Foreign Correspondence: A Pen Pal's Journey Geraldine Brooks (top 10 novels of all time TXT) š
- Author: Geraldine Brooks
Book online Ā«Foreign Correspondence: A Pen Pal's Journey Geraldine Brooks (top 10 novels of all time TXT) šĀ». Author Geraldine Brooks
Sheād quit the depressing job in the convalescent home and was working at McDonalds, learning how to make milkshakes and operate a french-fry machine. She was also taking a course to become a guide at the New England Aquarium: āI can give you a good 3 minute talk on Priscilla the Octopus, or on sea anemonesācare to try me?ā
In September she started at Boston University as a biology major, writing that being back in school was āsort of rough but I have to at least make it through the year.ā¦ā
She made it only four months. āBoston University just got too big and impersonalā and living alone in her own apartment after the halfway house didnāt help. By January she had reenrolled at Rutgers. āThings are going fairly well; ups and downs as usual.ā
And so it went on, through 1976 and 1977āāups and downs as usualā as Joannie struggled with demons I couldnāt begin to fathom. Iād exhausted my repertoire of reassurance: I seemed to have been repeating the same platitudes for years.
Each time she wrote it seemed that she had a new major: horticulture in one letter, anthropology the next. She would send me the address of a new apartment sheād leased and Iād write to her there, only to be informed in her next letter that sheād never moved in. āI chickened out, stayed home instead which I know isnāt a good situation ā¦ but Iām too afraid to leave.ā
For me, there had been no question of leaving home until I turned twenty-oneāmy parents just wouldnāt consider it. But finally, in 1977, they decided I was old enough, at last, to move into my own apartment. I found a one-bedroom flat behind a dry-cleaning shop a few blocks from the university in Glebe, the neighborhood in which Darleen had predicted weād both have a ālittle houseā one day. It was a wonderful old neighborhoodāa finger of land jutting into the harbor, with small workersā cottages and terrace houses pressed cozily together. My flat had a view of a park from the sitting room and a narrow, shady garden in back.
But I was moving there without Darleen. Instead of returning to Sydney, sheād been offered a job in a big advertising agency in Los Angeles. āItās all more competitive,ā she wrote to me just after she arrived there. āBusiness is worshipped like sports are at home. Everybody saysāāoh, youāre from Australia, what are you doing here, Iāve always wanted to go there.ā Itās too early to make statements about the place though.ā¦ Iām glad you liked the Matisse poster, I thought that was your favorite of his. Did I tell you that was the blue of the sky when we climbed Mount Baldy?ā Her plan, she wrote, was to stay for just a year. But her life didnāt go according to that plan. On her way back to Sydney she met a tall, charming Englishman. By the time I moved into my little flat in Glebe she had married him in London.
I hung the Matisse poster, The Dance, in my freshly decorated bedroom, and imagined her nodding approvingly. Trevor and a few of his architect friends had spent a weekend turning my flat into a designer version of student digs: stark white walls and stripped timbers, exposed standstock bricks and rush matting. It was Trevorās gift to me, to make up for the fact that he, too, was about to leave Australia for his Big Trip. Heād finally earned his degree after years of night classes, and he planned to go and see the architectural treasures of Europe, perfecting his French and his skiing en route. By then I was inured to departures. They were part of the price of being Australian. I knew Iād miss Trevor, but I had gained enough confidence to welcome some time as an unattached person again.
āIt sounds as if life is treating you fairly decently!ā wrote Joannie that April. āExcept for the guy who took off for Zermattāthat would be a real coincidence if your fellow met Dolfi in Zermatt. Dolfi works there on and off as a ski instructorābut heās in Switzerland, Iām here, and in answer to your question, my love life is zilch and 100% absolutely nothing. Partly itās me because I just donāt feel ready to get involved with a guy at this pointāmy whole social life ā¦ has in the past two weeks been rather difficult, as has everythingāwell, itās just been a rotten two weeks.ā
Joannieās letters, mostly sad, would thud like a stone into the contented bustle of my new life. I would set each letter on my desk, resolving to answer it quickly. But it would get buried under the notes for some prolix paper on āWorking-Class Politicsā or āThe Mannerist Esthetic of Michelangelo.ā It might be more than a month or two before I finally scribbled a guilty reply.
She always wrote back immediately. But her letters increasingly began with a gentle, jokey reproach for my neglect: āDear Geraldine, Hi! I havenāt heard from you in ages.ā āDear Geraldine, Hi! Long time no hear (again).ā āDear Geraldine, Hi! I was really glad to finally hear from you. I was afraid you were swallowed up like Harold Holt!ā [the Australian Prime Minister who disappeared while swimming in the surf].
As I settled into uni life, old friends had gradually fallen away, like old leaves making way for new ones at the change of season. I had no intention of shedding Joannie, but to write about my studies, which were going well, or my romances, which were agreeably diverting, seemed tactless when I knew that both those areas of her life were troubled.
Even food, so problematic to her, had become one of my greatest pleasures. Darleen
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