Thursday, May 30, 2019

I Had to Fight to Read :: Personal Narrative, Autobiographical Essay

It was summer, stinking hot in a small town and I was 15 and bored. The town librarian had been giving me grief since I was eleven and in the sixth grade, when she issued her first decree that I wasnt old enough to check surface what became the first of a long line of books I had to fight to read. It was also the first of many times when one or both of my parents trudged down to the program library to insist equally firmly that she had no right to restrict my choices as I had their permission to read whatever I wanted.   The summer of my thirtieth course was especially difficult for this poor beleaguered woman. Her worst day came when I insisted on checking out all of Proust, every one of Thomas Wolfes novels, and while I was at it, Joyces Ulysses as well. After all, I reasoned, I had two weeks to keep these books and I was a fast reader.   So I took them home, to the old iron glider under(a) the grape arbor, and I propped myself up on a bunch of pillows and dug in wit h the same glee most people reserve for hot alter sundaes. I fanned the pages and decided to read Look Homeward, Angel first because I like the way all those words leapfrogged over each other on every single page. Wow The exuberant rush and gush of all those words The torrent was overwhelming, the words blurred, I was losing the meaning. I knew I had to long-winded the pace somehow before I would have to admit that the librarian was probably right and perhaps I really wasnt old enough to contribute sense of it.   And so I turned to Proust, finding relief within his exquisitely nuanced precision and pacing. My love of all things French was born with Proust, as I marveled at his privileged people and their luminous lives. Who were they really, I wondered, and was all of Paris like this, and if so, how soon could I get there? For the next two weeks, I cut back and forth between that unlikely duo, Wolfe and Proust, sweating from Julys heat and the emotional impact of Brother Be ns death (best read when one is fifteen), then chill off with the soothingly elegant rituals of Monsieur Swann and company.

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