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Jessica Jonas

Jessica Jonas

Monthly Archives: June 2012

Ray Bradbury

28 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by jessicamjonas in Books, Love, Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

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books, love, ray bradbury

The first time I found Bradbury was through Something Wicked This Way Comes, the book that devoured me so utterly that I had a moment of panic when I looked up and realized it was July instead of October. The lyricism of the writing, the horror of the situations, and the strength of the strange friendship between two such different boys captivated me, and I knew I had to read everything this man had written.

The first time I found Bradbury was in the Golden Book of Children’s Literature, my tome with green script on the side, with embellished old fairy tales and Rikki-Tikki-Tavi and Kipling and Aesop. The story was “Switch on the Night,” and there was a character called Dark in that one too, but not at all like Something Wicked’s nightmare carnival man. Dark the girl embodied night–crickets and stars, porch-lights and croaking or chirping frogs, the soft wings of owls and the texture of black tree branches against midnight sky.

Both of these stories are true–the first time I read Bradbury knowingly, and my actual first encounter. It turns out I have been discovering and rediscovering Bradbury for most of my life. The horror of the carnival stories, murderers, and people trapped within their own private fears; the sweet nostalgia for the mythical small-town America; the exhilarated rush of space and machine, and the prickling alien-ness that they hold; and always, the great human yearning toward understanding of self, of other, of loved one. I read and reread and stopped by his row on the bookstore shelf just so I could rest my hand against the block of books for a moment.

I took Bradbury with me to college. He was my Honors project. I combined literature and sociology in a way I hoped he’d be proud of, following his keen interest in people rather than the classifications he always eluded. Not quite sci-fi writer, too complex for moralist, too nostalgic for a doomsday prophet, too optimistic for pure horror. Dandelion Wine and From the Dust Returned, Fahrenheit 451 and The Golden Apples of the Sun, Martians and Greentown, Illinois.

One of the things I love about Bradbury is the stories he told about himself. He swore he remembered every instant of his life, including birth. He said a carny named Mr. Electrico had recognized him, age 12, as the reincarnation of his best friend, who had died in his arms in the first World War. He said Mr. Electrico had knighted him with lightning and commanded him to live forever, and he said it all with such conviction that I believed him.

Last Wednesday, Andrew called me up at lunchtime to tell me Ray Bradbury had died. Of course I started crying. I feel like I lost my grandfather. He formed my writing self, the play of it, the love of people and where people go wrong, the yen toward short and strange. My first thought was, What do I do if Bradbury is dead? What does the world mean if Mr. Electrico misspoke about that boy, all those years ago? How do I make sense of the world anymore when he isn’t here?

Bradbury made me feel like the mythos that you formed around yourself as a child was okay to carry into adulthood. More than okay, it was something to fuel you, feed you. He created himself like a story. Sometimes my friends tell me I see the world in different or strange ways; there’s a trio of us in which I am indisputably the loopy one, not because I think I actually am so silly as all that, but because I suppose there is a fancifulness and a sense of play that is more alive in me because Bradbury lived it so well.

Rest in peace, Mr. Bradbury. Live forever.

Learning to Look

14 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by jessicamjonas in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

I’m already freaked out about publishing a book by next spring in order to graduate. I’m starting to get more heart-fluttery (in both the good and bad ways) about creeping up on the 4-month mark to the wedding. I haven’t been writing much in any format. It’s a weird, transition-y time.

The good news is I’ve got lots of help in planning, and the best news for my writing soul is that I’m doing an independent study this summer about slowing the heck down. Ekphrasis, as I think I’ve explained before, is art inspired by art (poems from paintings, paintings from music, recipes from novels, etc.). I think it’s awesome. When I was preparing the study, I made up a long list of things I could do in the sphere of ekphrasis that would be challenging and interesting and tangibly rewarding: read so many academic articles and so many books, visit museums so many times, write this many stories at an average of so many words each.

The professor diplomatically told me she loved the ideas I was coming up with, but pointed out that what might be harder and even more rewarding for me, albeit in a less obvious-to-outsiders way, is to spend the summer learning to look. Develop a relationship with a painting instead of approaching it intending to wring out a story. Learn to see what’s not on the canvas. Accept the idea that it would be just fine to spend the summer on one artist, or one painting, if I found something that really spoke to me.

I’m trying. I saw Hashiguchi Goyo’s Beautiful Women at the Walters last week. I chose a painting to focus on, tried to pay attention to the details, wrote a little, tried to avoid the easy angle, wrote a little more. I’m not sure I’m doing it right yet. I’m worried I’m still trying to force story out. But I’m going back again on Sunday, and maybe I’ll look at something else, or maybe I’ll look at the exact same piece as before and see if I see something new, or if it’s closed itself off to me and I have to start from scratch.

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