Book Giveaway and a Little Insight Into the Roach Sisters
IN THE BEGINNING, there wasn’t a thing Margaret owned, a phrase she spoke, or a gesture she tossed off that I did not want as my own. But smooth-haired, blue-eyed, skim-milk-skinned, even visually she presented all that I could never be, her calm to my storm of unleashed red curls, speckled hazel eyes and haphazardly freckled skin.
Until long into our twenties, I honestly believed she was the most beautiful creature on earth, and while my response to the visual that is Margaret arced and changed over those years, the fact of her beauty never did.
From our beginnings, our physical differences also extended to what we did with our bodies. She sat in the shade and she read. Throwing myself off docks, diving boards and tree limbs, I knocked out teeth, bruised my shins and stubbed the top off my toe as regularly as most people eat breakfast, always really meaning to come to the table clean, or at the very least, unbloodied.
Emotionally, nothing was gained in the comparison. She could be still; she listened, she learned. Were she a kitchen utensil, it’s a measuring cup; I am handsful of flour tossed into a bowl.
The real separation came when our mother’s mind went to battle with something and lost. At 51 years old, and diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, our mother and her illness produced different responses in her different daughters. Margaret moved home and moved in to help. I moved out. Margaret took up gardening, a pursuit I judged to be frivolous and decorative. I started writing about our mother, a pursuit Margaret judged to be an invasion into our privacy and not all that helpful.
Each time I visited, there was another dwarf specimen tree; the tall hedge behind which our now unhappy home stood was sheared down to 6-inches. Peonies flaunted their party-dress splendor. What was the use, I wondered?
I researched and typed and fought with the government. What was the use, she wondered?
We had a lot to learn about the other.
In time, Margaret learned the crucial lesson that not all custodial care – tending, cultivating, and nurturing – has to be for something that only loses more ground every day. And I learned to respect that. As I started seeing my work as that of memoir, she started to respect that. The resulting admiration is no mere graft, but rather the flourishing regrowth that only a hard prune can provide.
Between the two of us we’ve now written seven books, the most recent being hers, a marvelous look from her own backyard. She knows something about what can be learned at home. I would know.
Join me in celebrating her new work, The Backyard Parables. It’s her best book yet.
To Enter the Giveaway
TO ENTER TO WIN ONE OF FIVE BOOKS, comment here,noting in both places the name of another memoir or gardening book that you identified with. Tell us why, too, if you wish. I understand some of you are shy and just prefer to say “Count me in,” or “I want to win,” but if you feel like sharing an inspirational book title and a sense of the “why” behind your choice instead, please do; all the better.
Entries close at midnight Sunday, February 3, 2013, with winners to be drawn at random (using the tool at random [dot] org) and announced the next day.
Once you post your entry here, go visit Margaret and tell her I get it now, and that I love what she does.
I love In Search of The Medicine Buddha by David Crow. Meeting David at Tibet House years ago changed my life. Reading about his spiritual and medicinal and aromatic journey was a treat and makes me appreciate my friend and mentor more and more.
Thank you for sharing this beautiful snippet of your shared life, in all its tussy-mussy glory.
I relate closely to Donna Johnson’s HOLY GHOST GIRL. I’ve only read one chapter, but it rings true and deep, and resonates with me because of our shared experiences and perspectives. (I will savor it, start to finish, when I’ve reached The End of my own book, CAN I GET A WITNESS? Memoir of a Tent Preacher’s Daughter)
Count me in, Marion – and it’s so fitting to discover there’s a yin to Margaret’s yang. Now I have two Roach women to inspire me!
I have loved reading countless gardening books over the years, but the personal gardening stories of Mirabel Osler “A Breath From Elsewhere”, and of Elsa Bakalar “A Garden of One’s Own” speak to me about a shared deep love of gardening and a connection to nature and humanity by digging in the soil and appreciating all the beauty around us…about living in the moment, immersing yourself in the myriad of colors, shapes, scents, contrasts and similarities of gardens. These authors touched a chord in me that plays the same symphony of pleasure we as gardeners share. It’s easier to understand the world in a garden. Life in all it’s glory, death, with winter and also the unexpected deaths when you’ve done everything right and a prized plant just croaks. Struggles for space and attention, thugs and wallflowers, introverts and extroverts…are all there. I have followed your sister’s blog for quite awhile now, and feel she is a kindred spirit, and would love to win one of her books.
