The Unselfish Memoirist: Ploughshares Founder
DeWitt Henry reads at Endicott College
by
Michael T. Steffen
This Thursday evening (28 March 2012) the Endicott College
reading series, organized and hosted by the founder of Ibbetson Street Press
Doug Holder, welcomed memoirist and founding editor of Ploughshares DeWitt
Henry as its guest speaker. While Mr. Henry’s seminal associations with
Ploughshares, one of the most respected literary magazines in America, would
be enough to draw interest on any campus – and Endicott faculty and student
turnout witnessed to the occasion – the readings and discussion given by the
speaker highlighted Henry’s memoirs, in particular passages from Sweet Dreams a
family history (Hidden River Press, Philadelphia 2011). It is a book of great patience and
personal research, which Thomas Larson best sums up:
Ranging from early childhood to the death of his parents,
DeWitt Henry’s Sweet Dreams is among the more unselfish memoirs you’ll
encounter. What’s so engaging about this book is Henry’s kaleidoscope of family
mishaps and cultural adventures that involve him in someone else’s becoming,
which, in turn, come to be his own. The memoir portrays with warmth and grace
how we mature in the crowded many more so than we do in the isolated self.
Reading from a few of the more dramatic passages of the
book, Henry spoke of the implicit “contract” between the memoirist and the
reader, binding the writer to stay faithful to things and accounts as they were
and happened – opposed to any inclination he may have to embellish. He suggested the responsibility of
the memoirist, in particular, to confront the damage behind the scenes of the
fantasies much of literature’s euphemistic tendencies produce – even betraying
the allurement of his book’s title, Sweet Dreams, evoking the candy factory his father owned and
operated.
For those who
have read Sweet Dreams, it would be hard to think that much – if anything – had
been added or omitted. That said, Henry revealed that his brother Chuck didn’t
altogether agree with him on all of the accounts of their childhood.
I hesitate to
give much detail of the book, not only for the reader, but with an instinct
that the heavier matter of Sweet Dreams is DeWitt Henry’s to tell. Before the
reading, I had a chance to chat with him about some of the book’s
memorable marginalia, the hushed nearly sacred aura that banks used to have,
the milkman dropping pints of milk and cream off at the door in the morning,
bailing hay on a ranch in Colorado…
These few instances don’t begin to account for the wealth of detail in the
book, yet remind me of the source of pleasure and meaning I received reading
it. Henry’s memoir served as a pathway to the things and events of my own young
life, from childhood on through to my struggles, fears and modest
accomplishments as a college student and then as a teacher and writer.
Importantly, in
our somewhat egocentric society, DeWitt Henry, in his writing as well as in
person, conveys the notion that a self, the “I,” is, “unselfish,” composed so
much of the things and people surrounding the observer’s consciousness – all we
take in dearly, with challenge or discomfort, as encouragement or threat to
ourselves.
Listening to Henry, I thought of the poem “Keeping Things
Whole” by Mark Strand:
In a field
I am the absence
of field.
This is
always the case.
Wherever I am
I am what is missing.
When I walk
I part the air
and always
the air moves in
to fill the spaces
where my body’s been.
We all have reasons
for moving.
I move
To keep things whole.
Your pants, they bother me. Take them off! Hey, i am looking for an online sexual partner ;) Click on my boobs if you are interested (. )( .)
ReplyDelete