All the Words We Know: a book review, of sorts…

Dear friends and readers, WordPress just notified me that my subscription is about to expire. My first post on this blog was May 22, 2012. That’s a long time ago! But my last post here was in July…So I’ve decided that I can no longer afford the expense for an on-again/mostly off-again blog. This will be my last post. And when you read it, you will understand why. Perhaps some other time, I’ll write again. But it will be in a different format. Thank you all for reading all these years. Stay hopeful. Stay grateful. Stay humble.


It’s never good to be in a rush at the library. But there i was, with only twenty minutes before an appointment and books to be returned, so i didn’t have much time to choose. The obvious selections are there by the circulation desk–six long rows of new books, faced out, so one can easily judge by the cover. The title? The splashy artwork? The author’s name?

The last two out of three books that i selected from these shelves have been winners, so the odds seemed pretty good. And this title jumped out: All the Words We Know by Bruce Nash. Never heard of him. Seemed to be a cozy mystery with an old lady on the cover. But it was the title that drew me in–All. The. Words. We. Know.

i have always loved words. Always have i loved words. Words i have always loved.

reading. writing. poems. novels. scrabble. word-games. magazines. books. libraries. bookshops. stories. lists. talking. thoughts. journals, crosswords. so, yes, give me All the Words We Know… Due in three weeks.

Only later, in the evening, as i opened it to read the blurb, did i realize that it was about a woman with dementia in a nursing home where residents are dying suspiciously. She has up days and down days, so sometimes she can remember what she knows, and sometimes she forgets what she should remember.

It’s not the subject i would have chosen. i closed the book. i shut my eyes. i should have known a book about old ladies and words wouldn’t be my kind of book.

Words are in such short supply here these days. These days words are in such short supply here. Here there is such a short supply of words.

My husband is losing his words.

He was always a man of few words. But the words he had were kind words, good words, sweet words, and now there is silence. and struggle. the silent words float up into the clouds and fall back down like rain from my eyes.

And so. Do i really want to read a whole novel about someone else losing their words and forgetting?

i decide to try the first few pages and see how i feel. Yes. This is why i’ve mostly been reading happy-ending-escapist fiction.


Rose (at least she thinks that is her name) is funny. If she forgets a word, instead of silence, she just throws another word in there. (Word Salad, anyone?) And since she is not running the country, it’s humorous. The elevator is the revelator, and next to it are the Fiery Escape stairs. There’s Angry Nurse, the Scare Manager, and the fellow in the wheelchair who doesn’t live there. In the cafeteria are pictures of sharks on the walls, and there are meatballs every night for dinner. The pictures on her whatitsname are pictures of the Dresser family–her son, her daughter, her granddaughters, and her two husbands, one of whom has his head torn off in the photo.

But all is not right at the nursing home. Her best friend, who cheats at Scrabble, is found dead in the parking lot from falling out her window. Rose loses her own beautiful room–with the window overlooking a garden to a room with the window overlooking a parking lot. And the man who takes her old room dies mysteriously after she has visited him one evening and held his hand. Maybe.

Rose’s musings take the form of disjointed thoughts, word play, puns, and occasional brilliance. Sometimes I stopped and read a paragraph out loud just for the joy of it. Here’s an excerpt from her thoughts after her room is downgraded.

“When they murder me, when they push me out this window and I am on my back in the parking lot with my head broken staring at the sky, I will be wearing a nice pantsuit. Pant suit. Pants suit. I like to look my best. The Scare Manager looks his best too, I’ll give him that. He makes an effort. If he murders me, at least we will both look the part. He looks quite handsome, in fact. I don’t think it’s just the new medication. Although I can’t be sure, obviously. As well as his expensive gold watch, he wears a shiny new leather jacket. And pants, of course. Not leather pants, but pants. He would not murder me with no pants on. Would not, with no pants on, murder me. That would be unprofessional. That would not be Best Practice. That would not meet Benchmarks.”

In her own broken way, Rose solves the mystery, brings the villains to justice, heals her family, and, yes, gets her own nice room with the big window back. Her own back window in the nice big room. And here’s what Rose has to say about it all:

“Things never change, until they do. Nothing ever happens, then things happen very quickly. It’s about time. Everything about this place is different, even if it isn’t. Everyone seems happier, about their room at least, or about the wall that they sit against in their wheelchair, or whatever. None of us may have much more in our accounts, but what we have at least flows in a new direction. One day recently there was a quiz night, and someone got an answer right. There is even some talk of the meatballs having improved.”

The thing is, this book made me laugh. Losing your words isn’t funny. Until it is. Maybe, just maybe, i need to have a different attitude. It’s about the sun glaring in your eyes. Or your eyes glaring at the sun. You can shut your eyes and enjoy the warm, or you can go blind glaring at it. If only i could remember this thought, instead of forgetting it when i need to remember.

But i will say, along with Rose — to enjoy this book, you really do need to like words. You do need to really like words to enjoy this book.


The End
of This.
The Beginning
of Something New.

