For months and months, folks have been coming into Boswell, telling me that I had to read Ruth Ozeki's novel, A Tale for the Time Being. They'd look at me and say, "I think you'd like it." Do I wear my reading taste on my sleeve so nakedly that even amateurs can figure out what I like? Oh, yes, there is this blog thing.
Back at Schwartz, we'd had a great run with Ozeki's first novel, My Year of Meats, successful enough that we made the tour schedule for the second, All Over Creation. Alas, that novel didn't seem to have the momentum of the first novel; why are audiences so fickle? To that measure, why is writing so fickle?

So A Tale for the Time Being was announced, Ozeki came to 2013's Winter Institute, and I got a copy signed. I played my old trick of having it personalized to Daniel, to force me to read it, but it didn't happen. Much as I wanted to, there were authors with upcoming events who wound up beating Ozeki out for the "currently reading" slot, and heck, I suspect she wouldn't be into the competition anyway.

We came close to an event, actually, halfway between hardcover and paperback publication. Every year Ragdale, the retreat in Lake Forest, has an arts celebration called A Novel Affair, which seems to triple the number of writers in attendance. Over the last few years, Jane Hamilton has set writers up to read in Milwaukee. In 2012, it was Gail Tsukiyama and in 2013, it was Karen Joy Fowler, and that was how I wound up reading We are All Completely Beside Ourselves (on sale in paperback on February 25).

So it seems that during the day, every other person comes into the store wondering why I hadn't read All Over Creation. Then I go home and stare at the inscription, "So nice to meet you!" See, she had a good time! I must have really charmed her in the four seconds I talked to her in the line. The paperback release is scheduled for December 31st, meaning that February is as good as booked.

Part Two: I read it.
So for those who are not paying attention to worthy literary fiction, A Tale for the Time Being is told from two different perspectives. A woman named Ruth, living on an island off the coast of British Columbia, finds a Hello Kitty lunchbox washed up on the shores. Inside is a diary of a young girl named Nao. She fears that this was lost in the tragic Japanese tsunami of 2011. Why do I not know the name of this storm, and why should I care, except that The Weather Channel now seems to name everything. That last storm was Pax, by the way.

Back in Ruth's story, there's a lot of pondering over exactly what happened. Ruth lives with Oliver, an artist in semi-retirement. It appears that Ruth might be happier in New York, but lives there for the sake of her husband, in a community that appears to be a hippie version of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (a lot of quirky characters and gossip).

So what can Ruth do? Of course a neighbor needs to remind her that this diary crossed the Pacific Ocean, and the likelihood is that Nao's fate is sealed. Of course you've figured out that Ruth is a stand in for Ruth, the author (and yes, her real-life husband is named Oliver). So Ruth is the reader and Nao is the writer, but we know that the reader is actually the writer. And that's just the beginning of the ideas that started spinning around in my head in this story that combines physics and Buddhism and storytelling (of course) together.
Part Three: What did the book club think?

Someone else noted that this treatment of soldiers is not uncommon, and we ourselves came across it when we read John Boyne's The Absolutist, which was about British troops in World War I. I noted that this was also just a story in the news, with that story circulating several months ago about toxic commanders in the military system. Here's Craig Whitlock's take in The Washington Post.
J3, our resident scientist, was particularly intrigued by the scientific theories in the book. Spoiler alert, but there was a lot of talk about multiple realities, and whether in fact there were two parallel stories told in Ozeki's novel. I'm not talking about Ruth and Nao, but Nao and Nao. Did Nao actually suffer two fates? It was discussed heavily. But the clues are in the references to Schrödinger's Cat and quantum mechanics that are spread throughout the story, and are discussed further in the appendix.
One of the things I should note here was that while there were a few women who did not like the book in the group, all three men did, so if you have a couples group or something, this might be a better suggestion than you first thought when you saw that teenage Japanese girl's face staring at you.
As I mentioned before, if there was any complaining, it was more about Ruth's story. Some folks didn't much see the point of her husband and the villagers, but L. found Oliver quite sympathetic and though the played a vital role in the story.
In my notes, I wrote the following equation and in the spirit of the science vibe of the story, I will repeat it here: Ruth's mother/Jiko = Oliver/Haruki #2. Sadly, I have no idea what I was thinking. T
So then we talked about the crow imagery. What does it mean, what does it mean? After several rounds back and forth, I thought of Paul Harding's sage words and said, "Sometimes a crow is just a crow." G. agreed that crows are great and I showed everyone G.'s crow painting that hangs in our store. Elizabeth Kolbert worries about crows in her new book, The Sixth Extinction.
One of the great things about A Tale for the Time Being is that whether you go into the discussion having liked the book or not (or liking it at the beginning and then losing interest, or not knowing what to think and loving it by the end, or seven other combinations), you can't come out of the discussion without an insight or two, and a bit more respect for what Ozeki was trying to pull off.
And that makes for a great discussion. Oh, and everyone who told me that I would like the book was right. I'm so glad I took your collective advice.
Part Four: What's next?
If you want a head start on our April selection, we're discussing Anthony Marra's A Constellation of Vital Phenomena on Monday, April 7, 7 pm...unless an amazing author wants to appear at Boswell on that date, and then we'll adjust.
1 comment:
I loved this book, and I am so disappointed I was unable to participate in the discussion. I wrote some thoughts in a brief review on Goodreads, copied here if anyone is interested:
Love love love. This book kicked me out of my reading slump and woke me up with a start. At once intense and serene, this book of contrasts embodies two worlds with great success. The voice of the story alternates between Nao, a sixteen year old writing a diary in Tokyo, and Ruth, a novelist living on a remote island in Canada who finds the diary washed up on the beach over a decade later. The two disparate stories are equally compelling, and I found myself loath to leave either woman's world at the conclusion of the chapters.
The book covers a dizzying array of subjects, including ocean currents, Zen Buddhism, quantum physics, Japanese pop culture, the ethics of computer programming, bullying, suicide, Alzheimer's disease, kamikazes, cats, the writer's process, and the nature of time and all beings. The story is enriched through this diversity, and amazingly never feels fractured or overly weighed down. The writing remains light and swift even in the darkest moments. Large ideas are woven in subtly, and the web of connections grows through the addition of other voices to the story, in the form of letters, journals, emails, and articles.
This book is unapologetically unique, and if you give yourself over to it and follow the flow of the current, you may come to find that each of us fractured and confused time beings are more connected than we realized.
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