I cannot think of any person who could possibly not love this book......
BEFORE READING THD BOOK:
This book grabbed my interest in a blink of an eye. Against all logical reasoning, I am putting it on the shelf from which I buy books. This is terribly out of character for me..... No, it does not take place in Czechoslovakia, but in fact in southeastern Nebraska. Many of the people living in this area were originally from Czechoslovakia. There are also many people of German descent. The author is the 13th Poet Laureate of the United States. Poetry does not usually attract me, but take a peek at the prose. B&N has it on view. Some reviewer compared it to Andrew Wyeth's painting. That's what hooked me first. I never would have found this without GR! I don't even care that I cannot find a Kirkus review!
ON COMPLETION:
This book is breathtakingly beautiful! I fear that any review I attempt to write will not adequately do the book justice. I need to collect my thoughts first, but Heather, definitely do buy this book! Jeanette, you must too! Kathy, I am sure you will love it. I will send recommendations to those of my GR friends for whom I believe the book would be particularly meaningful. I do in fact recommend it to all of my GR friends.
I will write more later, and I promise no spoilers.
You choose this book for the writing, which is gentle, reflective, imaginative, humorous, heartfelt and plainspoken. The book is a memoir about Ted Kooser's life, about all the mundane events that make up my life and yours too. He splits the book into four chapters - spring, summer, fall and finally winter. Although this represents one year, he speaks of events in his past that have left an indelible imprint on who he is. So it is NOT a book about one year of his life. Not at all! It is about his mother, his father, Uncle Tubby, his great aunt, Helen Stetter, Grandmother Kooser and friends. It is about growing older, about raising your kids and seeing them leave home. It is about dogs. It is about all those little things that make up our lives, particularly those specific to rural life. He throws in Czech sayings whicl lie as a backdrop to life in this rural town 20 miles west of Lincolm, Nebraska. He grew up in Ames, Iowa, so you get acquainted with life there too.
Each chapter is composed of bits of life, reflections on people and daily events. Now I will try and give you some examples. Let's start with the dogs. He has two. Alice is young and full of energy. Her passion is catching frogs. She doesn't walk; she runs, she scampers, she dances in circles. Then their is old Buddy:
I tell my friend about our other dog. Buddy, an English pointer who at fourteen or fifteen years of age (he was a stray and we don't know his birth year) he lies motionless most of the day, sleeping or with his eyes just open enough to see if Alice is going to pounce on him again. She wants him to play and doesn't give up easily. She thinks he's a large rubber squeaky toy. We've given him Ascriptin and steroids and are now trying a human arthritic medicine you can buy over-the-counter. It makes us feel better even if it doesn't help him much. I lie down on the rug next to him at least once a day and rub him all over and stick my nose in his ear. His big paws smell like years of hunting, like a hay-field in sunlight. This is a dog who once killed badgers and raccoon and who ran with the coyotes. (page 10-11)
Then there is the episode when his son Jeff was leaving home..... Jeff was Ted's son by his first wife. They were divorced when Jeff was two. Jeff had grown up with his Mom in Iowa. When he came to Nebraska to finish college he lived with Ted and his new wife, Kathleen, for three years. This was such an opportunity to be the father he had never been able to be. Life sort of crazily fell apart when he was to leave:
One chilly Saturday while he was in Iowa visiting his girlfriend, I sized up his old treehouse. He and a friend had built it one summer - a crazy catawampus collection of old boards, window screens and plywood strung between a clump of three old ash trees. The summer they built it they slept out there for weeks. It was their place on our place, and it had become for me a central symbol of Jeff's place in my life and all the happiness we'd shared. Now I wanted to tear it to splinters. I wanted to pull it apart and stack up the boards in neat piles and put the nails back in their jar. (page 25)
You see, the reader comes to care for Ted because he bravely exposes his foibles, his weaknesses, his idiotic behavior. Such behavior we all recognize in ourselves. Well, I certainly do! By the end of the book I really, really liked Ted! In the last few pages of the book he uses a metaphor of a man walking from one end of a speeding train to the other. This is simply stunning! I cannot tell you more because it sort of sums up the book.
OK, here is an example of Ted's humor:
For the past few years it's been fashionable for young women to wear ballcaps and to snap the strap on the back under their ponytails. I like the looks of that, their shiny ponytails jauntingly swinging, but it's hard not to think of the rear ends of horses. (page 90)
Or what do you think of this?
The Bohemian Alps is a worn place in the carpet of grass we know as the Great Plains, the spot where the glaciers wiped their snowy galoshes coming in and out. (page 45)
This I must quote too:
I was raised by clenched-jawed German-Americans who wouldn't have called for help if a tree had fallen on them. (page 60)
My husband is notorious for refusing to ask for help..... He too has German descent! You must certainly have heard the joke about Moses? 40 years in the desert and no, he couldn't possibly ask anyone for directions! You must read the episode about Ted's outhouse!
I could go on and on and on, giving more and more quotes. Some episodes will appeal to one reader more than another, but I think everyone will find numerous passages they will enjoy. And the summing up at the end is just wonderful! The train metaphor really struck me down. I had to give the book five stars.