THE DEATH OF FRED ASTAIRE and other essays from a life outside the lines
Leslie Lawrence
SUNY Press, Albany, New York
2016
Ms. Hen happened to read this collection of essays because
it fell into her lap. Sometimes a book can find its way to her,
and she’s glad this one did. THE DEATH OF FRED ASTAIRE is a collection of
essays about the author’s life: her experience choosing to be a lesbian parent
when it wasn’t as common as it is now, about becoming a widow, also about
teaching, being a writer, and striving to find and create art in a world that
thirsts for more beauty.
Ms. Hen appreciated the honesty in this collection of
essays. She felt as if she knows Leslie Lawrence well after reading the book.
Ms. Hen thinks Ms. Lawrence has led a lovely life, that she hasn’t always
achieved what she wanted, but she seems like a happy person, one who can
survive life’s tempests and come out on the other side of the ocean with her
sails still waving in the wind.
The title essay, “The Death of Fred Astaire,” is about her
desire to become a mother despite the fact that she was in a lesbian
relationship. The Eighties were a time when artificial insemination was first being
introduced, but Ms. Lawrence decided to choose the biological father of her child,
because she wanted to know his history and wanted her child to have a father
figure. She started by making a list of men - some former lover, some friends - and eventually found a suitable match. Ms. Lawrence had
a boy, and became the mother she always wanted to be.
In “The Third Hottest Pepper in Honduras,” Ms. Lawrence
talks about her experience as a temporary teacher in an inner city school in
Boston. She thought she was doing a wonderful job, until she went back to
school the next year. This reminded Ms. Hen of all the times when she thought
she was doing well, but ended up failing. Ms. Hen enjoyed the honesty in
this essay; life can throw a person a fast ball and she can get hit on the head
when she thinks she’s about to hit a home run.
The largest section of the collection, and the most
fascinating, appears at the end of the book, entitled, “Wonderlust.” It contains
short essays on the classes Ms. Lawrence has taken in her life: art classes,
dance classes, classes on education and other subjects. She explains why she
took these classes as the desire for meaning, to find beauty in the world. Ms.
Hen thinks that one of the most moving essays in this section is “Plank,” about Ms. Lawrence's desire to take a sculpture class when her partner Sandy was receiving chemo
for cancer. Her therapist told her, "‘When your bank account is empty, you
need to refill it.’" Ms. Hen loves the idea of refilling your bank account
with the quest for aesthetics. The world could be crashing around us, but we
should still seek what is beautiful. And Ms. Hen thinks it's possible that is one
of the reasons we’re alive.
Ms. Hen loved wading through the pages of THE DEATH OF FRED
ASTAIRE. As she read, she discovered it is not the kind of book that a person can
read through quickly; she would read an essay, but she would stop to think
about for a short time before reading the next one. This is a book that makes a
reader stop and consider that person’s own life, what does the reader think of
this subject, and why is it important?
A book that makes a reader ask questions is the type Ms. Hen
enjoys reading. She likes a window into someone else’s life, especially if it is one that is filled with the quest for beauty
and love, the desire to produce art, and the hope that our part of the world
matters.
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