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Thursday, July 26, 2007

I Want to Have Jasper Fforde's IVF Love-Child

It takes a lot to (1) get me out of the house, (2) get me to remain in a crowded space, (3) get me to sit still for an hour, and (4) get me to sit still for an hour next to a man who has quite clearly crapped his pants. But Jasper Fforde has this power.

Last night, I headed downtown for a Jasper Fforde reading. It has been on my calendar ever since he announced that he would be in D.C. on his website's tour page. Which makes me one-third loser, one-third dedicated, and one-third clever (a case in point, this week, I took my son's supersheet away because he kept crawling in between the supersheet and the regular sheet. As he watched me undo his bedding, he told me, "Mommy, you are a clever girl.")

There is a very short list of people I think are interesting enough to get me to sit next to a man whose pants are full of feces. Especially in a crowded room. In the center of a row where I can't really move around and fidget as I like to fidget. I would drive downtown--and have--for a Peggy Orenstein reading. I would go hear the Dixie Chicks speak. I would love to spend an evening receiving cooking lessons from Alton Brown. And I once called Norton Juster at 9 p.m. and got invited over for a tea party later in the week.

This side story is important to understand my whole Jasper Fforde/infertility wrap up at the end of this post so indulge me for a moment, will you? Maybe pause and get another cup of coffee because this is a longer story.

My favourite book growing up was Norton Juster's The Phantom Tollbooth. If you haven't read this book yet, you should go to your local independent bookstore (you like that, Politics and Prose? I always have your back) and purchase a copy today, simply for the best line in the book that applies nicely to infertility treatments, "so many things are possible just as long as you don't know they're impossible." I started reading this book when I was six and I read it over and over again through elementary school. I loved this book so much that I always left the last page unread so I could feel like the book wasn't over.

I liked to buy this book whenever I found it--new or used--so I own many copies. When the anniversary copy came out, I purchased that too. I was in graduate school and I was living in Amherst. One night, I was looking at the biographical information for the author and I noticed that it said that he lived in Amherst, Massachusetts. My heart started pounding and I took out a phone book, certain that he would never have his number listed. But there he was--and he lived only a few streets away from my co-op (of course I lived on a co-op. Did you really think I would live anywhere else?).

Everyone at the co-op told me I should wait until morning to call him because it was rude to call at 9 p.m. But I couldn't wait and those who have ever come close to meeting their idol will probably be able to conjure up the blood-racing excitement I felt knowing I was so close to connecting with him. I called him and he answered. And after a brief phone conversation, I was invited over for tea on his screened porch. It was one of the most incredible afternoons of my life--the man who had made me want to be a writer, the man who had made me love books, was showing me pictures of his grandchildren and telling me stories about how things came to be in my favourite book. It came at a time when I was questioning whether or not I wanted to remain in my MFA program and it was the twist of fate I needed to finish out the degree.

I picked up Jasper Fforde's first book because it was billed at an adult Harry Potter. And it was on a display table. Fforde's character, Thursday Next, was just about as close as you could get to Juster's main character, Milo. Instead of playing with words, Fforde was playing with literature, mucking around in all the classics. It was just good fun and it was a great world that you wished you could visit as much as Diagon Alley.

Though another book has since been published, the fourth book in the series, Something Rotten, was presented as the final book for Thursday Next. I started thinking about this book in the same way I thought about that final page of The Phantom Tollbooth. If I didn't read it, the series wouldn't end. Since I knew we would be trying again, I decided to save it--either for when I was pregnant or sitting in the two-week-wait or just plain depressed--you get the idea.

I still haven't read it. It's just been sitting next to my bed. But this is where the coincidences tie themselves up (just to be clear, we've already had the Juster/Fforde similarities in my love for them and willingness to sit next to someone who reeks of human excrement; the whole last page/last book comparison; the met Juster and it changed my outlook on my situation and we're almost at the part where I talk about meeting Fforde and how it changed my outlook on my situation).

At the reading, Fforde admitted that despite his enormous success (the room was packed--hundreds of people. The last time I had seen Politics and Prose that crowded it was for a Michael Chabon reading after he won the Pulitzer. And the crowd for this reading made the Chabon reading look like it was for John Nobody reading from his book on whale mating rituals), he had written seven books in twelve years before he got his first break (I bolded that sentence because it's important). When he said that, it was as if the lights dimmed for a moment and he turned directly to me in the audience (as I sat squinting in the spotlight, the stench of shit barely noticeable):

"Melissa, learn from my story. Twelve years. Seven books. And none of it was a waste because it brought me here. Keep trying. Start with your own eggs. Run yourself $500,000 in the hole or take yourself up to Cornell. But keep plugging away. And when that doesn't work--because let's be honest when we consider your stim response and your wonky cycles: it probably won't--you should go to donor egg or adoption. But if your family isn't complete, keep trying."

"At the risk of my sanity?" I ask.

"At the risk of your sanity. You can get sanity back."

"You can?" I ask. "Because I'm not so sure. I feel like I'm teetering close to the edge sometimes..."

"Teeter. Let yourself fall. Pick yourself up. Start over. One day you'll be an enormous success in family building as I am in writing. Your children will all come home for Christmas and you'll be standing around the piano singing carols and you'll think to yourself, the twists and turns brought me here."

