Where’d You Go, Bernadette? by Maria Semple

Washington
Suggested by: Kaity
Traveled: May 21-25

Everything about Where’d You Go, Bernadette? went down easy. It’s written in quippy correspondences, a narrative pieced together through emails and letters dashed off to secretaries. It’s a novel I read almost without noticing, so accustomed am I to scanning messages and texts during my in-between times. Its structure made it breeze by, and its setting in Seattle’s West coast tech world was familiar enough for me to register the satire and warmly appreciate it.

Also, full disclosure, I read this book on vacation. There was this handsome dude on the towel next to me waiting to slather me down with a giant bottle of sunscreen (we’re talkin’ every ginger’s fantasy here). So yeah, the plot twists brought on by Seattle’s pervasive rain only made me feel giddier and more relaxed that I don’t live in Washington. Passive aggressive housewives and a bizarre ending in Antarctica reinforced a smug contentment with where I am in my life. I thoroughly enjoyed the humorous and neurotic world of Bernadette, if only for the moments when I got to put the book down and feel more wholly the beauty of my own day.

Bernadette was a lovely little rest stop before my itinerary turns to denser pages and some veritable classics. A perfect beach read. It even managed, in its simplicity, to sneak in some profound moments about the power of creative expression and the consequences of feeling unrooted. Refreshed, I’m back from vacation and ready for Alaska.

Wild by Cheryl Strayed

California-Oregon-Washington
Suggested by: Natalie
Traveled: May 18-20

I had a drink after work last week with a new friend of mine. It was at an upscale cocktail bar with an “Old Western” atmosphere, the type of place where the bartenders pour you $15 shots of whiskey from behind handlebar mustaches and period-style suspenders. Somewhere in the middle of my second “Punch Drunk Buck,” my friend and I started talking about daydreams we like to have, the happy places we like to visit when things get stressful. I told him my favorite: I don’t even have to go into that much detail for you, because it’s essentially the plot of Cast Away. It is overwhelmingly tantalizing to me to be marooned alone on a desert island, charged only with the act of survival. I’d get to clear away the bullshit significance of emails to answer and flowers to plant, and just straight up succeed every day by finding new ways not to die.

Clearly, we were not good enough friends yet for this.

“3 years??” my friend choked on his drink. “That’s your ideal??” 

“Well, yeah,” I reasoned. “The first couple of months would be terrible, because I’d be figuring things out and starving and thirsty and thinking I’d be rescued. I want at least a couple years to get the hang of basic stuff, and then enjoy the daily victories of being alive.”

“I guess so,” he said, eyeing me skeptically. He didn’t get it at all.

Only a few days later, I opened Wild for the first time, and immediately found someone who does. Cheryl Strayed, in her compelling account of her journey hiking the Pacific Crest Trail alone and generally completely unprepared, has an amazing story. With her life basically falling apart, completely off course, she decides to hike from Southern California to the Oregon-Washington border. Alone. 26 years old. And, oh yeah, she has never backpacked  before in her life. Somewhere in her, she knows that a journey of physical struggles and solitude will pull her out of the spiral she is in. She will be reborn. And she is! In between her toenails falling off and the rain-soaked days of trudging over rocks and bramble, she becomes firmly and gloriously rooted back into life.

Now, I’m about as far away as you can get from being a hippie. But dammit if there wasn’t something seriously soul-stirring, seriously compelling, seriously instinctual about a return to the wild. Where communing with nature doesn’t just mean a stroll in the park, but a down and dirty, desperate, raw, simple relationship with the world. Where you cannot help but recognize the beauty and pain around you and rediscover its reflection in yourself. Where the aches of your soul can be healed by new aches in your back, and the answers to some of your hardest questions are found as long as you take just one more step.

Cheryl reminded me that I am a creature. That I have a little flame of an animal inside of me. It’s the same little flame that yearns to be on an island somewhere, chewing on coconut rind and smelling fresh leaves ground between my fingers. It feels good to know that I have that little flame. I feel like going on a hike!