On one of these reconnaissance missions, I came across a table with new titles at 20% off. Hilary Mantel's new one, Bring Up The Bodies, was there. It had a nice heft to it and I quickly calculated that there were lots of pages per dollar making it a pretty good investment. But I am already on the waiting list at the library for that title. I'm number 13, of course, but nevertheless I figure if I'm patient my day will come...let's see...January 2014 maybe? But that's without renewals. Considering its length, I can probably count on lots of renewals. January 2014 might even be optimistic since the book is "on order." So, they don't even have it yet, which means the first person on the list isn't reading it yet. Considering that, I guess I should stop being angry at how slow he or she is reading. There were only two copies ordered for the entire library system.
Also on the table was a colorful display of The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry, a first novel by Rachel Joyce. The price was right because, with 20% off, I could still get a packet of magnetic book markers with my gift money. I took both books to a comfy chair and started to read Harold Fry and within five minutes I knew I couldn't leave Barnes & Noble without it. Triumphant, I presented the book and a set of eight Celtic bookmarks to the clerk. (NB: the bookmarks are yet another wonderful invention I did not invent. The list of great ideas that weren't mine continues to grow. The bookmarks clip over the page marking the exact line where you should begin again. And they don't fall off and land between the seat cushions in the car when you are stopped at a red light and think you can sneak in an extra minute or two, or are running for the front door in the rain juggling an umbrella, a book, four bags of groceries, a purse and a briefcase, or when you trip on a crack in the sidewalk and, like a remake of "Goofy Goes Skiing," go air borne while trying to hold down your skirt but loosing the book you're carrying which then lands 10 feet away into the mud. Even then, the bookmarks stick. I've tested this theory personally, so I can sign an affidavit attesting to it. They obediently sit where they are placed...even in hurricane force winds. Okay...I have not actually tested them in hurricane force winds but I do have faith in their tenacity. It isn't beyond the scope of possibility that I could have invented them, though, considering that when I was 8 years old I "invented" panty hose...I didn't act on that light-bulb moment regretfully; I was probably too young to get the patent anyway. I'll leave that story for another time.)
Harold Fry has retired from a brewery. He lives a quiet and sad life in a small English village with his wife Maureen, who suffers through a constant irritation with him and everything he does. One day, included in the "quotidian minutiae" (don't you love that phrase) of the morning mail a letter arrives from Queenie Hennessy, a woman with whom Harold worked at the brewery. He hadn't seen nor had he thought of her in over twenty years. They had been friendly acquaintances, but nothing more. She is dying of cancer in a nursing home in Berwick-upon-Tweed, she explains, and is writing to say good-bye.
Harold writes a quick and unsentimental reply and heads off to the nearest mail box wearing his light coat and a pair of yachting shoes. He passes the first mail box, and then the second, but he continues to walk. As long as he walks, Queenie will live, and so his odyssey to reach Berwick-Upon-Tweed begins.
The writing is beautiful and thought provoking:
He remembered his father in the nursing home, and his mother's suitcase by the door. And now here was a woman who twenty years ago had proved herself a friend. Was this how it went? That just at the moment when he wanted to do something, it was too late? That all the pieces of a life must eventually be surrendered, as if in truth they amounted to nothing?Along the way, Harold encounters challenges and characters, each of which help unlock memories and free a spirit long squelched, and the reader walks along with him cheering for him to succeed. Early on in my reading of the novel I wrote in my book journal ("Why walk? Why doesn't he take the quickest way to get there?) But, of course, the question was soon answered:
In walking, he freed the past that he had spent twenty years seeking to avoid, and now it chattered and played through his head with a wild energy that was his own. He no longer saw distance in terms of miles. He measured it with his remembering.This novel is on the long list for the Man Booker Prize, something I did not know when I picked it up at the book store. I am not surprised. I can say with great satisfaction that my birthday money was well spent; I simply loved it. In reading this novel I was reminded that whatever the destination upon which we set our course, it is the journey itself that really counts...and I never lost my place.