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Summer
Books Essays lend clarity to enormous reality of life after Sept.
11
SMALL
WONDER By Barbara Kingsolver HarperCollins, 267 pages,
$23.95 |
REVIEWED By JUDITH
BROMBERG
In case youd like to know, high school students, at least my
high school students, love Barbara Kingsolver. This year in advanced placement
English, we read two of her books, The Poisonwood Bible and Prodigal
Summer. Reminiscing over the year, one student remarked recently that
The Poisonwood Bible was the best discussion we had all year. I could
not disagree.
Small Wonder is Kingsolvers latest offering. A
collection of essays, the volume grew out of a response to Sept. 11 that she
was asked to write. Within a month she had written five such responses. All 23
essays, whether written before or after Sept. 11, reflect its enormous reality
and either draw meaning from it or attempt to lend some clarity to it.
Readers fond of her earlier collection of essays, High Tide in
Tucson, will be equally engaged by this one. Two of Kingsolvers most
prominent themes are politics and the environment. It may be an
overgeneralization, but I would venture that she writes with even greater
intensity in Small Wonder than High Tide, because more seems to
be at stake.
Regardless of her genre, be it short story, novel or essay, one of
Kingsolvers gifts as a writer is her ability to see in the small details
of life the bigger story, the larger truth. Such is the case in her title essay
Small Wonder, which (true story) centers on a child lost in the
forested hills of Iran and found in a cave being nurtured by a mother bear. No
paraphrase can possibly do her rendering justice. The essay must be read to be
appreciated, but she concludes it by saying, It seems to me that there is
still so much to say that I had better raise up a yell across the fence. I have
stories of things I believe in: a persistent river, a forest on the edge of
night, the religion inside a seed, the startle of wingbeats when a spark of red
life flies against all reason out of the darkness. One child, one bear.
Id like to speak of small wonders and the possibility of taking
heart.
Each essay, in and of itself, contains a small wonder and each
affords us the possibility of taking heart, just as all her previous novels and
stories startled us into recognition, rattled our complacency and planted
seeds. Just as she wrote about the CIAs involvement in the internal
affairs of the Congo by telling the story of a Baptist Missionary family being
caught up in it all (The Poisonwood Bible), she probes the world
for its tender spots and carves something hugely important into a
small enough amulet to fit inside a readers most sacred psychic
pocket. Should we capture birds to save them, or may we lay
claim to a perfect shell that has become home to a hermit crab? Even desert
wild flowers have a story to tell, and so do nest-building hummingbirds.
I was amused by her essay Taming the Beast With Two
Backs (think Othello), in which she confesses to writing an
unchaste novel. While she doesnt name it, she can be talking
only about Prodigal Summer. She acknowledged once in reference to this
book that she had to invent a whole new way to write about sexual matters that
typically are uttered only in terms anatomical or pornographic. In this essay
she tongue-in-cheek resigns herself to the economic reality that this one
wont make the core English lit curriculum. I beg to differ,
Barbara! (See above.)
One essay I would like to make required reading in English lit
curriculums, among the future book buyers of the world, is Marking a
Passage about the role of the independent bookseller. Kingsolver feels
strongly about them because she credits them with her initial popularity and
her success as a writer. They gave her readings, they recommended her books,
they selected her for their in-house book clubs, they sold her book by
hand. She goes so far as to say that without them some of the titles she
has given the world would not exist. There would be no glorious launching
of The Poisonwood Bible in the parking lot of the Book Mark; there would
be no Book Mark and no Poisonwood Bible. The big stores have
their place, she concedes. Id just be happier if it
werent in place of the other kind.
It is widely acknowledged that the majority of Kingsolvers
readers are women. In fact, concurrent with her environmental themes runs a
strong thread of eco-feminism, nowhere more prominent than in Prodigal
Summer, in which stories of women, nature, and motherhood weave an earthy
tapestry. Since all women are daughters and most women are mothers, two essays
here with a unique appeal to women are letters to her daughter and to her
mother. Though she comes from different directions, both essays center on the
intense relationship between mother and daughter, both are about coming of age,
both incorporate the power of memory and story, and both make us appreciate the
power of unconditional love.
Finally, as she did in The Poisonwood Bible, Kingsolver is
not afraid to take on the icons and sacred cows of our culture. As a
professional storyteller, she takes myths personally and sees
it as her job to examine the stories and poke holes in the myths if that is
what is called for. Above all, she believes in telling the truth, which in some
part of this book or other will make every reader squirm a little.
One of her most powerful essays is on reclaiming the flag,
especially after Sept. 11, from the ultraconservatives who have wrapped
themselves and their causes in it and its cousin, patriotism. I believe
it is my patriotic duty to recapture my flag from the men who wave it in
the name of jingoism and censorship.
And so I would like to stand up for
my flag and wave it over a few things I believe in including, but not limited
to, dissenting points of view.
Were all just people together, she says, and
whether one agrees with her or not (and some do not), you have to marvel at her
facility with language, with imagery and the power of her metaphors.
Footnote: My graduating seniors must do one last project for which
they select one writer from our course, read another work by that writer and
then, with the benefit of some research, show how those two works inform one
another. Well over one-third selected Barbara Kingsolver as their writer. Small
wonder!
Judith Bromberg teaches high school English in Kansas City,
Mo., and is a frequent reviewer for NCR.
National Catholic Reporter, May 17,
2002
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