Okay. 4.5 stars. But after this author's Mink River saved me from the pandemic panic, I just can't find a 5-star-worthy read. A bold endeavor, this, taking on an unwritten RL Stevenson tale, for which 5 stars should certainly be given for bravery, alone. I loved the Carson adventures, wanted more of them, but not so much the Fanny story. I kept waiting for something terrible to happen. And I'm glad it didn't, given that this was RL's real life story, mind you, but I wanted more of the adventure.
Beyond the narrative, what Doyle has given us is his own priceless wisdom and instruction on his craft, for which I am grateful. And if you, like me, are a great admirer of this sadly departed author, here are some of his pearls, boldly channeled through the voice of RL himself:
“He was, I could tell, choosing his way among the possible skeins of story, and picking carefully which to trace, and which to leave in shadow; it is a surpassing art, as I have learned, to know which things NOT to say or write, so that those that DO see light are not obscured by tangles of lesser growth, so to speak.”
"I knew myself well enough as a writer by then to know that anything written in exhaustion would be prim and wan and desiccated and not worth the ink on the page. Even then, while still in my twenties, I was dimly aware that there was one sort of writing that discusses and comments and informs, at best usefully, and sometimes quite beautifully; but there is also another sort of writing altogether, that uses every conceivable tool and angle and approach and trick and delight-of-hand to reach for that which is deep and inarticulate in each one of us; and it was on Bush St. that I first began to perceive that I might be capable of this latter thing."
"I loved the essay, for it is the form closest to the human voice, closest to the general loose and free and untrammeled manner of human thought; but for the most part when I was young, I did but add to the mountain of mannered essays, poor writings all too conscious of themselves in their delivery, like actors who are trying too hard to act, rather than simply being the character portrayed. But on Bush Street I sought, in a real sense, to approach that for which we do not have good words, or words at all; and too I began to see how a fiction could hint a a deeper truth than any essay or article could achieve, though the latter reveled in their veracity, and dismissed novels as only airy wisps and dreams."
“I began to wonder if he was not very consciously and deliberately choosing particular chapters of his life to tell, in order to tell me other things, perhaps --- about the nature and power of stories, about how decisions not only reflect but create character, about how stories actually shape our lives; could it be that the words we choose to have resident in our mouths act as a sort of mysterious food, and soak down into our blood and bones, and form that which we wish to be?”
And then there is this to ponder. And I do think I have met a soilsithe in my own life. You? "I believe him to be one of the illuminated ones, the soilsithe, as my mother would say, the menerangi, John tells me they are called in Borneo. Every land is graced by the soilsithe, and how they arise from among us, and what strange and fantastic shapes they assume, and where they come from and where they go when they die is a great mystery; but were we more honest with each other than we are, we would speak more freely of them, for every one of us has met one or more, and knew it instantly, too. But we are so often afraid to speak of the things that mean the most to us, isn’t that so? You of all men, being an author, would know that, isn’t that why you write your books, in the end, to speak openly in print of the things we do not say aloud?”
“We do not acknowledge enough, I think, the clan and tribe of our friends, who are not assigned to us by blood, or given to us to love by a merciful Creator, but come to us by grace and gift from the mass of men, stepping forth unannounced from the passing multitudes, and into our lives; and so very often stepping right into the inner chambers of our hearts. In so many ways we celebrate those we love as wife or husband, father and mother, brother and sister, daughter and son; but it is our friends whom we choose, and who choose us; it is our friends we turn to abashed, when we are bruised and broken by love and pain; it is our friends whose affection and kindness are food and drink to our spirits, and sustain and invigorate us when we are worn and weary.”
If nothing else, this book leaves you with a long list of other books to add to your list, a list for me which now includes RL himself. Thank you, Brian, wherever you are...
K3