Okay, here goes:
Making a list of books I'm currently reading is similar to constructing a family tree, the lines of one leading to another, including the ways the books showed up for me.
Let's start with Geraldine Brooks. I'm sorry to say I haven't read her fiction, but after reading this lovely memoir, Memorial Days, shared with me by Freda, I will start with Horse.
I love reading writers' personal stories before reading their poems and fiction and essays. I can picture Geraldine now almost like a friend I've actually met, living on Martha's Vineyard. Her writing is so vivid that it takes you there. She talks like we talk, only better on paper. In person, she tells us she's shy, but her friends are a bunch of rowdy women. She throws parties, because Tony loves them, but he's the gregarious life of every party--while she prefers serving the food.
I wish that back in the day, when I was a child and reading every book I could find by Lois Lensky, I had known that Lois was a real person who lived a certain kind of life. I wish I could have gone to You Tube and looked for speeches and interviews, or gone online to see if she'd written a memoir or autobiography. Back then, it would have been called the latter.
Geraldine and Tony Horowitz, her Pulitzer Prize winning husband, live a fascinating life--two renowned journalists who traveled the world writing for esteemed magazines and newspapers. He had just completed his book, Spying on the South: An Odyssey Across the American Divide, when he suffered a massive heart attack on a book tour in Chevy Chase, Maryland.
Geraldine and Tony had met in the Columbia school of journalism and had been married for 31 years. His death was devastating for her and their two sons.
After three years of doing all the minutiae required to deal with the death of a spouse, she realizes that she's never had the full-throated expression of grief that she yearns for. So she goes back to her homeland in Australia and stays in a media-free rustic cabin on Flinders Island.
"This will be, finally, the time when I will not have to prepare a face for the faces that I meet. The place where I will not have to present that things are normal and that I am okay. Because it has been more than three years and, contrary to appearances, I am not at all okay."
I have now ordered one of Geraldine's novels (she's also a prolific novelist and Pulitzer Prize winning one) and the kindle edition of Tony Horowitz' last book, Spying on The South.
Thanks to the internet, I can track down interviews and book talks--so the lines in the tree are taking me all over the place on this Sunday morning.