"We're not Christian," I explain. "And we don't have a piano. But I'm still going to keep trying, Jasper. For you."

This was the point where I came out of my daydream and realized that I was still wedged between two people on a folding chair. Stuck in the center of a row.

When it came time to have my book signed, I was going to just have him sign the first book in the series to be polite to the hundreds of people waiting behind me. But at last moment, I yanked the final, unread book out from my bag as well.

"Could you sign it, 'congratulations'?" I asked the non-daydream, very-real Jasper Fforde when I was standing in front of him.

"What am I congratulating you on?" he questioned, signing my name and the word across the inner title page.

"I can't really answer that. Can we just leave it mysterious?" I said, thinking about how I still have no idea when I will read this book: I will read it when I need it. When I need to get out of this world and be somewhere else for a little bit. Even though there is now a fifth book in the series, this fourth book has taken on such huge significance that it feels wrong to read it until I've accomplished something.

On my way out of the store, I found a book I have wanted for a long time on the remainder shelf. It felt like kismet. Like I should be in the store that night. Like I had been delivered an important message and the literary gods wanted to make sure I didn't miss the fact that the reading was where I was supposed to be. Sometimes it comes in a burning bush. Other times it comes in the form of a remaindered copy of the Daniel Gilbert book you've borrowed from the library a few times. In the end, it's all just fire and smoke to direct your attention to the words.

At this point, I would love to hear who you want to meet badly enough that you would remain wedged between two people for an hour.

13 comments:

Ruth said...

Wow, how powerful. Thank you for writing this and giving me my first cry of the day.

megan said...

Jeanette Winterson. hands down. i think she is one of the most amazing writers on the planet. i would certainly sit on a folding chair between unsavoury characters to hear her read.
i'm glad you went to the reading and even more glad to hear that your resolve to complete your family is so solid. sometimes the messages come to us in the most unexpected places at the most unexpected times.

ultimatejourney said...

What an incredible post. You're truly inspirational.

Unknown said...

so many things are possible just as long as you don't know they're impossible

Life is so worth living when we keep this in mind. Thanks for an amazing post!

As for who I would want to meet (and would brave the smell of shit to meet) - the Dalai Lama himself. Bald, flowing robes, striking. (I'm serious, but name the movie!)

Paz said...

fabulous post! This is what blogs are for...

Anonymous said...

I love that you quoted that part of the book. I tell my students this all the time and I truly believe that is true. The only problem with IF is that I can recall the very minute when I knew a baby was impossible. From that moment I felt something slip away from me that I haven't been able to find since; not my fertility, but my hope and that was harder to face than any failed cycle.

Anonymous said...

That's awesome that you met the author of The Phantom Tollbooth! I haven't read that book in a long time but it's on my re-reading list. I haven't read any of Jasper Fforde's novels, but now they are on my list too.

Congrats on your revelation -- and for your mysterious, memorable answer to Fforde's question.

Dan Savage and Camille Paglia have both long been on my "ideal dinner party" list, so I would certainly sit for a long time, on a rock, surrounded by pregnant women stroking their bellies while my period is starting, just to have the chance for a read & meet with either. Unfortunately St. Louis is not a large enough city to attract most book tours.

Sarah said...

if i print out this post and bring you my copy will you sign it for me? this is just so huge. i'm so in awe of you calling Juster and your amazing afternoon with him, and i just LOVE that you asked Fforde for that inscription.

if i were face to face with alton brown i think i would become the excrement stench myself because i would literally shit my pants. and he's hardly intimidating.

i did go meet george pelecanos at borders and had this grand plan of what i was going to say to him but i got all faint and sweaty and just silently handed him my book to sign with a dumb open-mouthed look on my face.

Anonymous said...

Great post.

I love love love the Thursday Next series. Jasper Fforde's talent is inspiring. And the books are just so much fun. Loved the 2nd and 4th the most. And from what I've read/heard, there is a possibility of more books. The main story lines were wrapped up, but more can be opened... one can hope!

M said...

I'm still stuck on the excrement thing!! wtf??

(seriously great post... x)

katd said...

This is an incredible post!

I feel like this right now about Barack Obama. (not to get too political!) He seems so fresh and new in a forum that I am so over. I love to hear him speak because I feel like he actually has something to say. And not to be shallow, but he is a little bit cute, as well :)

jenna sais quoi said...

Amazing post. Your faith has bolstered mine (and trust me, I need all the bolstering I can get).

Ironically, in light of the infertility situation, my favorite author of all time is Margaret Atwood. I love her imagery, the way she writes is incredibly powerful and evocative.

I actually did manage to meet her many moons ago. She did a reading of Cat's Eye at my University and was kind enough to sign my tattered paperback copy of The Handmaid's Tale.

Jenna
http://diagnosisunexplained.blogspot.com/

Unknown said...

I just finished reading The Phantom Tollbooth. How did I miss this amazing book? It was written in 1961, so you'd think it would be at the top of teachers Must Reads lists when I was in school, but nary a word. Well, now that you've brought it to my attention, I won't forget it - I'm planning on buying my own copy (I borrowed from the library for this initial reading) and giving it to my little guy when he hits 8 or so. Loved, loved, loved this book! Thanks, Mel.