The Books on my Shelves

Sunday, April 26, 2009

The fabulous Holly Cupala of Brimstone Soup tagged me on this meme, and since I was musing just yesterday about bookshelves and friendships, it seems an appropriate Sunday launch. The question is, What's on your bookshelf?, and the specifics are these:

Tell me about the book that has been on your shelf the longest...

A beaten, brown thesaurus (the pages unbound now and out of order) and the bible my mother gave me. In fact, however, most all of my books have been acquired during the last 20 years. I was not a bookish kid (I was a writerly one, not a bookish one, which is truly not the right order of things) and did not come from a bookish family, which is not to say that I did not come from an educated one. It's simply that the home that I grew up in was not furnitured with books.

Tell me about a book that reminds you of something specific in your life ...

Natalie Kusz's Road Song was the first memoir I ever bought—the first I ever read. I was pregnant with my son. I was in a Princeton bookstore. The book was revelatory (you can write about your life? like this?) and I wrote to Ms. Kusz, never expecting a response. A few weeks later, one came. "As I am sure you know (because, judging from the elegance and insightfulness of your letter, you must be a writer yourself), writers are in the business of attempting to expose the human condition in such a way that our description resonates in the souls of other humans ... " A writer myself? Not then. Just someone who loved the sound of words, their puzzling together. By announcing to me a new genre—memoir—and by suggesting to me a possibility—an actual writer—Ms. Kusz and Road Song changed my life.

Tell me about a book you acquired in some interesting way ...

This past Friday six books arrived in a brown box, chosen by an editor with whom I've lately had the privilege of corresponding. I had mentioned that I sought, in my life, books that "put faith in the reader." She responded with generosity and with a telling eye and ear. Every one of these six books appears to be my kind of book. You'll be hearing about them here, over time.

Tell me about the most recent addition to your shelves...

Since the books in that box aren't yet on my shelves (but on the coffee table, where I will leave them until they are read), the newest books were three: Book of Clouds, The Frozen Thames, and The Cradle. I've written of them all here. Book of Clouds also, in its way, changed my life, my way of seeing what is possible in story.

Tell me about a book that has been with you to the most places...

Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient. I've read it several times, in several places—in El Salvador while visiting my husband's family, in Orlando while helping to oversee a corporate launch conference, on the train to New York City.

Tell me about a bonus book that doesn't fit any of the above questions...

Two books that I felt strongly should win the Pulitzer Prize did, and they sit eloquently on my shelves: March by Geraldine Brooks and Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout. There were shouts of joy here when both were announced. Both winners aren't just enormously talented writers. They are gracious people, which counts just as much.

9 comments:

Woman in a Window said...

Not usually a fan of the meme, this meme is rather insightful into you, I dare believe. Nicely done. Books. Boy, what a gift.

Anonymous said...

What a wonderful meme. I so enjoyed hearing about the books and your relationship with them. I've just finished The Frozen Thames because of your review, and I'm going to put other books on my list from this meme. Thank you.

Liviania said...

Very cool meme. Some of these sound like interesting reads.

Maya Ganesan said...

What a lovely letter Natalie Kusz sent back. And what a compliment.

It was such a treat to read this.

Erin said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Sherry said...

Thanks for doing this fun meme. I especially like your Road Song story. I'm so glad the author wrote you back and said what she said. Just from the two that I've read, I know that your memoirs accomplish that description which "resonates in the souls of other humans."

Sherrie Petersen said...

Books that arrive in brown boxes are always fun :^)

Anna Lefler said...

I love snooping around on your shelves, Beth. Which is to say, I love snooping around in your world.

Thank you for sharing all of this.

XO

Anna

holly cupala said...

This is wonderful, Beth! I confess, I just wanted to get to know you better, as your writing captures me. Thank you for sharing.

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