Saturday, June 28, 2008

By Accident

I've had a very hard time finding something to read. I have thousands of books in my bookstore and none of them were calling to me. Maybe it's because it's summer. Maybe I have too many choices. I've started a handful of books and then put them down. I'm sure they're good, but I'm just not interested. Then I picked up a book by Iris Murdoch called "An Accidental Man." I've read several others by her (The Sea, The Sea and The Unicorn) which I thoroughly enjoyed, so I started in. And I loved it!

It's a strange book. Basically, it tells the story of a man who just lets life happen to him. When things go wrong, he shifts the blame. When things go right, he takes the glory. There are dozens of characters in this book -- I almost needed notes to keep track of who was who. Each person revolves around the main character, touching him directly or indirectly, but never realistically. He just sort of "is." The dialogue is fast-paced and witty -- the driving force of the narrative.

I liked the book because it made me think of all of the interactions we have with people. Sometimes our encounters are brief and insignificant on the surface, but have a lasting impression. Other interactions are long term and intimate, yet suffer for lack of understanding or compatibility. The smallest events can have a huge impact on the course of our day. Or we can try for years and years to make changes and seem to fail miserably. There is a myriad of reasons why some relationships "work" and others don't. In essence, we need each other to fill certain roles.

And sometimes, the most profound moments of our lives happen "by accident."

2 comments:

Bear of Very Little Brain said...

Good review and segue into real life. Know the feeling of reaching for a book and, ah, not wanting it and reading another and it's not interesting or whatever; then happily one falls into your hands and you kind of take off. Know that feeling. Maybe because it's summer, like you said. I read Flash Jackson by William Kowalski last month; the book LITERALLY fell off the shelf into my hands on two separate visits to the library, so the second time I checked it out. The review on the back was interesting. Liked the first half a very lot; then it turned a corner and I didn't like where it went or ended up by the last page. What a ride. From it, though I took ONE sentence that may be the reason I read the whole book and have thought about it for a month. Glad you liked yours! Lots of love, Nat

Adrienne Dimond said...

MOM!!!! I nominated you. Check it out at adrienne.hale@blogspot.com/