The unexpected, unwanted lesson — Learning and letting go

This is a sermon I’ve been writing to myself. It may not apply to you. Just saying…

Silly me. I thought at my advanced age, lessons in life were already learned. I’m old enough now to be the one offering sage advice rather than stressing over just what this lesson is supposed to teach me.

I know better than that really. The road we travel is never guaranteed to be smooth no matter how new or old your vehicle, no matter what season. It is the season of potholes after all.

And the journey we’re on is always guaranteed to teach us something–if only we pay attention to the curves. Interstates are boring after all.

But this one — it was tough. I was blindsided by it and maybe still haven’t recovered. So I’m writing my way through it and trying to see it through a mirror of objectivity, which might be an impossibility since mirrors are reflections of what we ourselves see.

I try to believe the best of everyone. I try to be kind, and in turn, I think others should be kind. I try to deal with those who aren’t on a limited basis. Life is too short to be bothered by unkind people, don’t you think?

In February I took an online writing course. I was looking forward to it and eagerly did the first few assignments. And then…

The instructor sent me back a detailed critique. I wanted critique. Tell me that the scene didn’t work because the dialogue was unrealistic; tell me that there was too much description, not enough description, whatever specific critical analysis you’ve got. But don’t say general ugly words. When I read them, I was stunned. They had no purpose except to insult. I read them again. I was not only astonished that an instructor would write such things to a student, I was crushed.

eat your wordsI know that I should not care what some unknown person wrote to me under the guise of criticism. But I did.

Suddenly I doubted whether I should even be writing. I had been praying for answers as to whether I should continue writing this already-overlong piece of fiction; perhaps this was the answer? I put down my pen and unplugged my keyboard. I didn’t open WordPress. I didn’t open Scrivener. Instead of writing on a blog, a fiction project, and a non-fiction project, I wrote nothing.

And during this six weeks of quiet, I rediscovered that I do need to write. The writing may never turn into a novel. It may never be published. Yet whatever our creative outlets are–writing, art, music, storytelling, sewing, gardening, woodworking–they are neglected at peril to our own well-being.

I have been trying to banish the fear and ugliness that instructor dumped on me. I don’t know why the words were so unpleasant, but I have used prayer to try to forget them.  It isn’t easy for me to let things go; I’m a dweller. I dwell on what I should abandon and leave behind. Conveniently, the sermons at church these past few weeks have been walking us through the book of James, and I have listened with my heart to his apt words:

Consider it pure joy my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.  –James 1:2-4 (NIV)

Trials of many kinds. That means trials of all sizes and extents — from the huge life-altering events to the smaller every-day grouches that throw off one’s plans for the hour, day, or week. And please note what perseverance does — it makes us mature and complete, not lacking anything. What would be without trials?  Spoiled children, selfish and demanding, lacking character and wisdom. In just a few more verses, James tells us what will happen when we do persevere:

Blessed is the one who perseveres under trial because, having stood the test, that person will receive the crown of life that the Lord has promised to those who love him. — James 1:12 (NIV)

Having passed the test by not giving up, brings us God’s approval; not necessarily human approval, because human approval passes away with the seasons. It’s your fifteen minutes of fame, and pretty much only serves your pride; God’s view of our perseverance is like snow on daffodils– they droop in the snow, but when the sun comes out they stand taller and appear more golden than ever before. (Yes, there’s been a lot of snow on daffodils around here lately.)

That brings me to human approval. I’m guilty of wanting it. I’m guilty of being very unhappy when there is discord between humans I am close to. Heck, I’m even guilty of disliking it when people I don’t like dislike me. Or something I’ve done. Or something I’ve written.

But we can’t allow meanness or unkindness to win, and by dwelling on it, or taking it too seriously, we allow it too much power over our lives. By listening to churlish words, I allowed my own confidence to be shaken. I gave those words power.

Yet the truth is that words do have power, and if we read further in the book of James, he tells us that:

the tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts. Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark.The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body. It corrupts the whole body, sets the whole course of one’s life on fire, and is itself set on fire by hell. All kinds of animals, birds, reptiles and sea creatures are being tamed and have been tamed by mankind, but no human being can tame the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison. — James 3:5-8 (NIV)

James doesn’t mince words. Our tongues are small, but vile, and cannot be controlled; he compares our tongues to a fire that can set the entire forest ablaze. We’ve all set wildfires with words; just because I was on the burnt end this time, doesn’t mean I can forget the times when I lit the match.

There are several lessons here.

1) Don’t let others’ words or actions derail you from your own goals or make you lose confidence. Be not afraid.

2) Don’t dwell on it; move on. Know that your perseverance will bring you maturity and strength.

3) Aim to please God, not humans. Forgive the imperfect humans that surround you, for you too, are imperfect.

4) There will always be curves ahead and potholes in the road, no matter what season. This journey is a pilgrimage and the way we travel is the substance of our lives. The words we say, the kindnesses we do, the love we show–that’s what counts. Those potholes will always be there — the significance is in how we deal with them.

5) Pray. We aren’t meant to drive off into the sunset alone.