Hourglass Time, memory, marriage

Dani Shapiro

Book - 2017

"The best-selling novelist and memoirist delivers her most intimate and powerful work: a piercing, life-affirming memoir about marriage and memory, about the frailty and elasticity of our most essential bonds, and about the accretion, over time, of both sorrow and love. Hourglass is an inquiry into how marriage is transformed by time--abraded, strengthened, shaped in miraculous and sometimes terrifying ways by accident and experience. With courage and relentless honesty, Dani Shapiro opens the door to her house, her marriage, and her heart, and invites us to witness her own marital reckoning--a reckoning in which she confronts both the life she dreamed of and the life she made, and struggles to reconcile the girl she was with the woman... she has become. What are the forces that shape our most elemental bonds? How do we make lifelong commitments in the face of identities that are continuously shifting, and commit ourselves for all time when the self is so often in flux? What happens to love in the face of the unexpected, in the face of disappointment and compromise--how do we wrest beauty from imperfection, find grace in the ordinary, desire what we have rather than what we lack? Drawing on literature, poetry, philosophy, and theology, Shapiro writes gloriously of the joys and challenges of matrimonial life, in a luminous narrative that unfurls with urgent immediacy and sharp intelligence. Artful, intensely emotional work from one of our finest writers"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Dani Shapiro (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
145 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780451494481
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

SPACEMAN OF BOHEMIA, by Jaroslav Kalfar. (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $15.99.) A Czech astronaut is shot into space to investigate a mysterious cloud, and leaves behind a trove of earthly baggage. As our reviewer, Hari Kunzru, put it: "But for all the strangeness of outer space, it is the writing about his home village, the place to which he longs to return and perhaps never can, that beats strongest in this wry, melancholy book." LOCKING UP OUR OWN: Crime and Punishment in Black America, by James Forman Jr. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $16.) Forman offers a masterly account of how black elected officials grappled with the drug crises and violence of the 1970s. The book, one of the Book Review's 10 best of 2017, argues that prison reform requires a new understanding of justice, one that emphasizes accountability instead of vengeance. ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE, by Elizabeth Strout. (Random House, $17.) Nine linked stories complement Strout's earlier novel "My Name Is Lucy Barton," and follow a cast of interconnected characters who negotiate their desires and pain, and move past traumas. Our reviewer, Andrea Barrett, praised the book, which she described as "thick with details and even more profound in its rendering of the ways we save, or fail to save, one another." THE GIVERS: Wealth, Power, and Philanthropy in a New Gilded Age, by David Callahan. (Vintage, $17.) A new crop of billionaires is quietly shaping society through their philanthropic ventures - including school choice, climate change and even marriage rights - with little oversight. Callahan knows the field, and can explain the preferences of tech billionaires versus Wall Street donors, for example. He sheds light on these donors' goals, their choices and how they're different from their forebears. THE KINGDOM, by Emmanuel Carrere. Translated by John Lambert. (Picador, $17.) Carrere takes on the subject of early Christians in the religion's founding days, imagining Paul and Luke after Christ's death. Along the way, he weaves in reflections on his own faith: Driven by despair more than 20 years ago, he became a devout Christian, praying and undertaking a rigorous study of the Bible, until the fervor faded a few years later. HOURGLASS: Time, Memory, Marriage, by Dani Shapiro. (Anchor, $15.) In this midlife appraisal, Shapiro explores the subtle transformations of her life, examining her hopes and exposing the fissures in her marriage, along with her belief that the relationship will prevail. Looking back on the origins of her relationship, Shapiro enters an eloquent dialogue with her earlier, younger selves.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

