I’ve been crying since I was eight years old. Blame Lurlene McDaniel. I do.
In the summer of 1987, I found death on a shelf at the Lee County Library in Sanford, North Carolina. I had been looking for those pre-teen romance novels, the ones where boys didn’t have naughty intentions and girls said no to drugs even in the midst of the popular kids. I had devoured these sorts of books all summer and had finally exhausted the library’s moderate selection. So, as any other little girl would do, I began perusing books for the coolest, hippest teenage girls on the cover, the girls I wanted to be.
It was time to go and I was desperate to find something to read. By chance (or was it?), I saw a really pretty blond girl, whose hair was crimped and massive, sitting with her mother. I hastily picked up the book and ran to the check out.
Later, I examined the book more closely. The book was called Mother, Please Don’t Die. Which, of course, meant Mother was, in fact, going to die (but I wasn’t a savvy reader back then so I held out hope things would end well). The book followed a girl’s journey through her mother’s dying and her own grief as well as the difficult transition from being a little girl to being a teenager. Megan made sense of her mom’s worsening symptoms as best she could as a young girl; she told me about the terrible pressure and the anger bubbled to the surface at baseball practice, resulting in her consequent suspension. After her sister’s wedding, Megan sat with her mother and they had the first truly frank conversation about death that I had ever read; Mother was not going to be there for Megan’s wedding. She was dying.
And when she did die, my heart was shattered and I sobbed out loud. I’ve been reading and sobbing ever since. I developed a voracious appetite for the dying genre. Through my middle and high school years, I learned about living with diabetes, juvenile arthritis, kidney failure, and AIDs. I felt enlightened with each page. I groped for all the empathetic artifacts in the words that were written. I began to live with all of these hardships. I felt I knew what it was like.
The year before, 1986, had been a bad year. In January, my grandfather died of lung cancer. It was the first death I’d experienced. It was scary flying from North Carolina to Arkansas, only to see a dead body, dressed in blue and not breathing in a wooden bed. Two weeks later, I sat forward with the rest of my class, eyes glued to the television as the Challenger exploded and everyone on board was killed. They sent school counselors around to speak to us about dying and grief. I felt terrible for the teacher on the Challenger, but I cried terrible, painful tears for my grandfather.
Weeks later, I randomly asked my mother if she had had any other children before my brother and me one night before our bath. She hesitated and told us she had given birth to a little girl when she had been previously married, but the girl had died when she was a toddler from cancer. I nodded and soon forgot about it, as children will. It wasn’t long before my subconscious mind kicked in and I began to wonder if I had cancer, too, and asked my mother if I was going to die. Months I asked her and for months I must have drove a stake in her heart.
Little girls don’t understand these sorts of things. I didn’t. By the time I held a copy of Mother, Please Don’t Die in my hands, I needed to read about grief. The only problem is I never stopped grieving. The reading and the grieving is a question of insignificance; no matter if the chicken came before the egg, the chicken and the egg exist.
When I was eighteen, a very receptive former teacher gave me Angela’s Ashes by Frank McCourt as a graduation gift. Since then, it’s the real stories of laughter and pain that have touched me the most. Into Thin Air. Devil’s Knot. Young Men and Fire. Books about the Holocaust, 9/11, surviving freak accidents, OCD, alcoholism, depression. The stories are compelling but they are most important to me as conduits for processing my own life (and grief).
In a nutshell, I read books that are too sad for other people. A book is deemed good if I cry. It is deemed brilliant if I can still sob thinking about it a year later. There are many brilliant writers out there.
Right now, The Dark Tower: the Gunslinger is impatiently waiting on my bedside stand for me to finish it. The sojourn will be short and I will soon return to form. Stacked in the corner are my standard fair, books about the Taliban, mental illness, murder, the Mormon lifestyle…all await me. I can only think greedily of the sobs I am soon to cry.
I can’t help but think I’ve made Lurlene proud.
