Cicero wrote:Thanks for posting that Blixa. I'll add Housekeeping to my reading list.
I grew up in Utah and went to law school in Massachusetts so I can relate to her experience . . . although I definitely didn't read Horace or Virgil in high school.
I guess it should be obvious from my handle, but I really enjoy reading Cicero for precisely the reason that she mentions (I get an inordinate amount of pleasure when I "get" the irony after repeated readings).
Housekeeping is an amazing first novel, but Robinson is also an interesting writer on religion, as a believing Christian (and one who identifies as a Calvinist!). This
Paris Review interview is a good introduction to her very interesting oeuvre. I quite like it when she says: "Religion is a framing mechanism. It is a language of orientation that presents itself as a series of questions. It talks about the arc of life and the quality of experience in ways that I’ve found fruitful to think about." Indeed, thinking about the great framing narratives of the Bible has become extremely interesting to me lately.
Here is an interesting discussion of a recent lecture of hers at Calvin College. I quite agree with her when she says, "“We live in a time when the claiming of a religious identity has become more important than abiding in what that truth implies.” No kidding, this very thread itself attests to that.
(Her fiction is never overtly preachy, by the way, she is a religious writer more nuanced than even Flannery O' Connor. There is not one shred of condescension toward "the secular" in any of her work, nor anything other than respect for the various framing narratives of mankind.)
From the Ernest L. Wilkinson Diaries: "ELW dreams he's spattered w/ grease. Hundreds steal his greasy pants."