The Shape of a Year by Jean Hersey ~ 1967. This edition: Scribner’s, 1967. Hardcover. Library of Congress# 67-13158. 243 pages.
My rating: 6/10.
This is not at all a poor book, but rather an unexceptional one. Set in the author’s rural homeplace of Weston, Connecticut, here are month-by-month musings and reportings of the little incidents of her life. These definitely have a certain appeal, but there is a creeping banality clothed in florid description to some of what she judges worthy of note. Most of it is all very well and good, but while readable this does not promise to become a favourite.
As a personal record it seems just a bit too good to be true, a shade too sweet and optimistic; there is little record of any sort of frustration, annoyance, disappointment or anger; it is all very “nice”, as if the author decided ahead of time to only include the more inspiring incidents of her days. I think this would be a much stronger memoir if it showed a broader range of emotion.
Golly, these comments sound a little harsher than I had intended. Here, I’ll share some of the author’s words with you so you can get a better picture of what this one is all about. I suspect this author will appeal most to the Gladys Taber crowd. (For the record, I like Gladys Taber; my mother had a number of her Stillmeadow books and I read them with deep delight during my teen years.)
Jean Hersey, born in 1902 and living in the Eastern United States, in Pennsylvania and Connecticut, was a prolific writer of magazine articles for Woman’s Day and various gardening and houseplant periodicals. She also authored something like a dozen non-fiction books dealing with gardening, homemaking, and semi-rural life.
*****
From The Shape of a Year: January, 1965.
January mornings at seven are like opals, soft, milky white and pink around the edges. The January sun rises silvery white, bright but not warm, and a mist like an aura hovers over the south meadow.
One morning early as we ate breakfast, Bob was eyeing a cluster of many colored Christmas tree balls lying in one of the upholstered chairs. We had dismantled the tree the day before.
“They look,” said he sipping his coffee, “as if they were waiting for a goose to come along and hatch them.”
“It would have to be a golden goose,” I replied watching the stars laid on their shiny surfaces by the early sun streaming in the windows. Obviously no ordinary goose could sit on these bits of Christmas magic.
May, 1965:
May sweeps in on a theme of daffodils. I gather armfuls from the meadow and next day so many more unfold that I cannot see where I have picked. Along the roadside the willows are tumbled masses of pale green foam, and forsythia, in streaming fountains of flowers, reflects the sun’s golden rays. Here a dusky pink weeping cherry adds a soft note of color. There a magnolia tree is a bouquet of pink blossoms, and everywhere maples are shaking out their tight fists of green into lacy green leaves.
July, 1965:
Where is our grandson? I am waiting on the station platform for this young thirteen-year-old who will be carrying a suitcase and I don’t see him. Other people get off, but no Jeff. There is a boy down the platform – or is it a boy – it seems more like a thatched roof moving along.
“Hi, Grandma, here I am.”
“Why, Jeff,” I gasp. “Hello, how good to see you.”
I gasp because here we have the Beatles incarnate. I have no war with these young Englishmen beyond what they have done to the hairdos of America…
October, 1965:
The fragrance of burning leaves is another autumn delight. Their delicious rustle and the scent of their smoke invariably carries me back to the days when my father used to rake great piles to burn. Before he lit them my friends and I would burrow deep and hide ourselves in the slightly scratchy heaps. From here we would look out at the world through tiny odd-shaped chinks of light …
December, 1965:
These days the car is always filled with Christmas presents on the way in or the way out. One time we were in New York City with presents to deliver and we parked our convertible. When we returned the presents were gone and the top neatly slit with a little triangle just large enough to reach in and draw things out. The gifts did look rather festive with their gay paper and ribbons. I’ve often considered though, what their effect was on the person who appropriated them. He overlooked a suitcase and overcoat on the back seat, and took instead a package of wild bird food destined for my brother-in-law and a book called The Power of Constructive Thinking by Emmet Fox. I’ve never ceased to wonder about the reaction of this particular thief as he opened his haul.
*****
And there are recipes.
While I wouldn’t search this author out, I also wouldn’t turn down another of her books if it came to me cheap and easy, as this one did – on the bargain rack at a used bookstore this autumn.
Thanks for sharing. I like the concept and title: “The Shape of a Year”. makes me reflect on the shape of my own year. Also, it makes me think of May Sartons’ book – you probably know it, “Journal of a Solitude”. One year in the countryside, it includes the beautyful moments but also the downsides and frustrations. I read it last year, here’s more: http://virtual-notes.blogspot.de/2012/03/journal-of-solitude-reading-challenge.html
May Sarton – I have another of her books, “Plant Dreaming Deep” – more personal reflections. A wonderful book. Thank you for the link to “Journal of Solitude” – it’s one I don’t yet have, but will be looking for. And I’ve been wandering around your blog this morning – so much to see, read and ponder! Lovely. 🙂
I bought this book at a used book sale last summer. (And here I thought I had discovered it!) I decided to save it and read it month-by-month this year instead of all in one gulp. I just finished January and liked her topics: clutter, snow and icicles, and weight loss plans. Perfect start to the year. And how lovely that she has a greenhouse filled with orchids. That was a surprise!
I love reading about life in the country or on the farm. I also have read a couple of Gladys Taber’s books. One of my favorites is ‘The Egg and I’ by Betty MacDonald. It is a chronicle of her life raising chickens. It is hilarious.
There was a lot to enjoy in Jean Hersey’s book, I cheerfully admit that.
I *love* Betty MacDonald! She’s one of my “can’t recall how many times I’ve re-read her & love her more each time” authors. I have everything she ever wrote except one of the Miss Piggle-Wiggle books. I need to write about her. Rather daunting to realize I’ve barely touched the tip of the “books in my life” iceberg with this blog so far!
I loved reading Gladys Tabor’s work as well as Faith Baldwin’s in the women’s magazine’s my grandmother used to subscribe to when I was a teenager. I had them in mind when I found “The Shape of a Year” at a second-hand book store a while back and while I do agree that some of the topics are pedestrian, I like the author’s optimism. After reading the comments above, I’ve decided to follow Belle’s example and re-read a chapter a month.
I think I may have sounded a bit harsher than I intended in the beginning of the review. I quite enjoyed reading the book; it made me smile in agreement frequently. It just wasn’t really as *magical* as some personal diaries can be. A chapter a month is a great idea! 🙂
I came aross this book 20 years ago. I reread it every year, sometimes forgetting during a season and going back. Each time, I find it delightful. I have often wndered what else was going on in her life — that it couldn’t always be quite so utterly open to the magic of her surroundings,clear-eyed and delighted, with no bumps or tears. But there is a place, certainly in my life, for remembering when there was, for some people, in some places, a slower time, moments of appreciation and gratitude for the blessed world she had, without the undercurrent of dis-ease that plagues the world now.