12 comments
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January 27, 2010 at 10:48 am
bindo
Funny, I really dug this piece, no doubt due to my own penchant for reading dark tales…
It seems Im off the couch again and have put the razor away…(Grin)
January 27, 2010 at 2:30 pm
jessiecarty
OMG! As soon as you typed Lurlene McDaniel, I was transported back to the Scholastic Book Fair in Perquimans County, NC where I picked up “Six Months to Live” (1985). I should take a picture of this book and the sequel “I Want to Live” (1987) that I STILL OWN! I was more fascinated with witches at this point in my life but I also had some kind of fascination with sick kids. These two book are about kids with cancer. Great blog post. I can see one on these same topic stalking me.
I really like The Dark Tower books.
Now to go watch a documentary about conjoined twins. Or have I seen it already?
January 27, 2010 at 2:40 pm
Bryan Borland
Oh, the books of our youth. I was obsessed with Judy Blume, who taught me about wet dreams and periods. Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. Then Again, Maybe I Won’t. What good books!!! As far as death and dying, well, I did read the Choose Your Own Adventure books. I always made the wrong decision and space creatures would eat me!!!
January 27, 2010 at 2:44 pm
medicatedlady
OH, Jessie, both good books. I just friended Lurlene on facebook! You should do the same. I also loved Christopher Pike and R.L. Stine.
January 27, 2010 at 2:45 pm
medicatedlady
I’m glad, Bindo. It’s nice to put the crazy away for a while or at least push it out of arms’ length.
January 27, 2010 at 2:45 pm
medicatedlady
Byron. Judy was a good author as well.
January 27, 2010 at 3:54 pm
Bryan Borland
OMG I just remembered The Boxcar Children. I wanted to live in an abandoned train!!
January 27, 2010 at 3:55 pm
jessiecarty
Yes! And next we will give a shout out to Boxcar Willy 🙂
January 31, 2010 at 11:56 am
Maury Draper
Hey, I clicked on here from Bryan’s blog, and immediately knew it was you when I read this post. I really enjoyed this post, your writing. I read that same book as a child, and also the 6 months to live ones…I wanted to read all those books as well.
I cannot imagine what that was like for your mom to lose a child. That has got to be the most painful thing in the world.
February 1, 2010 at 9:10 am
medicatedlady
Hey lady,
Welcome. I’m glad you were able to tell it was me. I don’t attach my “other” name since this has personal and adult content (beware, girl!) that probably would get me fired if my students got wind of it.
I always knew we were alike with depressive tendencies.
I just remembered Sweet Valley High. I loved that series, except for the name of one of the twins’ friends, Enid.
February 1, 2010 at 9:27 am
Patrice
Oh my darlin, have I got a book or two for you…
On a recent trip to the library I happened across “Alive in Necropolis” a rather bizarre tale by Doug Dorst. Now I’m waiting for him to pen another tale of dark and dirty; spooky – and even humorous – death and the “hereafter.”
Coincidentally, I also picked up Laura Lippman’s “What the Dead Know” – and it wasn’t until I got them home that I realized both books had illustrations of creepy cemeteries on the covers. And oddly – neither was shelved amongst the mysteries; I just pulled them randomly from the fiction aisles the way I do when I want to change my reading habits. I pull books and read the reviews on the back cover.
No reviews at all? Put it back.
A couple of “author only” reviews? Put it back. (Often these are thinly disguised pap; names lent in exchange for listing on said cover…)
An Edgar or a decent NYTimes, Library Journal, or such review? Read the inside cover for plot outline, and if it passes, drop it into book bag.
Sometimes I get really lucky this way, finding things I’d never know about otherwise.
February 18, 2010 at 2:11 pm
xredsparrow
profound..
although i don’t know why they would feed children horrible stories like that. what about sweet valley high or the hardy boys?
anyway, youll enjoy the gunslinger. it is poetry. not among my favorite King novels, but linguistically probably the most beautiful. good luck with it 🙂