Spring Reads, Part II: Blossomise, Spring Chicken & Cold Spring Harbor

Our garden is an unruly assortment of wildflowers, rosebushes, fruit trees and hedge plants, along with an in-progress pond, and we’ve made a few half-hearted attempts at planting vegetable seeds and flower bulbs. It felt more like summer earlier in May, before we left for France; as the rest of the spring plays out, we’ll see if the beetroot, courgettes, radishes and tomatoes amount to anything. The gladioli have certainly been shooting for the sky!

I recently encountered spring (if only in name) through these three books, a truly mixed bag: a novelty poetry book memorable more for the illustrations than for the words, a fascinating popular account of the science of ageing, and a typically depressing (if you know the author, anyway) novel about failing marriages and families. Part I of my Spring Reading was here.

 

Blossomise by Simon Armitage; illus. Angela Harding (2024)

Armitage has been the Poet Laureate for yonks now, but I can’t say his poetry has ever made much of an impression on me. That’s especially true of this slim volume commissioned by the National Trust: it’s 3 stars for Angela Harding’s lovely if biologically inaccurate (but I’ll be kind and call them whimsical) engravings, and 2 stars for the actual poems, which are light on content. Plum, cherry, apple, pear, blackthorn and hawthorn blossom loom large. It’s hard to describe spring without resorting to enraptured clichés, though: “Planet Earth in party mode, / petals fizzing and frothing / like pink champagne.” The haiku (11 of 21 poems) feel particularly tossed-off: “The streets are learning / the language of plum blossom. / The trees have spoken.” But others are sure to think more of this than I did.

A favourite passage: “Scented and powdered / she’s staging / a one-tree show / with hi-viz blossoms / and lip-gloss petals; / she’ll season the pavements / and polished stones / with something like snow.” (Public library)

 

Spring Chicken: Stay Young Forever (or Die Trying) by Bill Gifford (2015)

Gifford was in his mid-forties when he undertook this quirky journey into the science and superstitions of ageing. As a starting point, he ponders the differences between his grandfather, who swam and worked his orchard until his death from infection at 86, and his great-uncle, not so different in age, who developed Alzheimer’s and died in a nursing home at 74. Why is the course of ageing so different for different people? Gifford suspects that, in this case, it had something to do with Uncle Emerson’s adherence to the family tradition of Christian Science and refusal to go to the doctor for any medical concern. (An alarming fact: “The Baby Boom generation is the first in centuries that has actually turned out to be less healthy than their parents, thanks largely to diabetes, poor diet, and general physical laziness.”) But variation in healthspan is still something of a mystery.

Over the course of the book, Gifford meets all number of researchers and cranks as he attends conferences, travels to spend time with centenarians and scientists, and participates in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. There have been some truly zany ideas about how to pause or reverse aging, such as self-dosing with hormones (Suzanne Somers is one proponent), but long-term use is discouraged. Some things that do help, to an extent, are calorie restriction and periodic fasting plus, possibly, red wine, coffee and aspirin. But the basic advice is nothing we don’t already know about health: don’t eat too much and exercise, i.e., avoid obesity. The layman-interpreting-science approach reminded me of Mary Roach’s. There was some crossover in content with Mark O’Connell’s To Be a Machine and various books I’ve read about dementia. Fun and enlightening. (New purchase – bargain book from Dollar Tree, Bowie, MD)

 

Cold Spring Harbor by Richard Yates (1986)

Cold Spring Harbor is a Long Island hamlet whose name casts an appropriately chilly shadow over this slim novel about families blighted by alcoholism and poor decisions. Evan Shepard, only in his early twenties, already has a broken marriage behind him after a teenage romance led to an unplanned pregnancy. Mary and their daughter Kathleen seem to be in the rearview mirror as he plans to return to college for an engineering degree. One day he accompanies his father into New York City for an eye doctor appointment and the car breaks down. The men knock on a random door and thereby become entwined with the Drakes: Gloria, the unstable, daytime-drinking mother; Rachel, her beautiful daughter; and Phil, her earnest but unconfident adolescent son.

Evan and Rachel soon marry and agree to Gloria’s plan of sharing a house in Cold Spring Harbor, where the Shepards live (Evan’s mother is also an alcoholic, but less functional; she hides behind the “invalid” label). Take it from me: living with your in-laws is never a good idea! As the Second World War looms, and with Evan and Rachel expecting a baby, it’s clear something will have to give with this uneasy family arrangement, but the dramatic break I was expecting – along the lines of a death or accident – never arrived. Instead, there’s just additional slow crumbling, and the promise of greater suffering to come. Although Yates’s character portraits are as penetrating as in Easter Parade, I found the plot a little lacklustre here. (Secondhand – Clutterbooks, Sedbergh)

 

Any ‘spring’ reads for you recently?

14 responses

  1. Ooh… I think it’s unwise for an author to advise “calorie restriction and periodic fasting” without a serious engagement with disordered eating (which few health writers do, since nothing we as a society do in the pursuit of thinness is widely acknowledged to be a problem). I’m hoping Gifford does spend time on the terrible mental and physical effects of disordered eating, but I’m guessing he doesn’t.

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    1. He doesn’t advise either regime, only meets individuals who do follow them and reports the findings of, e.g., mouse studies. And the effects aren’t wholly positive. As for himself, he just tries to cut down on fast food. He approaches all the extreme strategies with bemusement. Some kind of general disclaimer about ‘don’t try this at home / speak to your own doctor’ would probably be in order, and I imagine if this had been published any later he and his publisher would indeed have been more careful about diet-related content.

      I’ve always thought food is such a simple daily pleasure that I would never want to turn it into an experiment or act of penance, though I have a friend who’s done a 5/2 fasting diet since the birth of her daughter 4.5 years ago, first to lose the baby weight and then to make up for the fact that she gets very little exercise in her new lifestyle.

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      1. Ah, well, that sounds a bit safer! It’s a very, very fraught area for many (maybe most?) people. The advice that resonates most with me seems to boil down to “everyone’s mileage varies, but eating food is important and ought to be, at least, a non-punitive experience”.

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      2. For sure. My sister struggled with eating disorders in high school and still finds binge eating practices triggering. I know she’s lucky to have been able to reclaim the joy of food.

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  2. Echoing Elle, here. It’s a dangerous thing to dangle in front of anyone with experience of disordered eating. And your garden sounds lovely! Courgettes are very rewarding but quickly turn into marrows when you’re on holiday, I’ve found!

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    1. The wildflower meadow shot up in our absence thanks to all the rain! And the roses and clematis are in full bloom. I see a couple of tiny shoots in the courgette pots and tomato tray but nothing too promising yet.

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  3. I remember enjoying Yates’s Revolutionary Road in school, but I don’t think I could endure that Cold Spring Harbor cast of characters these days.

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    1. I have Revolutionary Road on the shelf to read. I remember Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet putting in good performances in the film (exorcising Titanic!).

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  4. I loved Revolutionary Road so Cold Spring Harbour is now being added to my “to read sometime” list

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    1. I have the impression that all of his novels are similarly melancholy.

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  5. No spring here apart from, I suppose, a Vintage Flower Van in my Christie Barlow read earlier in the month!

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  6. Of these three, I’m most attracted to Spring Chicken. I find the variance in aging fascinating.

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    1. Although part of it is genetic, it does seem that there are things we can do to slow ageing down (mostly just sensible eating and exercise).

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  7. My stacks are oozing these days, but I know, among them, is a story that I selected to read just now, with your seasonal reading projects in mind, but for summer not spring. (I can’t remember which one…but I’ll find it, eventually.) Enjoyed reading about your selections and your spring!

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