Picture
I had a whole day off, today. And I did nothing. Nothing but read Judith Guest’s Ordinary People. If you weren’t born by 1976, you’ll have to take American Beauty, nix the gay theme, keep the parents and lay most of the plot onto the kid. Robert Redford made a blistering movie from Ordinary People and won himself instant acclaim, as a first-time director.

That’s what the seventies felt like.

Sun blasts and foul clouds of something burning. Happy town—wherever your happy town was—simultaneously shining and black with shadows. The Viet Nam war stampeded sense and honor and justice pretty much off the map, beating up the second half of the decade with the horrors of the first.

And yet, there was Leo Kottke guiding us through the fog with his “geese farts on a muggy day” voice and intricate guitar work. Nixon bludgeoning the presidency, which had had plenty of pounding before the Watergate scandal. The Hite Report spilling our sexual beans while a talking seagull taught us all to individuate.

It was a mixed bag, the seventies, a wheel with half its spokes broken, a chaotic field of change that has helped open the entire world to overweening greed. I don’t long for the seventies but I wish we had the years back, in order to do less harm.

Revisiting the decade of my twenties today reminded me of the brain of the purple mountain. I read Guest’s novel propped on the couch with a sunny view of Mt. Olympus out my window--a violet mountain against the blue sky. Leo Kottke named an early song of his “The Brain of the Purple Mountain,” and I’m guessing not many people know that his title is taken from a great line of poetry.

When Alfred Lord Tennyson was twenty-one, he spat out a beautiful curse against sophists, over-thinkers, worldly experts, wise men, the clever. His poem is called “The Poet’s Mind.” It's from 1830. FYI, the merry bird is the poet:


In the heart of the garden the merry bird chants,

It would fall to the ground if you came in.

In the middle leaps a fountain

Like sheet lightning,

Ever brightening

With a low melodious thunder;

All day and all night it is ever drawn

From the brain of the purple mountain

Which stands in the distance yonder:

It springs on a level of bowery lawn,

And the mountain draws it from Heaven above,

And it sings a song of undying love;

And yet, tho' its voice be so clear and full,

You never would hear it; your ears are so dull;

So keep where you are: you are foul with sin;

It would shrink to the earth if you came in.


I love it that this poet gets preachy. That he dares to smack at the powerful, who've lost their respect for beauty and the still small voice in them which marvels, which waits, which adores.

The best definition of sin I’ve heard is “missing the mark” (hamartia in Greek). We are all foul with sin if we do not marvel at purple mountains, if we drive through days ignorant of the water drawn from heaven singing its song of undying love.

The water is not a metaphor. Its song is everywhere water flows freely. A ditch, a gully, a city creek, a faucet, your garden hose, a stream. Turn on your irrigation system if that's all the water nearby you. If you cannot hear it--hear and feel and receive it--read more poetry. Listen to Leo Kottke. Listen again. Let Judith Guest take you through hell to reach a moment where a father and a son connect. Find your mark.
Because, to bring Joni into the mix, "we've got to get ourselves back to the garden."

I know this is a tad stream-of-consciousness, but so were the seventies!

Wish I could have found a link for "When Shrimps Could Whistle." Any Kottke is good Kottke, so enjoy what I did find!

 
 
Picture
Everything a novelist needs to know is learned by age four. I don’t remember which great writer said this, but there’s truth in it. The furious beauty of childhood stamps us for life.

Why then aren’t there more novels that feature great kid characters? Let me name a few of my favorites...

To read the entire guest blog, go to Rundpinne.

 
 
Picture
Non-fiction Book Review

You do not have to fall in love with Broken: A Love Story, but I’ll bet you will. In Broken, journalist Lisa Jones opens up the “post-apocalyptic” world of Wyoming’s Wind River Reservation, to follow the life of Stanford Addison, a quadriplegic Arapaho horse gentler whose way with horses and people is “non-insistent to the core.”

Stanford ran wild as a young man in 1970s Wyoming. He broke hearts and horses and laws until, at age twenty, a car wreck crushed his spine and demolished his youth. Twelve years in a wheelchair finally resulted in Stan’s accepting and working for the spirits who spoke to him. He found his center. He began to give his gifts.

Jones takes to Stan’s dispassionate guidance, hungry for a deeper connection with her life. She writes: “I thought I was in heaven the way a goose flying on the fine salt breezes near La Guardia Airport thinks it’s in heaven right before it flies into the landing route of a 747 from Kansas City.” With humor and honesty, Jones faces down personal demons, learning that to be broken is one possible way to be whole.




 
 
Picture
Still more of my favorite books, little known and much deserving of your time, interest and affection.

