Special Delivery

If you’re visited the Shirley Jackson page, you might have seen me saying something along the lines of “if you’ve only read Shirley Jackson’s horror, you’re not getting the full Shirley Jackson experience”. Now I’ve read lots of Shirley Jackson but it wasn’t until I was poking around on the Central Connecticut library system’s online catalog I found a Shirley Jackson book I’ve never encountered called Special Delivery: A Useful Book for Brand-New Mothers. I did a double take right down to removing and cleaning my glasses, sticking them back on and staring at my computer monitor in slack jawed wonder. Now since I was on my lunch break, at my desk in a high traffic area of my building, imagine the lovely picture I made. But no, my brain and eyes did not fool me and inter-library loan request Special Delivery: A Useful Book for Brand-New Mothers  I did.

Along with being a master of the horror genre, Shirley Jackson was a loving mother and could craft little plays of perfect (and imperfect) motherhood. Special Delivery: A Useful Book for Brand-New Mothers is one of those hidden treasures. Even looking at Special Delivery: A Useful Book for Brand-New Mothers with 2013 (childless yes, but I have encountered people in all states of motherhood) eyes, it holds up and is a must read. Shirley Jackson provides the bulk of the essays, everything from people visiting Baby, her experiences the four times she had her children, things to bring the nurses, and the like. There are also contributions from now classic and sometimes sadly forgotten comic writers such as Mark Twain, Cornelia Otis Skinner (does anyone but me know who she is?), Robert Benchley (yes THAT Robert Benchley from the infamous Round Table and grandfather of Peter (Jaws) Benchley) and Ogden Nash. It’s also a time capsule on days when long hospital stays and baby nurses and diaper service were the norm vs our kick you out 24 hours post spawn popping, 6 weeks of paid maternity leave (if you’re lucky) and spend your entire paycheck on daycare.

And the truly amazing thing? Around the time Special Delivery: A Useful Book for Brand-New Mothers was published (1960), Shirley Jackson was ending her days of  semi charmed motherhood, her children were no longer the cute kiddies from Life Among the Savages, she was a pariah in town over defending her youngest daughter from an abusive teacher and a few years her first grandchild would be born. Yet her pieces make you (okay…me) almost want a little pink, sleeping bundle of baby wrapped in a soft blanket and smelling of soap and baby powder of your very own to coo over. (Blacklight: “NO! Besides aren’t you too old for babies? Me: “I’m 40!” Blacklight: “But you just said you were old enough to be grandmother last night!”)

With publishers discovering just how popular the retro market is, wouldn’t it be awesome if Little, Brown and Company (and their parent group Hachette Book Group USA) reprinted Special Delivery: A Useful Book for Brand-New Mothers? I would so buy a copy and the only thing I’m a mother to is a betta fish and stuffed dragons. <waves to Little, Brown and Company and Hachette Book Group USA> Maybe there’s still time for a Mothers Day 2014 re-release?

My Favorite Dickens

I know what you’re thinking..EWWWWWW…now THAT is horrid, disgusting and certifiable. You should be ashamed of yourself.

Correction…I know what you’re thinking about me having a blog post called “My Favorite Dickens” because anyone who spends anytime talking books with me discovers I loathe Charles Dickens so much and so very hard. Just the thought of the time and school hours wasted on reading Bleak House and Great Expectations is maddening. Not even Gillian Anderson can make Bleak House tolerable. However I have to be grateful for the fact that Charles Dickens, that overrated blowhard who makes my eyes roll back so far in my head I almost need a trip to the UConn Health Center ER, is a link in a chain that created one of my recently discovered favorite authors, Monica Dickens.

For those who want to play family tree. Here it goes. Am very sick of typing Charles Dickens. So very sick. Charles Dickens spawns Henry Fielding Dickens who spawns Henry Charles Dickens who spawns Monica Enid Dickens.

Now usually (see Tigers in Red Weather), I don’t like certain writers and their extended writing spawn. But when trolling the fiction section of Book Barn and the library book sales bag days, I don’t always think about the writer’s last name and just zero in on certain publishers, figuring “oh gee…they haven’t done me wrong so far.” And oddly enough both these publishers (Virago Classics and Persephone Books are British and on my I Want Every Thing They Publish lists…such another post entirely…) And into my shopping bag went Monica Dickens’ Mariana in the Persephone Books reprint edition with the main thought “If I don’t like I can always try and sell it to Book Barn”.

And how very glad I am that my brain focused on “OMG Persephone Books” and “what a lovely cover” and didn’t process that an British writer named Dickens could be related to <shudders> HIM…because I would have missed out on a wonderful author. Like Stella Gibbons and Angela Thirkell, opening a Monica Dickens books, fiction or one of her memoirs, is like stepping through a door into the past. Only you don’t have to be of a certain class because even the best Stella Gibbons and Angela Thrikell isn’t that fond of the lower orders. It doesn’t matter if you’re curled up on Mr Couch rocking a tattered Marvel t-shirt or sprawled on Mr Bed, fighting a hacking cough and wishing you had sprung for a Miskatonic University sweatshirt because it’s gotten freezing and the layers of Mr Blankie and Mr Cardigan aren’t enough, you’re “Monty” putting on a battered looking hat, taking the bus to the employment agency to try out a career as a cook even though you can barely make scrambled eggs let alone a feast for 12 after being an epic failure at theater school. You’re the slightly older and maybe not wiser “Monty”, confused as to how to make a nurses cap out of a round of linen and scraping wax off hospital bed wheels while trying to survive as a nurse in training during World War II. Or you’re the older “Monty”, an established and beloved wife and mother, looking back on her life and career through the years.

And then you’re yourself again, coughing and hacking, lurching into the living room for your computer to see if the local libraries have any and I mean ANY more Monica Dickens books in their systems for an interlibrary loan. You will even accept one of her children’s horse books which in your head are akin to Noel Streatfeild’s Shoe books. You must have more Monica. And then when you’ve tracked down those few titles, ecstatic that they are available, wanting them that second and vowing to scour the library sales and your favorite used bookstores for more titles while filling an Amazon Wish List that you know no one will ever check because your family just doesn’t function that way, you pick up the book you just ended and start again from page one.