Eighteen years: a lifetime, a blink of an eye, an endurance contest, a testament to faith and commitment. When Shapiro (Still Writing, 2013) considers the length of her marriage, all these aspects come into play. How did she, with two failed marriages behind her, abandon caution and marry again? How did he, referred to only as M. in this memoir, decide that she would be his first, and presumably only, wife? The two are writers first and foremost: she is a novelist and he is a war correspondent and screenwriter. But they are parents, too. Their son, Jason, now 16 and thriving, nearly did not survive infancy. Constantly battling the strains of financial insecurity that comes with their chosen careers, Shapiro and her husband also must confront life's other inevitable challenges: age and infirmity, but also loss and letting go. In a voice that radiates grace and wisdom, Shapiro writes poignantly about the passage of time and the conflicting forces of acceptance and denial that rage within us all.--Haggas, Carol Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this touching and intimate memoir, Shapiro (Slow Motion, Devotion) admits that she has lost interest in telling stories. Instead she focuses on what is underneath: "the soft, pulsing thing that is true." Over the years, the truth has become less hard-edged, more nuanced, than when she was young and had "all the self-knowledge of a Labrador retriever." She does revisit earlier themes-her father's death, her son's devastating illness-but really this is about her 18-year marriage to "M." There are many ups and plenty of downs, too. M had traded his career as a successful war correspondent for one as a struggling screenwriter, so that she wouldn't have to worry about him being on the battlefield. But she does worry about him, fretting that one more disappointment will lead to hopelessness and he will follow his mother's descent into Alzheimer's. Shapiro beautifully weaves together her own moving language and a commonplace book's worth of perfect quotes from others. Journals from her honeymoon-the last she kept-are often lists of things and places that in their very meaninglessness make an effective counterpoint, emphasizing what she has learned since the days of that beginning. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The noted novelist and memoirist reflects on her marriage and the elusive nature of time.To write openly about an enduring intimate relationship requires courage and tact; it's a balancing act that can trip up the most seasoned of writers, not to mention potentially damage the sacred bond at stake. In this compelling account of her 18-year marriage, Shapiro (Still Writing: The Perils and Pleasures of a Creative Life, 2013 etc.) carefully exposes the vulnerabilities that have subtly begun to surface within the relationship and, individually, within her husband and herself, over the years, sensitively addressing how time, age, and the fluctuations of success continue to impact their lives. This is the third marriage for the author. Her husband, referenced here as simply M., is a screenwriter and formerly a foreign correspondent who was based in Africa. Together, they live in a rural setting in Connecticut with their teenage son. Shapiro moves back and forth in time from their first meeting at a cocktail party in Manhattan and their subsequent wedding and honeymoon in France through the various trials they've faced within their marriage. These include the near-death of their young son, deaths of parents, struggles with finances, and difficulties navigating the career demands and frequent disappointments of two writers sharing their working lives from a home base. Throughout, the narrative demonstrates Shapiro's finely tuned, poetic skills as a writer. "The stumbles and falls; the lapses in judgment; the near misses; the could-haves. I've become convinced that our lives are shaped less by the mistakes we make than when we make them," she writes. "There is less elasticity now. Less time to bounce back. And so I heed the urgent whisper and move with greater and greater deliberation. I hold my life with M. carefully in my hands like the faience pottery we brought back from our honeymoon long ago.We must be handled with care." A sharply observed and frequently moving memoir of a marriage. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Hourglass Time, Memory, Marriage   From my office window I see my husband on the driveway below.  It's the dead of winter, and he's wearing nothing but a white terry- cloth bathrobe, his feet stuffed into galoshes. A gust of wind lifts the hem of the bathrobe, exposing his pale legs as he stands on a sheet of snow-covered ice. His hair is more salt than pepper. His breath makes vaporous clouds in the cold. Walls of snow are packed against the sides of the driveway, white fields spread out to the woods in the distance. The sky is chalk. A rifle rests easily on his shoulder, pointed at the northernmost corner of our roof. So. He bought the gun.  I take a long sip of coffee. Our two dogs are sleeping on the rug next to my desk chair. The old, demented one is snoring. There's nothing I can do but watch as M. squeezes the trigger. Bam! I start, and the dogs leap up. The windows rattle. The whole house shakes.   