Not long ago I heard a story on NPR about the effects of e-readers on the world of reading. People are reading more, particularly young people. The commentator suggested the increase could be due to anonymity: when you're on an electronic device, people might not know you're reading. Could be the kid on the bus next to you isn't just listening to rap or playing a game. He might be reading Great Expectations without fear of being labeled a nerd - or whatever it is kids call each other these days.
I was about to buy a copy of Jack
Remick's Gabriela and the Widow in
paperback because I'm old school, because I don't have an e-reader, because I
like the feel of paper in my hands. But NPR made me question my bias against
e-books, so I downloaded Kindle on my small Acer laptop, bought my first e-book
and began to read.
I didn't like slipping into bed
with a cold hard laptop. I couldn't float on the magic and mystery of Remick's
lyrical prose. I was dog paddling with arrow buttons, unable to scan ahead or flip
back to reread with the ease of turning a page. Still, the power of Remick's
words kept me at it, pulled me to a computer screen long after my teaching and
writing day was over. That screen became a portal and the story took me to the
far side of my own life's mirror, a life I once lived and allowed to slip from
memory.
“When you go through your
reflection you become who you are.”
The Widow reminds us that we must
never forget our past, for it is what makes us who we are and who we become.
“You must speak from inside the
tears and you must smell the pain on your skin or you will never be whole
again.”
Remick writes the tools of the
craft into his story: a list of events and a stack of notecards, each labeled
with date, place and object. Gabriela and the Widow use these tools to
construct the List of the Widow's life and in doing so Gabriela experiences new
ways of being, alternatives to the violent patterns that have marked her young
life. Throw nothing of yourself away, the Widow teaches. Save your fingernail
clippings, your hair trimmings, your life stories. A lesson on living. A lesson
on writing. I see Gabriela with her notecards and her long list as I work the
notecards on the storyboard of my current novel.
Gabriela and the Widow is a lyrical treasure that paints a magical
mysterious world of two women, so close they inhabit each other's dreams and relive
each other's experiences. In doing so the Widow leaves a bit of herself behind
when she passes and Gabriela enters womanhood regaining a life tragically
interrupted in childhood as an innocent victim of the atrocities of war.
This is a beautiful, horrific,
captivating read full of the lights and colors, the smells and music of southern
Mexico and central California. The story held me to the screen and that says a
lot. I have no doubt some of you will point out that reading off a computer is
not the same as using an e-reader. You may even insist that I give Kindle a
chance, certain I'll love it once I get used to it. Maybe so, but I'm not ready
to make the jump to an e-reader just yet. I still want a signed paperback copy
of Jack Remick's Gabriela and the Widow
for my library.
4 comments:
Arleen: I am so lucky to have readers who see what's there. So lucky. Thank you for posting this on facebook.
Downloading my copy--onto my Kindle-- momentarily. And that means my husband will have it on his too! And I'm getting a paperback as well. I do love the cover art.
It took me some time, but I now enjoy reading on my e-reader as much as real books. I'm a convert!
And yes, Gabriela and the Widow is a great read - just getting into it myself.
I'm with you, I like having book in hand so I can turn back to past pages, etc when reading. However, when I'm traveling, my eReader is easier to carry and I get more books than the one or two paperbacks I would normally pack. It's a give and take relationship I think.
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