“Good books have questions for us to ponder. That is what all good art does."
Just Like That is a kind of vaguely familiar English catch-phrase. It reminds me of Grace Paley’s title Enormous Changes at the Last Minute: Boom, and just like that, they fell in love, or just like that, he died.
Just Like That is the third in the loosely connected wonderful middle grades trilogy by Gary Schmidt, after Wednesday Wars and Okay For Now. All of them balance lighthearted fun with kids dealing with serious issues. I was alerted to this book being published by friend Kristen, and immediately got it and began reading. Schmidt’s wife Anne died eight years ago, leaving him to continue raising their six (!) children. When I was done I texted K that I read the whole book as Schmidt working through his own grief through the character of Meryl Lee Kowalski and she said she thought ALL of the books written after his wife’s death were essentially about his dealing with his grief. What do they say about great minds, again?
Meryl Lee has lost a friend to death, and faces “The Blank,”missing him so much. What is The Blank like?:
"It was if Absence had moved into the room and taken up all of the air.”
Her parents send her from Long Island to a posh private girls’ boarding school in Maine where she encounters the stuffy elitism of rich girls and stiff schoolmarms focused on what one teacher talks about, speaking in all caps to the girls: Resolution and Overcoming Obstacles and Accomplishment. She also meets a kid named Matt, homeless, carrying a pillowcase of money, moving north, trying to escape some people. Two tough pasts to come to terms with. Isolation in trauma. How can they recover? The answer is making connections with people: Good people Matt meets on his way north, some of whom are the same people Meryl Lee meets.
The book takes place as do the others in the late sixties, when racial and economic and gender inequities get faced, at the time of the Vietnam War. Glad those struggles are finally over? Have you been reading the paper (or, I mean, social media feeds)? This is a girl’s school, so there is a focus on women in literature and history, but there is an increasingly feminist focus that Meryl Lee brings to the school as she challenges the treatment of servants there as less than fully human.
“We’re going to watch for ways to change the world”--Meryl Lee
As is the case in every book I have read by the Calvin University English Prof Schmidt, reading matters. Meryl Lee is discouraged from reading John Steinbeck’s "lewd" Grapes of Wrath, with its focus on economic justice. (that great book was taken out of my high school curriculum on that basis! I wonder f Schmidt heard that story from a mutual friend?!). Meryl Lee is asked instead to read about Mary, Queen of Scots. But the key text here for her is L. Frank Baum’s The Wizard of Oz. Matt, who learns about lobster fishing, reads The Old Man and the Sea, but also Treasure Island and (of the orphan) Oliver Twist. You can learn from literature, is the point, it can be a life guide. Matt and Meryl Lee, living (sorta) parallel lives, each with a dead friend and parents (largely) gone. “It stinks for both of us.” So what else do you do to cope, beside reading? You make alliances, you make family out of the people around you, especially if you lack a reliable family.
So what will Meryl Lee’s Accomplishment be? It has to do with (mild spoiler) her working “across the aisle” with people she does not like in the least, and finding common ground with them. She has problems at home, too. Matt’s Accomplishment, in the face of his own Obstacles, is in part to find a Home and stop running, to trust that people can help him so he can stop being a kind of refugee. But in this book there are both awful, even violent people (Schmidt might refer to them as “not yet” good, but he might also identify them as just plain bad) and protectors, such as Captain Hurd, and Mrs. MacKnockater. The idea is to bind together with good people and fight injustice and try your best to reach out to others who are “not yet.”
“So, Miss Kowalski, in the face of that dilemma, what options do we have?”
“We could pretend that the ideal could exist.”
Yes! Believe that the world and all people are worth saving, and then take steps to work with others to Accomplish that. You pick yourselves up when you are in a dilemma and you start over.
I like Schmidt’s balance of humor with his serious attention to grief and real world suffering--lost lives in Vietnam, divorce, bullying, the threat of violence. I like his use of disrupting chronology in telling the two kids’s stories. I like his use of repeating themes and images. I love this trilogy. Okay For Now is still my favorite, but all three of these are great books. The fact that this is a book that takes place at a girl’s school and has Meryl Lee as its emerging activist lead character with guidance from teacher Nora MacKnockater I think makes it an inspirational feminist text, and maybe a tribute to Schmidt’s own wife.
(spoiler?) “You are the Tin Woodsman, who lost your heart, and despite the Obstacles, found it again in the only way you can find it: By giving it away”--Nora MacKnockater, to Meryl Lee
Just like that.