifs by Mathias Freese: In this impressive and varied collection of creative essays, Mathias B. Freese jousts with American culture. A mixture of the author's reminiscences, insights, observations, and criticism, the book examines the use and misuse of psychotherapy, childhood trauma, complicated family relationships, his frustration as a teacher, and the enduring value of tenaciously writing through it all. Freese scathingly describes the conditioning society imposes upon artists and awakened souls. Whether writing about the spiritual teacher, Krishnamurti, poet and novelist, Nikos Kazantzakis, or film giants such as Orson Welles and Buster Keaton, the author skewers where he can and applauds those who refuse to compromise and conform. A psychotherapist for twenty-five years, Freese conveys a unique combination of psychodynamic thinking and Eastern philosophy while examining Existentialism, alternative education, and Jewish values.

My two cents

I have been reading this slim book of essays on and off for two months. I couldn't rush through it. It is one of those books that you read a few pages a time, ruminate upon, reread, and then potentially regroup. If you're looking for a diversion or some escape, this isn't it. If you're looking for a something with some real meat, and want to be challenged, provoked ... and you want to feel, then consider picking this up.

This Mobius Strip of Ifs
by Mathias B. Freese
At times I admit I felt a little embarrassed as I felt that the author was baring his soul, as many of the essays are so deeply personal -- from this thoughts on losing his wife, his reminisces of fatherhood, to his beliefs on how education conditions us, to religion, to his favourite movies ... and even to his skirmishes with book bloggers!

The essays are diverse as is Freese's style. He can be succinct, delivering his blows in a few quick strokes, or he can meander on a bit then make his point, if at all. The book has three main sections:
  1. "Knowledge is death" comprised of 19 essays drawing from his years as a therapist, an educator and a writer, and his thoughts on religion, on being Jewish and the Holocaust;
  2. Metaphorical Noodles comprised of 7 essays, dealing mainly with movies and books; and
  3. The Seawall comprised of 10 essays mainly about family life.
If you have read Freese's Down to a Sunless Sea, in this book he refers quite a bit to some of the short stories, lending a bit more insight on those short stories. (I also highly recommend you check these stories out!)

Whatever the essay, he is uncompromising on his thoughts and beliefs that have taken him a lifetime to ruminate upon and to verbalize through his writings. What strikes me most is that he obviously does not write to please the reader, he writes to please himself. He could definitely piss people off. (and warning: don't expect politically correct language - he calls it what it is!) But then, that is what is so good about this book!

You become Freese's reader, student, confidant. He obviously doesn't need you to agree, but he does want to provoke you. 

As I was reading this, I started remembering conversations with my grandfather where he would say what he wanted to about a life lived. A simple man of few words, the truths that he revealed in those talks still remain with me. Yes, expect some warm fuzzies.

And as quickly as I started to warm up to Freese, he turned devil's advocate and transformed into one of my former professors -- someone who challenged me to challenge my beliefs -- making me uncomfortable at the least, even angry, or sheepish as the case may be. On some occasions I agree,  on others, it not an agreement without a fight. Other times, it's just a total rejection.

You'll feel like you've picked Freese's mind after having finished this! He'll get some reaction from you, I can assure you!
**

The essays that most resonated with me dealt mainly with Freese's family life.
Self-examination about his life and growing old in "At 67":
"I don't feel, or I don't believe, that my core self is any different than it was at forty. Inside I am still me, narrow here, expansive there, emotionally stingy for that, largesse for that. I am still impatient with others, aging has not moderated that. I ask myself here, what is it I want from aging? Does it provide solace or sorrow, or should I experience some kind of generativity which Erik Erikson spoke of, the capacity for giving one's wisdom, the whole ball of wax and human lint we accrete from a lifetime's living?" - p. 8

I felt immensely sad when he talks about his daughter, her battle with Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction Syndrome ("About Caryn"),  and how he lost her to suicide and ("I Had a Daughter Once").
Coming from a family of educators, I also found the essays on being an educator fascinating. "Teachers Have No Chance to Give Their Best" examines what the education has done to dull, rather than sharpen minds, to encourage conformism rather than vision. I found myself nodding to many of his points and am passing it along.
"The essay On Reading Christopher Hitchens's God is Not Great" struck a chord in me. Freese subtitles this "How Religion Poisons Everything" and looks into some very touchy territory (you have been warned):

"Hitchens repeatedly makes the telling comment --and obvious one, at that -- that all religions are man-made. Once you creep into that, see its merit, you then can see that religion is the cause of crusades, jihads, circumcision, resurrection, the three Magi, the Virgin Mary, Mohammad fling away on his horse, the Conquistadores, ghettoes, and forevermore. I once had a conversation with a close friend who I connected to because he was open and fairly liberal. We spoke about religion. I felt free to do that with him. I asked if he believed in ghouls. No response required. he chuckled. I went on, How about vampires? Witches? Flying carpets? Dragons? Ghosts? Finally, he asked me to get to the point. I did. And yet I told him, you believe in a preacher about 2,000 years ago who is a conflation of myths and never existed, actually rose and was resurrected [..]"
 
And lastly, if you're a book blogger (read: me), "At Personal Posturings: Yahoos as Bloggers" may be of interest as Freese as an author tells it like it is. It made me laugh out loud. But it also made me realize that book bloggers and authors do a very strange little dance and regardless, are simply human. You'll get nice bloggers and some not-so-nice bloggers ... and vice versa.

These thoughts spring from a mere first reading. I am sure that I will be rereading the essays once again and will find some more nuggets in there -- because this is one of those books which you can read and re-read and come out with even more great finds.

Verdict: A challenging, provoking, and entertaining read that will get you thinking and examining your beliefs. An immensely satisfying read if you decide to stop and ruminate. What comes to mind is the old adage: An unexamined life is not worth living. I envy Mathias Freese as he is obviously living and living well. 

First line: I was casually informed a year after the fact by the editor of Grafitti that my short story "Herbie" published in that magazine was listed in Martha Foley's The Best American Short Stories of 1975 under "Distinctive Short Stories of 1974."

Last line: I advocate you rummage for yourself after forty years.

I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
·
OLDER



© guiltless readingMaira Gall