top of page

Keep Up with the Essay One Paragraph at a Time

A New Feature (Almost) Every Friday

Want to subscribe for free?

Click here.

Main feature

April 26, 2024

 

 

from A Postcard Memoir

by Lawrence Sutin

 

“All the desires and the parts where I get disoriented are real.”

—Lawrence Sutin

 

Lawrence Sutin has published books in multiple genres: biography, history, novel, collage and erasure books, and memoir, including A Postcard Memoir, a series of vignettes based on his personal collection of postcards. Before he retired, he was a professor in the Creative Writing and Liberal Studies Programs of Hamline University and taught in the low-residency program of the Vermont College of Fine Arts.  He “tries to lead a quiet life devoted to writing, family, friends, reading and listening to music,” his website explains. “It doesn’t always work out quietly but he does the best he can.” You can learn more about him and his work here.

The Paragraph of the Week is his take on the postcard image beside it.

Suttin 1_0001.jpg

The Paragraph of the Week

 

In Jerusalem, during my junior year abroad, the woman I thought I would love forever and I became lovers. She had come separately to the Holy City after her graduation, at which point she had broken off with the young man with whom she had been in love for most of her college years. In the autumn, by accident, we met in the library of Hebrew University where I was a student. Obtaining her address and phone number, I persisted gently but obsessively with my attentions. It was fitting for my fantasy of her as a dusky angel nurtured and protected by the gods that she had found lodgings in a single-room garden house in the backyard of an old Jewish residential district. I could walk to it from my dormitory, by way of a semiarid valley. One night, after many shy visits there, we began to kiss and went on kissing for hours, yes, hours. Her black hair fell over my face, a robe of initiation. I was a virgin. My first orgasms with her were in my own jeans as we lay together writhing on her bed. At last, in the hoarfrost winter, we became lovers. Paul McCartney’s first solo album was playing in the German Quarter apartment of a friend of hers who was away. We were both fumbly. At dawn beside her I heard the muezzin’s call. She was asleep with her rich hair now falling over her black brows and ripening plum skin. It crossed my mind then that if I married her, as I intended, I would never have any other women.

 

—Lawrence Sutin

Commentary

 

In the “Author’s Note” to A Postcard Memoir, Lawrence Suttin claims that his memoir,  based on photos of people he does not know, borrowed names, made-up details, in places where he has not been, is emotionally true.  “All the desires and the parts where I get disoriented are real.” In this memoir of his desires he meets a woman who looks just like his first love and fantasizes about them reading books together “and “kissing with the slow, precise passion reserved for the spiritually chaste” though she had another boyfriend and his love remained unrequited. He met her postcard look-alike, pictured here leaning against a tree, years later in the Hebrew University library, and after “shy visits” to her apartment eventually began kissing her “for hours” while her “black hair fell over [his] face, a robe of initiation.” This love would not last. He made the mistake of peeking into her diary and grew jealous when he read of a “young, dark, Israeli soldier” who had seduced her before they met “with sizzling ease.” After their split, he entered a period of risk taking, “of travel, friends, drugs, attitudes that twisted harder than drugs,” passing time, believing in nothing. But desire remained. He still loved the frieze of Venus’ breasts which have “the delicious throb of wings, the fragrance of milk, lemon blossoms, and blood, the softness stone has when shaped into breasts.” He fell in love with the woman who would become his wife in his adult writing class. She knew he did not have a girlfriend because he wore “orange socks,” and he fell for “her draping fair hair, paled blue eyes and rosy mystic calm after sex.” In this made-up book of real desires, he writes that “I had the sense of having slipped into a garden I’d never seen and yet suddenly belonged in.”

 

—THE

Subscribe

~   ~   ~

Subscribe to The Humble Essayist

The best way to keep up with us is to add your name to our growing list of subscribers, and we will send free, brief, weekly reminders of our features with a link to the page directly to your email. Please click on the blue button to subscribe.

Click the blue button for weekly reminders.

Return to Main Feature Here

~   ~   ~

Announcements

News from Great River Review

Three lyric essays by Steven Harvey appear in the newest edition of Great River Review. The first piece, called “Oakleaf Hydrangea” begins this way:

 

"The oakleaf hydrangea winking at me over the top of my book carves a saucy shape in the mind standing boldly as itself between me and the rest of the world, hands on hips as it were, the woody bush a swirl like the vessel of water it is named for..."