The woodpecker had arrived the previous fall. Once he chose our house he seemed quite content, settled in, as if he had every intention of staying a while. At first, I had no idea where the noise was coming from. Rat-tat-tat. From my study, it sounded like a loose shutter banging, though we had no shutters. It was almost a city sound -- like a faraway jackhammer -- out of place in the quiet of the country. Rat-tat-tat-tat-tat. Of course, it seemed possible, too, that the infernal banging was entirely in my mind. "My head," wrote Virginia Woolf, "is a hive of words that won't settle." I couldn't hold a thought. It was as if an internal axis had been jarred and tilted downward; words and images slipped through a chute into a dim, murky pool from which I could not retrieve them. Finally, I spotted the woodpecker from my son's bathroom window. Perched on a drainpipe just below the wood shingled roof, he was a small, brown bird with a tiny head and a pointy beak that moved back and forth with astonishing speed as he hammered away at what was already a sizable hole in the side of the house. Rat-tat-tat. It had been a time of erosion. I'd begun to see in metaphor. We'd lived in the house for twelve years, and things were falling apart. The refrigerator stopped working one day. The banister warped and the spindles on the staircase loosened and clattered to the floor. An old, neglected apple tree on our property split in two, its trunk as hollow as a drum. The house needed painting. The well needed fracking, whatever that meant. The front door was cracked, and on winter days, a sliver of wind could be felt inside. Late that same fall of the woodpecker, as I sat reading at the kitchen table one afternoon, two large, mangy creatures loped across the meadow. One was grey, the other a pale, milky brown, they were otherworldly, terrifying. My spine tingled. I grabbed my phone to take their picture, then texted it to M., who was in the city that day. Wolves?  No.  Sure? Yes. Coyotes. Not coyotes. I know coyotes.   The basement regularly flooded. If the wind blew in a certain way during a heavy rainfall, we could count on a half inch of water in the workroom where M. kept projects in varying states of half-completion. On a long table, he had hundreds of photos cut into stamp-sized pieces. These, he planned to assemble into a photo collage. A finished one from years earlier hangs in our guest bathroom. I never tire of looking it: our now-teenaged son as a toddler, hoisted on the shoulders of a friend, a smiling, radiant man whose daughter will later fall to her death from a Brooklyn rooftop; my mother in a hat to cover her bald head, months before she died; my mother- in-law before Alzheimer's set in; the three of us -- my little family and I --on the steps of our Brooklyn townhouse; then older, on the porch of our house in Connecticut. Alive. Dead. Lost. Like the names I refuse to cross out in my address book, I catalog those I have loved.   "Honey!" I called downstairs, keeping an eye on the woodpecker who, if he noticed me, didn't seem to care. "I need you!" M. peered at the woodpecker through the bathroom window. "Little fucker." "I know." "We're going to have to replace all that siding." "Let's put it on the list." The list included pressing items such as painting the house, fixing the front door. We really did need to install a generator, replace the heating system. The list had once included items like redoing the bathrooms, building an addition. I'd stopped keeping a list. "I'm getting a gun." "I don't want a gun in the house." "Not a real gun. A pellet gun.  Nail the fucker."   I did some research. All the while, the pecking continued. More holes were hammered into the side of our house. A friend recommended a brick of suet, hung from a tree. Another suggested a porcelain owl placed atop our roof.  M. is not fond of home remedies. The weather grew colder. Leaves on the trees turned russet, deep yellow, bright burgundy.  Families of wild turkeys strutted across the front meadow. My mind was on fire. Each day, I sat in my second floor office and heard rat-tat-tat-tat-tat.   I'll take care of it , M. said. A familiar refrain, one I have always loved and long to believe. This longing - my longing - is part of our marriage. We have been together for nearly two decades. The woodpecker, the mangy creatures, the hive of words. The creaky house, the velocity of time, the accretion of sorrow. The things that can and cannot be fixed. I'll take care of it .   M., before I knew him, owned real guns.  He had been a foreign correspondent working out of Africa, in territory that required bodyguards and weapons. He kept a Kalashnikov stored in a locker in Mogadishu. On occasion, he wore a bulletproof vest. It hangs on a hook in our coat closet. Now, he is having a tete-a-tete with a woodpecker as I stand holding one quivering dog while petting the other. He hadn't listened to me. When had he snuck a gun into the house? Where had he bought it? Walmart? Bam! The sound echoes off the roof.  