"He was from the shore. There was sand and ocean, horizon and sky, daytime and nighttime--the light, the dark, the tide, the stars, the boats, the sun, the mists, the gulls. There were the jetties, the piers, the boardwalk, the booming, silent, limitless sea. Where he grew up they had the Atlantic. You could touch with your toes where America began. They lived in a stucco bungalow two short streets from the edge of America. The house. The porch. The screens. The icebox. The tub. The linoleum. The broom. The pantry. The ants. The sofa. The radio. The garage. The outside shower with the slatted wooden floor Morty had built and the drain that always clogged. In summer, the salty sea breeze and the dazzling light; in September, the hurricanes; in January, the storms. They had January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December. And then January. And then again January, no end to the stockpile of Januaries, of Mays, of Marches. August, December, April--name a month, and they had it in spades. They'd had endlessness. He'd grown up on endlessness and his mother--in the beginning they were the same thing. His mother, his mother, his mother . . . and then there was his mother, his father, Grandma, Morty, and the Atlantic at the end of the street. The ocean, the beach, the first two streets in America, then the house, and in the house a mother who never stopped whistling until December 1944.
-- from Sabbath's Theater by Philip Roth
-- sdl
Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. But who took the equally brilliant photograph?
Posted by: Caroline Seebohm | July 28, 2018 at 08:29 AM