SEND ME A POSTCARD

One perk of ADVANCED AGE is that the daily arrival of the mailman, for me anyway, never loses its luster.

The mailperson, almost inevitably a man in my experience, is right up there in my mind with the local librarian and the priest as a consoler, a bringer of sustenance, a conduit between my cloistered little world and the world at large. I have come close to tears in my occasional outbursts of gratitude and wonder that the guy reallly does show up, mostly, rain, shine and here in Tucson, almost dangerous heat.

“Eh, it happens every summer,” he shrugged with a smile when I waylaid him the other day to breathe my thanks, then ducked his topeed (is that a word? topee-ed?) head, and walked on.

Some days the mailbox contains but a flyer for some fancy horse-boarding stable addressed to the previous tenant, or the sixtieth ad for Spectrum cable, or the weekly specials at some local grocery store. Or a bill. Or something in the way of a snafu that requires a few 800 phone calls, or a lengthy session online.

And then some days the mail is like Christmas morning.

That happened yesterday.

I received a check and a nice note, for starters, from the one person who’s definitely signed up for my next Writing Workshop.

I received a used book, Ring of Bright Water, which is a memoir about living in a remote spot in coastal Scotland with an otter by an aristocrat named Gavin Maxwell who was definitely eccentric and perhaps slightly mentally unstable. Apparently this is a classic but I’d never come across it before.

I opened the book at random and found: “Mijbil had in face displayed a characteristic shared, I believe, by many animals; an apparent step, as it were, on the road to travel-shock death, but in fact a powerful buffer against it. Many animals seem to me to be able to go into a deep sleep, a coma, almost, as a voluntary act independent of exhaustion; it is an escape mechanism that comes into operation when the animal’s inventiveness in the face of adversity has failed to ameliorate his circumstances…I came to recognize it in Mij when he travelled in cars, a thing he hated; after a few minutes of frenzy he would curl himself into a tight ball and banish entirely the distasteful world around him.”

Some of us have another word for this coping mechanism: drinking.

Anyway, I can’t wait to dig in, though I have many books on my nightstand I need to plow through first.

One of these is called Scraps of Wool: A Journey Through the Golden Ages of Travel Writing, compiled by Bill Colegrave. Here I’ve come across many old favorites: Bruce Chatwin, of course; Patrick Leigh Fermor, Mary Kingsley. But I also have a whole new long list of other books to check out: Isabella Bird’s A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains, Wilfred Thesiger’s The Marsh Arabs, a biography of the short tortured life of Swiss-Russian writer, explorer and vagabond Isabelle Eberhardt.

Another is the apparently hard-to-find and therefore expensive Bernanos: An Ecclesial Existence by Hans Urs von Balthasar. This also arrived by mail (on a previous day) from a reader in Connecticut who lent me his copy! Larded with fantastic passages and quotes, among them: “I never have time to write; but I have made it my duty to receive anyone who shows up at my house, and it happens all too often that I have to lose a whole hour in the company of an idiot.”

Also, “[E]ach of us is in some way or another, and in succession, a criminal and a saint.”

Finally, I received in the mail yesterday a card (printed by the United States Holocaust Museum, “View of the countrysde in Csobanka, Hungary, as the Hungarian Labor Service conpany 109/13 departs on the morning of April 20, 1942”) from a friend in Northern California. Our is an epistolary friendship–we’ve never met in the flesh–but since at least 2016, when she first wrote to me, we have exchanged anecdotes, reflections, and (mostly from her) book suggestions. Ann is the one who told me of Clare Kipps’ Sold for a Farthing, and for that alone, has my eternal and undying gratitude. She always has some interesting tidbit of thought, or a surprising insight, or a fantastic, little-known book she wonders if I’d like.

She ended with this quote from Camus’ The Plague: “What we learn in time of pestilence: that there are more things to admire in people than to despise.”

13 Replies to “SEND ME A POSTCARD”

  1. Hello Heather,
    I have been enjoying sharing some of your adventure through your writing. You always seem to make me 1. Reflect and 2. Smile. Thanks for that. I loved Ring of Bright Water when I read it long ago. Perhaps I will re read it. And I will definitely check out Sold For a Farthing. Happy shadow gazing…. As only is possible in your new neck of the woods. Fondly, Wicki

  2. PS…Is your mail man from Nepal?

    1. HEATHER KING says: Reply

      Ha, thanks so much for the support Wicki, and Sold for a Farthing is now one of my all-time favorites–so looking forward to the Gavin Maxwell…and yes, some people actually wear jungle topees here, such is the heat!

  3. Susie Rose says: Reply

    I so love Sold For A Farthing. It’s become a favorite!

    1. HEATHER KING says: Reply

      Susie, isn’t it a gem? Utterlyl strange and enchanting…I’m so glad you like Sold for a Farthing, too!

  4. Philippe Garmy says: Reply

    Dearest Heather,
    Here’s a thought: Should you like to receive varied postcards from time to time with brief reflections and commentary from across the pond, please do share an address. What intentional fun and delight might that be for us both…If that strikes you as a good thing, you may contact me here: philippegarmy@icloud.com
    Your postman might enjoy it too!

    1. HEATHER KING says: Reply

      Hi Philippe, you’re so kind and you’re more than welcome to send me a postcard though my blog and other offerings as well as my attempt to respond to every comment will prob have to suffice for a reply! Huge blessings and thanks–

  5. Heather,
    You are a true connoisseur of words and expression. Have you ever thought of hosting a small book club, in the genre of your writing workshops?

    1. HEATHER KING says: Reply

      Kellie, wow, what a great idea–no, I’d never thought of a book club per se…a gathering or retreat or workshop type group even, centered on books. The Lord knows reading is a huge part of my life and always has been. I am going to take this under advisement–it would fit in perfectly with my whole Desire Lines: Arts. Divine Intoxication.Faith thrust…many thanks to you!

  6. Regina George says: Reply

    Thank you always for your reading recommendations. When I read Sold for a Farthing at your first suggestion (how long ago was that anyway?), it delighted me at every level. You will find Ring of Bright Water equally satisfying. 🙂 We reside in Ann Arbor, Michigan. So I have always enjoyed your renditions of California and now of Arizona. You have a way of noticing the small things that make a place real even from a distance. A perfect capture when our travel has been constrained. Your blog encouraged me to purchase your books and I have not been disappointed. You are so appreciated.

    1. HEATHER KING says: Reply

      Oh Regina, thank you so much! I have never been to Michigan, I’m sorry to say and Ann Arbor looks beyond beautiful..Like many of us, I haven’t flown, or even been on a long road trip (except between LA and Tucson) since COVID…my sense is that the travel bug will return eventually. So much to see, so little time. That’s a long-winded way of saying I’m so glad to have a reader in MI and I so appreciate your kind words–oh and I’m in the middle of Ring of Bright Water–yes, wonderful.

  7. So many books, so little time… My oh my, I would rather read than sleep!

    Love your Desire Lines, Ms. Heather!

    1. HEATHER KING says: Reply

      Thank you, Betty, I know, I have such a huge stack of books waiting to be read…I will get to them, though! Bless you and thank you–

Leave a Reply to HEATHER KINGCancel reply