Readers of this blog know that I spent part of this past Saturday with my niece, reviewing old things in envelopes, old things stored away for countless years in my father's attic.
Funnily enough, I came home from that adventure with Julia and sat down to meet a deadline from Book Country, which had asked me to write about how memoirs can be researched.
It was a coincidence. I took advantage of it. I wrote the piece that begins like this below and can be found in its entirety
here.
Earlier
today my niece, Julia, and I opened the door to my father’s attic, where
a single box among many boxes bears my name. I had agreed to help Julia
with a school photography project—to search, with her, for elements
from my past that would somehow explain who I am.
Letters were there—old boyfriends, a marriage proposal, a key-sized
envelope containing the dust of some prom flowers. A postcard upon which
each hand-inked letter was no larger than a sugar ant. Names: Tanya,
Steven, Pierre, Rob. An evaluation from the library where I’d worked as a
University of Pennsylvania student; the supervisor noted, in square
boxes, that I’d been “excellent” in all things. I also read, however: Although
Beth chats to her friends at the checkout desk for long periods of
time, she seems to be able to continue working and be accurate.
Published on October 10, 2013 10:22