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 inhale anything written about Celia Thaxter’s garden, and artist’s colony, on the Isle of Shoals so long ago. Please count me in for your giveaway of Margaret’s book. I’d love a copy. And thanks for your verbal portrait of both of you!
My Favorite Plant; Writers and Gardeners on the Plants They Love— edited by Jamaica Kincaid. Lovely little gem of a book
Wow! What a great list of memoir recommendations. As a musician and spiritual seeker, I loved The Music Room by Namita Devidayal. One of the best books I’ve ever read.
As a garden designer, I have to say the most inspiring book I’ve read recently is 40 Years of Chez Panisse by Alice Waters. While vegetable gardening and dreams of opening a cafe someday have overtaken my mind, it is so inspiring! An idea to grow, or to buy local seasonal produce and feed your friends is a beautiful idea.
Wow, I love this blog, just found out about it yesterday!
My favorite gardening book is “Passionate Gardening” by Lauren Springer and Rob Proctor.
I read several books by David Mas Masumoto and enjoyed each and every one. As a farmers daughter I find his books comforting and sometimes a certain passage will cause me great emotion.
The writings of Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall. Cheers!
Marion, my grandfather’s sister was a Marion spelled with an “o” and his third daughter is named Marion. I like your word “realia” for “writing what you know” as a way to approach memoir writing.
Your essay above about how you and Margaret were (and are) the same yet different and your “hook” that led me to her love of bird feeding and watching in her backyard reminds me of how much I miss gardening and birding after my husband and I moved to our condo building.
Dominque Browning’s Around the House and in the Garden has been one of my favorite books about gardening. Ms. Browning was in magazine editing when her husband announced he was leaving.
Count me in! Thanks
This looks like a wonderful read!
What a wonderful blog post.
Quite honestly, I love your first book! I just recently re-read it! And of course, the Lake Isle of Innisfree, your title inspiration, is my favorite poem. So of course I want your new book!
Love the blog post!
Gardening book that are also memoirs: “Gardening for a Lifetime: How to Garden Wiser as You Grow Older” by Sydney Eddison, “And I Shall Have Some Peace There” by Margaret Roach, and “Into the Garden with Charles: A Memoir”
by Clyde Phillip Wachsberger. Each of these books is a peaceful walk in the garden written by a fellow enthusiast, who has a way with words, gardening knowledge and a joyful appreciation of gardening and life.
In 1997 I came across a wonderful book by a very wonderful woman – “12 Lessons on Life I learned from My Garden” by Vivian Elisabeth Glyck. My life was about to explode and this book, and my garden, allowed me to understand that pruning and transplanting and rooting and making sure the conditions were right also pertained to my life. I interviewed the author for a review I was writing and we had a delightful lunch if I recall. Anyway, I love this book and I re-read it often. Looking forward to reading Margaret’s book.
Great post! Count me in. :)
Love to have the book.
I’m really enjoying Gathering Moss by Robin Wall Kimmerer. She reminds me why I love science!
Elaine
I can’t think right now of a memoir that really moved me. When I think of a book that moved me, I think of the book “Born Under a Million Shadows” by Andrea Busfield. This book was inspired by a young Afghan boy named Fawad who sells maps on Chicken Street in Kabul (Andrea got to know him when she lived there), and that same boy is now nominated for an Oscar this year for his part in a short foreign film. He is a remarkable boy, and the story he inspired moved me as much as he moved the author.
Love a chance to win this book. Don’t Call Me Mother by Linda Joy Myers is a memoir that resonated with me.
My favorite memoir has been “Glass Castle.” I didn’t really identify with it personally, but I found it delightful and hilarious. I want to win!