A Best Friend–

Jack’s post this week is sad – –

As many of our friends are now aware, our beloved Bruce left us and crossed the rainbow bridge last Friday after a short illness. I’m of an age now to have outlived a good few dogs and many cats, but the cats are independent and live their lives outside ours, whereas the dogs seem much more dependent, loyal, and trusting. Bruce certainly fit that description!

We had him (or he had us) for over four years, and he was probably around six years old when we got him. His first experience with us was a serious leg operation, which made him very suspicious of animal hospitals afterwards – at least he didn’t blame us. We don’t know much about his early life, but we suspect it wasn’t happy.

He really just had two modes – either sleeping on one of his beds around the house or romping around the backyard like a puppy.

Our good friend Susi Lawson is an excellent and prizewinning photographer, and she started coming to our house for weekly guitar lessons about six months ago. She never goes anywhere without her camera, so we have many lovely pictures of ‘Brucey,’ as she dubbed him. She posted a collection of pictures on Facebook a few days ago plus a very moving tribute which captures well how Bruce was seen by all our friends.

This is a tribute to the most sweetest zen dog I’ve ever met. Bruce (I called him Brucey) He was truly an empath.

He could feel the energy in the room and respond with those big cow eyes just by walking over and leaning against your leg. He once sensed my sadness in a conversation and silently padded over and leaned his head against my arm and looked up at me, as if to say “I’m here for you”. One night Jack and I spontaneously jumped up and danced to a song (it was an old Motown CD) and Bruce jubilantly joined in running around us in a surprising burst of energy. It was sheer joy!

It was obvious that Jack and Wendy loved him dearly and he was their ever present companion.

I grew to love him too and I think he was very fond of me. He knew the sound of my car and would meet me at the door.

He was a good solid presence of the kind of love we all need from one another. He knew when to comfort, when to dance and when to chill.

He was the ultimate zen doggie.”

I don’t think I could put it better!

RIP Brucey

Come back next Wednesday for more from Jack

The Monday Book – Trust by Hernan Diaz

Guest review by Janelle Bailey, avid reader and always learning; sometimes substitute teaching, sometimes grandbabysitting, sometimes selling books

Trust by Hernan Diaz

Trust by Hernan Diaz

It is difficult to write, for this book, a review that includes any kind of sweeping generalized summary, as a reader needs to experience it all as it unfolds to appreciate its layers and all that they share. This is a multi-genre, telling of financial industry history and the players who played, seemingly fictitiously but compellingly believable as well.

These characters’ interwoven stories and history over time is what makes the book all that it is. And it was a common theme to our book club discussion of it, recently, that many of us plan to go back and re-read it again for only knowing at the very end how some parts truly fit and wishing to re-connect things back to front again. I have long intended to make that my practice with some of the best books…but too often I finish the book, write the review, and close it…so eager to dig into the next, rather than read again the one I have just finished. For years I advocated students returning to the beginning once they had finished. In the best literature, the opening paragraph, even, or page of a book often foreshadows all that is to come from the entire work, ultimately, a fun thing for them to see play out. I have not, as often as I should, taken my own direction or advice.

In the case of Trust, the supremely valuable and multi-meaningful single word title is layers of impactful; the book is about “trust” as a financial industry term, as well as how one builds “it,” how one values a story and or can depend upon other persons’ perspectives and telling of story and/or history–or their interpretations–as well as what separates fact from fiction. I eagerly entertain a conversation with others about this single word–trust–and how it varyingly functions in the book, wishing to ponder and analyze how it plays into many aspects of the novel’s content, how it threads everything together but differently as well as similarly. If I were still teaching AP English Literature, I would relish the opportunity to discuss this with kids, as well as then challenge them to think of other words that are so multiplied in meaning, singularly, themselves singularly containing the layers we demand of the best literature.

There is no easy way to convey a list of meaningful or impactful characters in this book for that multi-genre, nearly Cloud Atlas-like conveyance, but it is easy to convey my fondness, most of all, for Ida Partenza and Mildred Bevel and their stories. I think you’ll find them to matter much when you meet them.

I wish to read this one again from cover to cover…and will. I first picked it up months ago, having put it on hold at the library due to its winning the Pulitzer Prize. When it came to me I only got halfway through before having to return it to the library. Then it became our book club selection, and I was thick into another thick book, finishing that only two days before book club met. So rather than returning to the beginning of Trust to start over, as I had intended and also knew I “should,” I was forced to pop in closer to where I’d left off, which was about halfway through, and still did not quite finish in time for book club. I had 20 pages remaining when we met.

And that could all make it sound like the book is not as wonderful as it is. It is deserving of the prize it won, and I am eager to read it all again.

And fully realizing I didn’t tell “you” much at all of what it is about, that is because as Janie said back in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, “You got ta go there to know there” and find your own way through its valuable layers of understanding.

Come back next Monday for another book review!