Joyride

I waited a while to read Susan Orlean’s memoir Joyride, waited for it to become available through my library’s holds queue. I think Orlean would approve of this, even though reading a library copy meant I didn’t buy one of my own.
“A library isn’t merely a municipal building, although it is that, too, and it isn’t merely a valuable resource for books, although it is certainly that as well. Libraries are something more than that,” Orlean says in Joyride, describing the process of writing The Library Book (which I read and loved), “something essential and emotional, the public soul. Maybe we recognize ourselves in them.”
I recognized myself in Joyride. Not that my writing career has been anything like Orlean’s, but her reasons for writing closely resemble my own: “Writing things down always felt natural to me, as if it completed the electrical circuit of a thought. A thought didn’t quite exist unless I put it on the page.”
This is why I’ve been keeping a journal since high school, why I started this blog in 2010 and am at it still. Stories are “documents of our humanity,” Orlean writes, “shimmering trails of time spent alive.”








