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A Million Fragile Bones by Connie May Fowler

14 Wednesday Nov 2018

Posted by Troy Ehlers in Book Reviews

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A Million Fragile Bones, book review, BP Deepwater Horizon, CNF, Connie May Fowler, creative nonfiction, ecological disaster, memoir, oil spill

A Million Fragile Bones by Connie May Fowler guides the reader, with love and compassion, into the environmental catastrophe caused by BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil spill.  The facts, chronology, and images are here in horrific detail, all made personal through Connie’s engagement with nature.  This balance between memoir and non-fiction enable a close attachment to the historical events, allowing us to witness firsthand the true horror and scope of this tragedy.

The early part of this book is memoir.  Connie shares glimpses of her childhood in a pointillist manner, such that we come to understand her deep and meaningful connection to her natural surroundings.  She lost her father at a young age, but remembers him as close to nature, and loving the sea and fishing.  When she is torn from her home as a child, she gains solace from written words. When alcoholism makes it hard for her mother to show affection, she finds unconditional love from her dog. When Connie sees birds, she sees freedom and strength and grace.  Ultimately she begins telling her stories and the memoir includes Oprah Winfrey discovering and producing for television her novel Before Women Had Wings.

Ultimately, Connie is seeking a home, and she finds one on Alligator Point, on the gulf coast of Florida.  She immerses us in the passion she has for the wildlife of her surroundings.  Every living being is sacred to her.  Even the snakes and spiders are welcome to share her home.  She studies the plants and birds and sea creatures sharing her world. In her free time, she works to protect the animals from land development by spreading the word and engaging with local politicians.

By the time we learn of the Deepwater Horizon’s explosion, we have shared Connie’s life and endeavors; we’ve become stakeholders.  We have come to love this place she calls home, after all we’ve seen through her eyes.  Suddenly what we begin seeing becomes tinted dark with dread.  Oil is pluming into the ocean.  BP executives and politicians are trying to cover up the disaster.  Toxic chemicals are dumped into the ocean to hide the oil and a mixture of airborne pollutants blowing in from the sea.  Connie’s health suffers.  After the polluted air come the dead and dying sea creatures.  Connie takes classes to become certified to save the living, scrub them of oil.  Her home has turned from paradise to hellscape.

A Million Fragile Bones is a compelling read.  Both the memoir and non-fiction tug at our heartstrings.  Even after having read about the oil spill and watched it unfold daily on television, there are many facts that have escaped our attention, swept under the rug by the industry and our leaders.  Here you learn the cold, hard truth.  The horror of what happened, and the damage from which the gulf (and the world beyond) has still not recovered.  And, living vicariously through Connie’s love of nature, everything becomes more beautiful, poignant, and tragic.

The world needs this book.

Connie May Fowler Cover

A Million Fragile Bones by Connie May Fowler

John Knowles’ A Separate Peace by Kirby Gann

22 Sunday May 2016

Posted by Troy Ehlers in Book Reviews

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A Separate Peace, fiction, John Knowles, Kirby Gann, literary, memoir, novel

John Knowles’ A Separate Peace by Kirby Gann is the latest in the Bookmarked series by ig Publishing. What makes this an enjoyable read is that it crosses several genres—memoir, literary criticism, and biography. Personally, I tend to read each of these for different reasons (emotional engagement, illumination, and research, respectively). Gann touches on all of these simultaneously, which results in a more compelling reading experience. At its heart, though, Gann’s book is a very personal story and exactly what it proclaims of itself on the cover: “…a no-holds barred personal narrative detailing how a particular novel influenced an author on their journey to becoming a writer…”

Early on, Gann sets out to provide the context in which he first encountered Knowles’ book. We see the young author (Gann) in his formative years as he becomes a writer and a musician. As Gann turns the microscope back on his childhood, we witness the author grappling with and discovering the formative events that helped make him who he is. This personal engagement (as opposed to a mere re-telling of events) is the hallmark of a successful memoir. This is a heartfelt, unflinching study of self, and especially appealing to me (as a reader) because it is the story of how a reader’s life can be affected by the books he reads.

Gann demonstrates how A Separate Peace became the right book at the right time for him—how he came to see himself as one of the book’s characters in the midst of personal childhood conflicts, and how it influenced his actions and friendship. He also shows how the book empowered him in the midst of difficulties. He contrasts what he gained from Knowles’ novel with the way other works affected his artistic sensibilities.

After studying the power of A Separate Peace and how time altered his re-reading of it, Gann gives us a thumbnail sketch of the life of John Knowles and his literary career. Now we see Gann turning the microscope from his own formative years to the later years of the writer who had inspired him, and this also strikes some poignant chords.

“Honest novelists will admit that although their work might originate in personal experience—narrative ideas informed by the author’s exposure to life—it is equally and as importantly true that books are born from other books.” –Kirby Gann, page 110.

Kirby Gann's book with lizard tracks.

Lizard tracks around John Knowles’ A Separate Peace by Kirby Gann

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