I take an Epsom salt bath one or two times a
week to maintain my sanity, and while I do, I always read what I call a “bathtub
book”—cheap, easy-to-read fiction, usually pulp murder mysteries or chick lit. But
I recently ran out of bathtub books, and the only book on my shelf I hadn’t
read yet was “The Boys in the Boat”, which I got in a Christmas book exchange
last December. It’s about the University of Washington men’s rowing crew trying
to win gold at the 1936 Olympics. I
never cracked it open because I’m not interested in the subject matter and I
dread reading “acclaimed” books. But I’d been assured by everyone who’s read it
that it’s amazing, fascinating, transcendent, etc. so in the absence of anything
else to read, I figured I’d give it a try.
I will concede that it’s well-written and the
author, Daniel James Brown, does an excellent job weaving a very complex story,
albeit one that 50 pages in, I still haven’t mustered much interest for. But
the part of the story that did grab me has nothing to do with the rowing team.
It’s about the pivotal subject Joe Rantz’s stepmother Thula, a beautiful, talented
and cultured violinist who had dreams of performing in concert halls all over
the world, and who apparently had the chops to make that dream a reality. For
reasons that remain completely unclear to me, she married Joe’s father, moved with
him to a run-down mining cabin in Boulder City, and promptly bore three
children. Of course, she’s miserable, lonely, and furious. But my question is…why??
Why on earth would this woman who had talent, education, and brains, think it
was a great idea to marry a miner and move to a hardscrabble town in the middle
of nowhere, where she couldn’t practice the violin because her fingers were
constantly chapped from the cold? What was the plan there, Thula? It remains a
distracting puzzle to me. I understand it was a different time and there were
different expectations, but I’m still disturbed by it. I don’t think the book
is going to circle back and tell me whatever became of Thula, either. The story
has just moved on, leaving me worried about her, even though she wasn’t a very
nice person, and she kicked her own stepson out of the house when he was barely
a teenager. (Bonus fun fact: She was apparently psychic and predicted the
sinking of the Titantic.)
I’m also disturbed by the fact that compelling
writing and historical relevance is not making me more interested in finishing
the book. You can’t force yourself to be interested in something you’re not,
but a part of me feels like bad, shallow person, because so many people loved
this book and it’s so critically acclaimed. And that’s why I don’t like reading
acclaimed books. I don’t usually love them as much as other people do, and then
I end up with an inferiority complex. I
should be interested. It’s an important story and rowing is a metaphor for
life and the subjects of the book triumph over adversity through teamwork and so on
into infinity and me probably never picking this book up again.
I submitted a short piece of fiction to a literary
magazine recently. Since I’ve been focusing almost entirely on getting my novel
done, I haven’t submitted any work for a long time, and I’ve forgotten about
the small but addictive thrill of waiting for a response; living with the possibility
of an acceptance at any moment now; that someone may like my work enough to
publish it, meaning my worth as a human being is affirmed. This is a pretty
inefficient system for maintaining self-esteem. I think there should be random
affirmations of everyone’s worth. I’m not sure how this would work. Maybe a sparkly-clad affirmation fairy could appear
out of nowhere occasionally and hand out a card and a treat. “Hello! I’m the
affirmation fairy and I’m here to tell you are a worthy human being! Enjoy your
cookie!” Or, maybe we could work on loving ourselves and not looking to outside
sources to make us feel whole. But that’s really hard work and there’s no
cookie involved, so I think the fairy idea is better.
For those of you who do liking rowing, here’s a
video. It looks like a total nightmare to me, but to each their own!
--Kristen McHenry
9 comments:
Well Thula died suddenly in 1935. Maybe you dont care for the book because you prefer fiction. I couldn't finish a book about fictional stories if my life depended on it. There are too many interesting real stories so why bother.
I enjoy your tangent..a very difficult historical context for this aspiring artist..very sad circumstances..listening to Joe 'one note' all day long singing jimmy crack corn did her in..plus his appetite,wow! no winners,,,she was an artist in her own right..a perspective only a sensitive feminist could feel. good thinking.geoffrey
With just a few arrogant (ignorant) key strokes J Clayton (https://www.blogger.com/profile/14738946841034529540) dismisses the likes of Dickens, Hemingway, Goethe, Dostoesvsky, just to name a few, because he couldn't finish a book of fictional stories if his life depended on it. I too was curious about the circumstances of Joe's stepmother, wondering what would cause her to abandon the refinements and culture of her upbringing, while at the same time harboring such hostilities toward a ten year old boy. Thank you for raising the thoughtful discussion! (Kristen--I would also be interested to learn what books you do find interesting reads.)
I hope you did finish the book! I found the early parts of the book a slog as well, but boy, did it pay off. I don't think you'd be much interested in Thula at the end (and it doesn't end well for Thula!). The "why?" for me was all about her cold rejection of her stepson. Joe's eventual wife had the same question!
Great book. Inspirational.
P.S. I am enthralled with rowing now. Rowing.
"rowing is a metaphor for life"
How true, how true! It's all stroke, stroke, stroke, but never really getting anywhere you want to go. On top of that you get sunburn and repetitive stress injuries for your trouble and if you complain, you're a bad team player. Also this one guy gets to tell everyone else what to do while he or she just goes along for the ride.
Oh wait, the metaphor was supposed to be inspirational? My bad.
I finished the book. I can see the step mother abandonment of the 10 years old boy but my goodness, the man was a packaged deal when she married him. How could the father permit this to happen??? She may have been educated, sensitive and refined but actually she was cruel!
Thula made a choice. Many of us do not get to fulfill our talents, so that is not so unique to her. She was cruel, self-centered, and unreasonable. I want to call her husband a wimp, but he had a difficult wife to deal with as a married man. Still, he should have supported his son.
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Exactly. When you're used to nickel candy, healthy food tastes terrible. Some preferring trash fiction to well written history needs to stick to dimestore drivel.
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