When I saw “a family memoir on the
front cover of Beth Alvarado’s Anthropologies
I wasn’t quite sure what that meant. Aren’t all memoirs some sort of history of
a family, or at least of one member of that family? Then I wondered how she was
going to be able to speak for her family, do them justice, my own anxieties as the
writer in my family were already clouding my reading before I had even started.
Once I got into the book it became
clear how she was going to do this. From the first page she says about her
mother, “she wants to tell me her stories, and every time I come to bring her
groceries or make her soup or take her to see a doctor, she revises them.” This
sets up everything. It shows us a pattern that is seen throughout the memoir. The
narrator is being told these stories, especially the ones that do not involve
her, and is sharing them with the reader. And as she shares them with the
reader she has the ability to set the circumstances of a situation in a very concise
way, letting the reader in subtle on what is happening and making us feel like
we are there. She does this a couple of different ways but here it is through
listing the activities she does for her mother: grocery shopping, cooking, doctors’
appointments. As readers we now know she is at least in part taking care of her
mother, but she didn’t have to tell us it out right.
Later in the memoir we see she is
not only the receiver of stories in her own family but in Fernando’s as well. She
says of Dora, “I think Dora tells me these stories simply because I am a
willing listener.” The pattern is shown again, and now as readers, because this
isn’t the first instance this has happened, Beth is given the credibility to
speak about a family she wasn’t born into.
If there was any doubt about the reliability
of the narrator, Beth has some interesting ways of grabbing hold of credibility.
First off when she isn’t sure of a detail she states that she isn’t sure like
she did in the scene when her and Fernando are riding home from dinner with her
parents, “Look, he says, I don’t need a white savior. (but maybe that was on
another night.) thanks anyways, he says.” This is a very tense scene, and Beth
risks interrupting it to stick to the “truth” that makes the narrator creditable.
As a reader now we will take what she says as “truth” because if it wasn’t she
would state the uncertainty.
If as a reader you were still
wondering how she is able to render such lively details of the lives of people
who lived generations before her, like her grandparents and great grandparents,
Beth subtlety gave the reader the answer to that question in more than one
place.
In a section in part two at Johnny’s
funeral it says, “I was a traveler, only half in the world, recording,
remembering what I could see, relying on images.” She is referring to her not
speaking Spanish, but it is a wonderful metaphor for someone who collects people’s
stories. Collecting them isn’t enough; one has to be able to render them to
life. In the conversation with Dora, Beth as the narrator explains to the
reader how she is able to render them to life and how a “family memoir” is even
possible to write, “I love the way whole histories open up before my eyes, one
or two details and I can imagine a life.” She managed to imagine several.
Best,
CF
Lovely. I spent quite some time contemplating how she brought these older stories to life. I thought about some of the amazing stories of my ancestors and family members that I never met. But I have hesitated with those stories because, although they are interested, they need a human quality about them. I am definitely going to be looking at the ways she imagines a life out of a few details. I have a few tricks up my sleeve for getting my juices flowing in this area, but Alvarado sets it up so beautifully. She goes so far back without diminishing the story in the slightest, without wasting time trying to anchor the time perfectly. Thanks for your insights,
ReplyDeleteVan
It's never easy to write your truth. It brings up feelings, ideas and thought that may have been silent or perhaps unnoticed by self and others. I suppose that's why I'm a fiction writer. The amazing thing about Beth Alvarado is that she gives just enough to make the point and allows the reader to imagine the rest. Definitely a technique I want to explore as I begin writing memoir. I am excited to discover what I might find.
ReplyDeleteThis is true CF she is almost a conduit in both directions from the elders to her own children, even telling the story of her own daughter's divorce. She has an amazing ability to layer herself in a story even while she's the narrator.
ReplyDeletenice
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