His hair is standing on end and he looks not unlike Einstein. A small dark speck against the white sky as the bird flies away, and I can almost hear its laughter, a cartoon bubble: you can't catch me!   We have recently embarked on a massive housecleaning after reading a popular book about the Japanese art of tidying up.  It falls into the department of things we can control. The author instructs readers to empty the contents of every single household drawer and closet and lay it all out: the old sneakers, balled up work-out clothes, tangled necklaces, single earrings, gift soap still in cellophane wrappers. The report cards, paper maché art projects, baby bjorn. The boxes of heating pads from a long-ago bout with sciatica. The pregnancy test displaying the pink line. The electric 'smores maker, a housewarming gift, deposited unopened in the back of the coat closet. I found these old journals of yours. Just yesterday, M. handed me two thin, spiral-bound notebooks. One is red, the other blue. They don't look familiar. I open the red one. Dated June 8, 1997, the entry reads: Day one. Arrived early in London and bought books at Heathrow (paperback ed.of Angela's Ashes . ) Arrived in Paris in the early afternoon (Orly) and took a   taxi to the Relais St. Germain. D. unpacked. Loved the room, great big bed, fluffy towels. My handwriting looks to me like a letter to my future self, a missive launched forward through time. If you had asked me if I'd kept a journal on our honeymoon, I would have told you with certainty that I had not. And who the hell writes about herself in the third person in her diary?   Today we ventured across the Seine only to discover that the Beauborg was closed. Went to Agnes B. where M. bought two nice shirts. Walked through the Marais, went to Ma Bourgoune, where a pigeon shat all over the back of M.'s new Agnes B. shirt. D. went upstairs and washed it off in a public restroom.   We weren't all that young when we married. I was thirty-five, M. forty-one. As I read my entries, I feel time collapsing on itself. It is as if I can reach out and tap that blissed-out honeymooning not-so-terribly young woman on the shoulder, point her away from the fluffy towels and café and shitting pigeons and direct her toward another screen, a future screen. As she walks into a shop on the Place Vendome (D. finally ended her search for the perfect watch to go with her beautiful new wedding band) I want to suggest to her that life is long. That this is the beginning. And that it may be true, at least in poetic terms, that beginnings are like seeds that contain within them everything that will ever happen.   On the highest shelf in my office closet, five boxes filled with reams of pages are stacked along with several cloth-covered volumes from the years I kept journals. Keeping journals was a practice for me, a way of ordering my life. It was an attempt to separate the interior from the exterior. To keep all my trash -- this is the way I thought of it -- in one place. Into the journals I poured every thought, each uncomfortable desire. Every petty resentment, seething insecurity, unexpressed envy that would be boring to all the world except -- perhaps -- to me. I continued the journal practice for years after becoming a writer, because I thought of the journals as the place where the detritus would be discarded, leaving only the essential --somehow the process itself would determine which was which -- for my real work.  I never imagined that a soul would read the journals. I would have been horrified, mortified if anyone had seen them. So why are they still on a shelf in my closet? Why have I kept them? The red and blue notebooks are, I believe, the last journals in which I wrote. After we returned from our honeymoon, that practice, which had accompanied me all through my teens and twenties and into my thirties, disappeared. It was disappearing even as I wrote in them, I becoming she . Interspersed in those thin notebooks were other things: lists, thoughts, ideas. But that still doesn't explain why I haven't burned them. They aren't there for posterity. Nor for reference. I don't believe the young woman who wrote them has anything to teach me. What does she know? She hasn't lived my life.   After breakfast we drove to Massaune, home of the best olive oil in France. Picked up three bottles. Then left St. Remy and took off for the Cote d'Azur. While in the car, D. ended up getting bitten by a nasty unidentified flying insect and jumped into the back seat where she remained crouching until the   car stopped. After determining that the insect was not a bee and D. would   live, we detoured to Aix-en-Provence for lunch (M.'s idea.) Excerpted from Hourglass: Time, Memory, Marriage by Dani Shapiro All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.