My inspiring book would be Seedfolk by Paul Fleishman. Not a memoir as such, the book recounts the growth of a miracle on a trashy inner city block that brings people of diverse ages, backgrounds and ethnicities together as they find a way to make green things grow in the harshest of environments. RE: yin and yang–YES!
Thanks for a vulnerable story.
I love Lasagna Gardening, as it got me growing everything and got me over the resistance of having to double dig. I dug nothing – the lasagna composting method and the beloved earthworms did all the work for me. Yay!
My garden is as big as a tennis court.
Universe – I would love to win this book – thank you…..
My Mom had altzeimers, and being the sister that lived next door, I was the one that looked out for her.. I have always enjoyed having a garden, and through thick or thin it was there for me, to enjoy, nuture and dig through my frustrations. Would enjoy reading how the Roach sisters did it.
The Victory Garden–the show and the book are still great. –djs
I know Margaret well, love her dearly, and yet learned more about her in this beautiful story. Don’t need to be entered in the contest (I’ve already read and am singing the praises of The Backyard Parables and have used Marion’s terrific book in my own memoir writing classesO. I just wanted to say, hooray for you both, and thank you for sharing your stories.
The $64 Tomato: How One Man Nearly Lost His Sanity, Spent a Fortune, and Endured an Existential Crisis in the Quest for the Perfect Garden William Alexander
The author’s father was gardener, my mother was a gardener. We both inherited the gardening gene. I laughed with recognition all through this very well written book. I never want to tally up the real costs of the food and flowers I grow. If an accountant ever required such a task from me, I would put all that effort and money into my basic needs to sustain life column.
Life without being covered frequently with good soil or being soaked by ill-placed hoses or, being sweaty and sunburned in the pursuit of growing and vegetables and flowers would be a very sad life for me. I even enjoy complaining about varmints. This book will remain on my shelves for a long time.
Marion, I would love to win a copy of your sister’s book….and look forward to anything you publish in the future. I refer often to your slender volume The Memoir Project and your blog prompts refresh my muse on my way to writing my story.
Hi!
I love the essays by the late Henry Mitchell – he is insighful and very down to earth (no pun intended). I also loved The $64 Tomato by William Alexandar, a hilarious account of his attempt to start an organic vegetable garden; From the Ground Up by Amy Stewart, her recollection of her first garden in CA which I read one very cold New England February and immediately started ordering seeds; and and Beds I Have Known by Martha Smith which I picked up because the title cracked me up and it ended up being a very funny book of garden essays. I have been dying to read The Backyard Parables!!!
Sent here by the lovely Katrina Kenison. I have such a complicated relationship with my sister, and as the younger sibling, I could relate so much to your early years, watching her and admiring every move. Beautifully written! I will be back!
A keen eyed and lovely sisterly tribute.
Atop An Underwood by Jack Kerouac. A collection of early short stories and other writings is a favorite.
Loved this post! I have Margaret’s other garden book, would love to have this one!
I would love to win a book for the North Chatham Free Library! I am in one of two memoir writing classes going on now at this cute and cool place. I see a link for me: memoir writing about the garden. So many of the perennials, houseplants and even vegetables I grow could be the focus of stories about people/places/events they make me remember.
Count me in, please. :)
Mike Feder’s collection of nonfiction essays: A New York Son moved me as did Homer Hickam’s Rocket Boys and Joe Brainard’s I Remember (a totally different type of memoir).
I closely identify with Edwidge Danticat’s Brother, I’m Dying as it captures so astutely how what happened to our relatives in another country and another time influences who we are.
I love Diane Ackerman’s “Cultivating Delight: a Natural History of My Garden.” I first read it before I had a garden myself, then again after I had a yard and garden. She is such a beautiful writer, and, while I often feel a bit jealous of her larger space and bigger projects than I am able to do, it is also really fun and inspiring to read about what other people are doing to make their garden dreams a reality. :)
Count me in