 
A Stay By The River short stories by Susan Engberg This gorgeous, quiet set of stories has brought me back many times over many years. It is my favorite book of short stories after those of Willa Cather. Engberg displays her profound sense of ease with sane characters whose struggles are more to understand than to suffer. I simply love this book. And on my wish list, Engberg’s new collection, Above the Houses.
A Stay By The River
Above the Houses

The First Coming non-fiction by Thomas Sheehan Once in a great while, a writer lays out a truth you’ve only intuited and it’s like having the text come from within you. Sheehan, a philosophy professor, treats the life and teachings of Jesus with such clarity and sense, laying to rest mountains of confusion. His subtitle: How the Kindgom of God Became Christianity. It is the first coming of Jesus that mattered. 
The First Coming

84 Charing Cross Road non-fiction by Helene Hanff You may have seen the movie with Bancroff and Hopkins, and loved it, but reading these letters from crusty impoverished American writer Helene Hanff to button-down British antique bookseller Frank Doel are laugh-out-loud funny with a stunning power to move the heart. Doel’s reserve slowly melts, parcels are sent to ease the bookshop’s post-WWII food rationing woes, and friendships build before your reader eyes. The two follow up books are also a delight, but Charing Cross delivers big love.
84 Charing Cross Road

Sunset Song a novel by Lewis Grassic Gibbon I will never forget reading this Scottish classic. The Brits do not have a corner on great novels about strong women who fight and win their identities amid rural poverty. The music of the inflected Northern Scotts language and the true daring of Gibbon to go epic in a tale of one young woman, Chris Guthrie, riding the turn of the century into the first World War… Give yourself many long weekends of reading pleasure. Get lost in Sunset Song.
Sunset Song

Willa Cather & the Politics of Criticism non-fiction by Joan Acocella Acocella quite simply knocked me into happiness with her analysis of how Cather’s works have been received by critics through time. Clearly an adept Cather fan, and a brilliant thinker, Acocella skewers the reviewers. I was not at all surprised to learn, years after reading this book, that she is an esteemed dance critic for The New Yorker. No wonder she’s adept critiquing critics. I love her love of Willa who “wasted no energy protesting against the forces that might have stood in her way. She just opened the door and walked through it. For this lordly action, she has been made to pay, mostly by women.” Strange to say, but this book of criticism is a reading romp.
Willa Cather & the Politics of Criticism


 
 
Picture

You may never have heard of 
some of my favorite books. I suppose 
I’d love to keep it that way. Keep them 
to myself. But as I am a writer known by few, I’ll break open the piggy bank 
and let coins fly. Great books are the coinage of the realm!


The Enchanted April                                            
a novel by Elizabeth von Arnim 
Exquisite sensibility and a truly surprising turn of events. Just when you think the four plucky women who’ve escaped dreary England for a month’s stay at an Italian villa will assert their independence from their pasts, they turn and embrace them. Brave acts, indeed.
http://www.powells.com/biblio/7-9780860685173-0

A Green Journey 
a novel by Jon Hassler 
How many times have I reread this tale? How many copies given away? I love spending hours with Agatha McGee—the elderly, crabby, exacting heroine—who dares expose herself to travel, spiritual doubt and love, in her ancestral Ireland.
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Green-Journey/Jon-Hassler/p/9780345410412

Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant 
a novel by Anne Tyler 
Yes, Tyler is famous, but this family cock-up from 1982 may have slipped beneath your radar. Homesickness, right when you are home, and gallons of good cooking, a hero who loses nearly everything to those he serves, the impossible mother finding her single moment of profound delight. I just read that Anne Tyler considers it her best work. I love it when I’m right!
http://www.powells.com/biblio/1-9780449911594-1

Muddling Toward Frugality 
non-fiction by Warren Johnson 
I don’t care if Johnson’s economic theories seem dated. I don’t care if Johnson’s premise that muddling through—a simple coping behavior which keeps us from being the utter tyrants and stupid-heads we set out to be, will in the end save us from ourselves—does not play out in history. His is an ardent and sensible call for frugality. I know he’s right.
http://www.alibris.com/booksearch?binding=&mtype=&keyword=muddling+toward+frugality&hs.x=0&hs.y=0&hs=Submit#reviews

Junket
children’s novel by Anne H. White, illustrated by Robert McCloskey
The irrepressible Junket, Airedale extraordinaire, never dwells in sorrow. Left behind by his people and adopted by the new city-bred farm owners who banish all of Junket’s friends, the dog rebuilds his busy farm life with a trot and a wink. This book lodged in my heart in fourth grade and hasn’t moved a centimeter since.
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/used/results.aspx?TTL=junket&usedpagetype=usedlisting&wid=2946523