Tuesday, August 11, 2020

This is How We Leave memoir by Joanne Nelson




 This is How We Leave

by Joanne Nelson




Memoir, 180 pages

Published August 11, 2020, Vine Leaves Press

Reviewed by Bill Mathis, http://www.billmathiswriteretc.com

$2.99 ebook

$14.99 Print

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About the Book

Against a background of family runaways, award-winning memoirist Joanne Nelson explores what it takes to stay when the going begins to dazzle and the staying seems way too ordinary. With a great grandfather who disappears, a grandfather who strays, and a father who walks away, she’s lived a life liable to give way at any time. In unflinching prose that is by turns intimate and humorous, she dives deep into her own role (and even culpability) in a childhood marked by disruption, emotional abuse, and parental alcoholism.

Nelson’s working-class roots and catholic schoolgirl upbringing, experimentation with all things negative, and hopeful creation of a new family life all serve a passionate story that examines the many ways we leave our communities, our families, and even ourselves. It will surprise no one that she became a psychotherapist—working with families, children, and in schools to help others on a similar journey. Her innovative observations and careful attention to detail create an engaging narrative of just how quickly our pasts become the now—and just what we’re going to do about it!

 Bill's Review:

Throwing out her mother’s empty booze bottles found in the breezeway attic, eating a sandwich at her deathbed, and recalling how well her mother danced only hint at the gamut of emotions and truth so elegantly expressed by Joanne Nelson in her memoir This is How We Leave.

There are many ways to leave relationships: leave a note and walk out; meander away and never return; drink enough that one’s children don’t want to be around them; drink oneself to an early death; or experiment with risky practices trying to kill the pain. The bottom line, however, is that you can never truly leave family. In one manner or another, family is always with you. The times you leave and come back, how you cope with the loss—those missed opportunities—and how you make sense of the leaving is what I gained from this excellent book.

Beautifully written, Joanne Nelson explores her family and herself in scenes written from her life of growing up with an alcoholic mother who, even when physically present wasn’t there; a father who left the family and connected with Joanne through the window of his car parked along the street as she walked to school; and her knowledge of a great-grandfather who abandoned his family.

She contrasts the uncertainty and pain of her homelife with being able to visit her grandparents. Her snuff-dipping and spitting grandfather took her kite flying and played games with her. Her grandmother created a homey, cooking, crafting environment in their modest trailer home. It was a space of peace and certainty.

The book begins with Nelson in her home office describing a photo of her family taken when she was young at her brother’s birthday party. “We stand close together and take our cues from those on the other side of the table, the adults waiting for just one decent shot without all that goofing around so they can eat before the coffee gets cold or the candles burn down the house.”

How long do we take our cues from those on the other side of the table? At what age do we stop?

Joanne ends this scene by writing, “Those bookshelves hold the answers to why I’m down here: the manuscripts recounting stories of escape or return and the mementos that tell their own suspended, yet scripted tales. It’s the dual perspective of the little girl held close by her brothers in a corner of the kitchen, safe behind glowing candles of the woman at her desk in a basement office—the soft hum of the dryer in the background, pictures of her family surrounding her—who just wants to tell about it.”

After reading This is How We Leave, I’m not sure we ever quit taking our cues from those on the other side of the table. But how we leave, why we leave, how we come back to say goodbye—even while eating a sandwich—is critically important. Joanne Nelson goes deep in the gut to reveal truth and honesty like few other authors I’ve read.

I highly recommend this book. 5 Stars.

About the Author

 Joanne Nelson

Joanne Nelson’s writing appears in literary journals such as Brevity, Midwestern Gothic, the museum of americana, Consequence, and Redivider. In addition, she is a contributor to Lake Effect on 89.7 WUWM, her NPR affiliate based in Wisconsin. Nelson lives in Hartland, Wisconsin, where she develops and leads community programs, maintains a psychotherapy practice, and adjuncts. More information is at wakeupthewriterwithin.com

Photo credit: Jia Oak Baker


Saturday, August 1, 2020

Great Lakes cultural history


The Cadottes: A Fur Trade Family on Lake Superior

The Cadottes, a fur trade family on Lake Superior

Robert Silbernagel

Wisconsin Historical Society Press May 29, 2020

ISBN: 9780870209406

304 pp

Ebook: $10.99

Hardcover: $28.95

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About the Book:

The Great Lakes fur trade spanned two centuries and thousands of miles, but the story of one particular family, the Cadottes, illuminates the history of trade and trapping while exploring under-researched stories of French-Ojibwe political, social, and economic relations. Multiple generations of Cadottes were involved in the trade, usually working as interpreters and peacemakers, as the region passed from French to British to American control. Focusing on the years 1760 to 1840—the heyday of the Great Lakes fur trade—Robert Silbernagel delves into the lives of the Cadottes, with particular emphasis on the Ojibwe–French Canadian Michel Cadotte and his Ojibwe wife, Equaysayway, who were traders and regional leaders on Madeline Island for nearly forty years. In The Cadottes: A Fur Trade Family on Lake Superior, Silbernagel deepens our understanding of this era with stories of resilient, remarkable people.

 

My Review:

After having visiting Madeline Island not long ago, taking the Lake Superior Circle Tour, and living in Wisconsin, Silbernagel’s story brings the era of Great Lakes fur trading and the voyageurs’ rich history to life. His book makes me want to go back to the Island now and consider anew the events unfolding there 200 years ago.

The history of fur trade in the Americas is a jumble of nationalities, exploration, high competition, and rich in folk legend. Despite the fashion of beaver fur felted hats worn since the fourteenth century in Europe, the American trade came in relatively late, during the last hundred years of the fashion. Men like John Jacob Astor quickly and under nascent US government sanction took control of the fur industry and reaped the staggering benefits while its agents mostly had a subsistence living.

But the fur trade is only part of the story of the Cadottes. Delving into the complexities of Ashinaabe, British, French, and developing US territorial trade, treaty agreements, battle, customs, religion, language, education, and law, Silbernagel creates an amalgamation of Great Lakes culture in one easy-to read volume. Following the several generations of the Cadotte family from emigration to today, the author explains how the French came to explore the new world not to conquer but to take part in the people they met, which is how Michael, part Ojibwe, and his Ojibwe wife, whose English name was Madeline, met and married. In the late 1700s they married in a traditional Objibwe custom, but forty years later, formalized their union in a legal Catholic ceremony. Silbernagel explores their reasons in the chapter “A Method to their Marriage,” one of 24 chapters devoted to helping readers understand the unique history of a developing nation of which little written documentation exists, or survives.

Recognizing the end of the fur trade era was near, the Cadottes and descendants shifted to more general trade, an attempt at lumber trade and commercial fishing, and interpreting between the Ojibwe and US government representatives during this period of upheaval.

Filled with photographs and illustrations, maps and abundant references, the history lover is sure to find The Cadottes an excellent addition to one’s expanding knowledge.

About the Author

Robert Silbernagel studied journalism at the University of Wisconsin and spent his newspaper career in Colorado. He retired as the editorial page editor of The Daily Sentinel in Grand Junction, Colorado, and currently writes a history column for the newspaper. He is an avid horseman and enjoys outdoor activities in the West, as well as reading and writing about history, publishing books since 1975 on such subjects as Aldo Leopold and Colorado history.