Monday, November 23, 2015

The Book Club Boogie

Several years ago, a neighbor and friend told me that there was an opening in her book club, and she was pleased to be able to ask me if I would like to join.  They carefully monitor the number of members, not wanting the group to get too large.  She had previously told me about this exclusive club, which was founded and organized by a high-profile intellectual/personality in the elite college town that we live in.  What makes this club special is that the author of the book to be discussed always attends the meeting.  One time, the assigned book was by Steve Martin, and yes, Steve Martin himself was at that meeting.


My friend told me that she thought I would enjoy participating in the club, but she warned me that it was a fairly serious commitment.  The founder gets angry if you miss a meeting.  Members are expected to complete the books on time and be at all the meetings.  After all, a great deal of effort is put into getting the authors there.

I didn’t have to think about it long.  I responded that, as much as I appreciated the invitation, I would have to pass.  Between work and childcare, I didn’t have a lot of time left to read.  And when I did read, I’d rather be able to choose my own books and read them at my leisure, without a deadline.  Sure, it’s sexy to meet some really great authors, but a group where the founder routinely gets angry at members is not where I’d like to spend my time.  I have enough challenges.

I really enjoy reading, or listening to audio books, as I’ve been doing more and more lately. Non-fiction is my favorite, although the occasional novel slips in.  I also enjoy talking with friends about books I’ve read.  At a party about a year ago, I was chatting up some books with an acquaintance, and a few weeks later, she emailed me to invite me to join her book club.  She said that it was a really laid-back group that meets only every six weeks, and that they read only fiction, to keep the atmosphere light.  You don’t have to attend every meeting, and you don’t even have to have finished the book to come to the gatherings, which members take turns hosting at 9pm, after the kids are asleep.  “Ok,” I thought, “I could swing that, as long as most of the books are available on audio,” which turned out not to be a problem.

At the first meeting, I admit to feeling a little intimidated, as several of the members taught at our prestigious local university.  Luckily, the others didn’t, so I was comforted by the fact that I wasn’t alone.  I enjoyed the conversation and the society, so it seemed like a good match.

Further down the road, we read and discussed, upon my recommendation, “Loving Frank,” by Nancy Horan, a based-on-truth novel about Frank Lloyd Wright and Mamah Borthwick Cheney, the woman for whom the famed architect scandalously left his wife and six children.  I like historical fiction as a second choice to non-fiction, and have long admired the work of Frank Lloyd Wright.  Spoiler alert: The end of the book describes how, in 1914, Mamah and her two children were murdered by a disturbed black man from Barbados, Julian Carlton, who was in the service of the unmarried couple in their home in rural Wisconsin.  Most of the people in the book club weren’t crazy about the book, but it did spark some lively conversation.  One woman, a teacher at an area public university, expressed her shock and scorn for the author, who ignored how Carlton must have felt as a black man living in isolation and service.  I was surprised by this reaction, because the book wasn’t about Carlton, it was about the relationship between Wright and Chaney.  Carlton’s emotional backstory never even entered my mind.

 

This should have been a hint to me about this particular club member’s feelings about race relations, but I missed it.  A few meetings later, we discussed “Americanah,” a really great book by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, about a young woman from Nigeria who leaves her home and boyfriend to come to the US and attend the private university in our town.  (I highly recommend it!)


Now, after the fact, a friend of mine told me, “Don’t you know to avoid talking about race, politics and religion at all cost?”  But anyone who knows me knows that I believe in open dialogue about all subjects.  Sometimes, the more sensitive, the better.

The public university teacher told the group about the struggle some of her students have in writing in what is generally accepted as “proper” English.  She explained that she is careful not to discourage her students from writing by being too critical, although often some students write like they speak, in broken English, in street vernacular, or in “Ebonics.”  She tries not to “over-correct” their papers for fear of discouraging them. 

As a perpetual student of French, I appreciate it when someone corrects a grammatical or pronunciation mistake I make.  People more often than not don’t, for fear of offending me, but I wish more people would.  But not everyone is me.  Still, I told the story of how, at a street fair a couple of weeks prior to the meeting, I was talking with two young teens from the black Baptist church I attend.  I was scheduled to perform with the church choir that afternoon.  One of the girls asked, “Where you singin’ at?”  I looked at her and said, “Excuse me?” in a playful way.  The other girl nudged her and said, “Where are you singing?”  The first girl got the message, so she repeated, “Where are you singing?”  I answered her question, but I could tell she was annoyed by my prompting her to use proper English.  Well, the public university teacher was appalled.  She berated me, saying, “You mean to tell us that this young person let you into her world and spoke to you like a peer, and you corrected her, right there in the middle of the street fair?”  I said, “Yes, I corrected her as I would have corrected one of my own children.  We are members of the same church family, but I am not her peer.  I am her elder.”  She said, “I don’t think you would have corrected your own child like that.”  I said, “I most certainly would have.  You don’t even know me!”  Anyway, it wasn't pleasant, but somehow we got past the scrape, and at the end of the meeting, we agreed on the next book.

Five weeks passed, I finished the book, but I hadn’t heard where the next meeting would be.  I offered to host it, since I had yet to host a meeting.  I had no response.  Finally, the morning of the meeting, I got a call from my friend who had invited me to be in the group.  She said, “Some of the members are super uncomfortable with the disagreement you both had at the last meeting, and they asked me to tell you that they would rather you not continue participating in the group.” 

Here I was, worried that I wouldn’t be up to snuff with some of the intellectuals in the group, and now I was being told that if there is a difference of opinion, better keep it to yourself.  My friend said, “We should just chalk it up to a bad match.  You know I respect you very much, which is why I invited you to participate in the first place, and I’m really sorry about this.”  I was stunned, hurt, and disappointed.  I had made friends with some of the people in the group.  To this day, no one has been in touch with me.  I even Facebook messaged a couple of members from time to time to say, “Hi,” but no one wrote back.  The level of immaturity and cowardice is stunning from a group of highly-educated and presumably civic-minded individuals. 

I was ashamed of having been kicked out of an elite college town book club for many months.  Then, as time distanced me from the bitter experience, I was finally able to talk about it, albeit cautiously.  I told the story to one close friend, who howled with laughter.  “I always thought you were a cool person, but this seals the deal!  You were kicked out of a snooty book club!  Awesome!  You should be proud of yourself for standing up for what you believe in!” she said.  I feel a lot better now.

Thursday, November 19, 2015

"Ew"

I was sound asleep.  I remember feeling warm and comfortable under my feather duvet. Unconscious. It was nice.

Then, I felt a light tap on my shoulder, and I heard my daughter, in her little girl voice, say, "Ew." Before I even opened my eyes, I knew that "Ew" could only mean one thing: she made a messy caca in her pullup.

What time is it?  I squinted to see my clock.  5am.  I forced myself awake.

"Come on, Audrey, let's go to the bathroom."

She had not-so-neatly already removed her pullup there.  It was on the floor, along with the fluffy pink tutu that I had brought back for her from France last summer, now soiled, along with the soiled bath mat, footsie pajamas, tile floor and the toilet.  It was going to be a big cleanup.  Why must she always insist on sleeping in that tutu?...

:-(