Learn more here.

Listen to the Dan Hill Podcast on The Beloved Republic 

at The New Books Network

Dan Hill interviews author Steven Harvey about politics, family, race, and being The Humble Essayist on his radio program at the New Books Network.

 

Here.

Return to main feature here.

Great River Review.jpg
New Books Network logo.webp
Announcements

News from The Humble Essayist Press

 

Beware poets writing prose? Nah. Check out the new releases from The Humble Essayist Press! Essay collections by two award-winning poets. Learn more here.

Kathy and Syd.png

The Beloved Republic Review

Thanks to Tarn Wilson for her review of The Beloved Republic at the  River Teeth website. She writes: “In his titular essay 'The Beloved Republic,' Harvey makes this heartening promise to those who feel worried and wearied, helpless in the face of 'war and tyranny,' that by devoting ourselves to lives of steady kindness, creativity, and friendship we are joining an invisible, benevolent army.” Read the full review here.

River Teeth Logo.png

Brevity

Thanks to Brevity magazine for publishing the short prose piece “The Hermit Thrush.”

You can read the entire piece at Brevity here.

Hunger Mountain

Thanks to Hunger Mountain for publishing “Aubade,” my exploration of perception in lyric prose. It begins with this epigraph from the artist Paul Cézanne: “The landscape thinks itself in me and I am its consciousness.” 

 

You can read the entire brief piece here.

Zone 3 Interview on The Beloved Republic

 

Thanks to Amy Wright and the folks at Zone 3 for granting me an interview about my new book. Amy reads with discernment, asks great and surprising questions, and listens carefully to the answers. Check out the question she opens with in the sidebar--it goes right to the heart of the matter! See the full interview here.

image.png
Hunger Mountain.png
Wright Question 1.jpg

The Beloved Republic by Steven Harvey

Available at Bookstores and Online

See more at the author's website and check out our video trailers here.

Trailer One

Trailer Two

The Beloved Republic

~   ~   ~

The Beloved Republic

 

I am pleased to announce that my fourth collection of personal essays  won the Wandering Aengus Press nonfiction award and has been nominated for two PushcartsThanks to the Press for this honor.

What is the Beloved Republic? E. M. Forster, who coined the phrase, called it “an aristocracy of the sensitive, the considerate, and the plucky” who “have the power to endure” and “can take a joke.” Pitted against authoritarianism, the Beloved Republic is the peaceful and fragile confederacy of kind, benevolent, and creative people in a world of tyrants, thugs, and loud-mouthed bullies. Taking Forster’s phrase for its title, my book can be read as dispatches from that besieged land.

Available online and at bookstores. Learn  more at the author's website 

wandering aengus.jpg
The Beloved Republic front cover.jpg
FOLLY BEACH cover jpg.jpg

~   ~   ~

Folly Beach 

Folly Beach is a book-length personal essay about easing fears of mortality and loss through creativity. It never loses sight of the inevitable losses that life brings, but doesn't let loss have the last word.  In the face of the grim, Folly Beach holds up the human capacity to create as our sufficient joy.

—THE

goodreads logo.jpg

In a world of loss, creativity is the best revenge.

Please

Follow on Goodreads

and write a review.

You can learn more about the recent work of Steven Harvey at his author's page here.

THE Mission

We at The Humble Essayist are in love with the paragraph, that lowliest of literary techniques.  A sentence stands out as a noble thing: a complete thought.  But what is a paragraph?  And what, in particular, is a good one?  You know it when you read it--that is our article of faith.  So on Friday of each week, beginning on Independence Day 2014, the very day 169 years earlier that Henry Thoreau moved to Walden Pond, we will select a single paragraph from an essay or a reflective memoir and print it here along with a paragraph of commentary.   We will choose paragraphs that are surprising, beautifully written, and, above all, thematic--illuminating the author's comment on life.  Each paragraph of the week is, in short, a concise review of the writer's work.  We hope that this page will introduce you to many exciting authors and their ideas.

 

The Humble Essayist thanks Clipartpal for the public domain artwork of "The Old Man Reading" that is the logo for the site.

bottom of page