THE BOOK I WAS MEANT TO WRITE
Judith Arnold
I don’t have a trunk. I don’t have a box under the bed. I
have file cabinets, but The April Tree
wasn’t stored in them, because every time I waded into this novel, I wound up
throwing away what I’d written. It took me decades of false starts and
self-doubt before I felt ready to tackle the story. During those decades, the
only place the book existed was in my mind.
The first time I tried to write The April Tree (although that wasn’t its title then), I was twelve
years old. I feverishly scribbled the story into a spiral-bound notebook. What
I’d written sucked—even at twelve, I was a pretty good judge of my writing—and
I chucked the notebook into the trash. I started the book a second time in college
(with some other title I no longer remember), typing it on my
Smith-Corona portable manual typewriter. I’m not sure what happened to that
version, except that by the time I graduated, it no longer existed. I started
it again about ten years later, when I had a computer and troublesome projects
were easy to delete. I wrote a few pages and deleted them, tried again, deleted
again, approached, retreated.
The April Tree,
in its many incarnations and under its many working titles, was different from
anything else I’d ever attempted. Not commercial fiction. Not romance. It
didn’t follow a standard story arc, with intensifying conflicts and black
moments and neat resolutions. It contemplated life-and-death issues, but not in
a heart-thumping-thriller way. During the years the book incubated inside me,
life handed me some rough times and some sad times, all of which helped to
inform the story.
Last year, I finally wrote The April Tree from beginning to end. I guess it took me all those
years to grow into it, to find the right way to tell it. Writing it wrung me
out, but I did it, and I was satisfied with it, and after dithering for a
couple of months, I sent it to my editor. She recently emailed me to say she
loved it.
So maybe, all those decades after I first struggled to put this
story into words, it might wind up published. If my publisher ultimately passes
on it, I can publish it myself as an e-book. Now that, at long last, it’s
written, I want to share it with readers.
The April Tree
is about how four people deal with the sudden, accidental death of a high
school girl. Two of the people are the girl’s best friends. One is a classmate
who revolves within their orbit. The fourth is the boy who is in a significant
way responsible for the accident. The book is dark and intense, exploring the
way we use faith and ritual to make sense of the universe’s random cruelty.
Here is how it begins:
It
was not his fault.
He
willed himself to unclench his fingers, which were curled so tightly around the
steering wheel they'd practically fused with the plastic. He imagined that if
he ever let go, his hands would leave behind a shadow imprint, like the shadows
left on the sidewalks where people had been standing in Hiroshima when the bomb
fell. He'd heard about that somewhere, he didn't know where, that people were
incinerated where they stood, dissolved into fire, and when the fire died their
shadows remained on the sidewalks like photographs of their souls.
He'd
heard lots of things, and he didn't believe any of them.
For
instance, he didn't believe that this wasn't his fault. He knew it wasn't. But
knowing was different from believing.
Remember everything. Remember it so you'll
be able to believe it someday. Remember because this is your life, from this
point forward. Nothing else counts. This is it.
Sunlight
spilled across the windshield, silver and liquid. Through the glaze he saw
trees, the foliage a dozen shades of green except for one rust-colored red
maple, the trunks gray. Why did little kids always use brown crayons to draw
tree trunks? Like lime lollipops with brown sticks. He used to draw trees that
way, too.
But
it wasn't true. Tree trunks were gray.
Remember this, he ordered himself.
The
road wasn't gray or black. It was an inky blue and the double-stripe running
down the center was school-bus yellow. The tennis ball was the nauseating green
of anti-freeze. If only he'd seen it sooner—but he couldn't have, because he'd
been on the other side of the hill.
Remember that, too. You were on the other
side of the hill. You couldn't see anything until it was too late. This isn't
your fault.
The
girls were a muddle of bare shoulders and slender, golden legs. They were
wearing shorts, unnaturally white sneakers and sleeveless white tops. He
counted three of them standing, but they seemed bound together, moving as one
six-legged creature with three heads. He couldn't see the fourth girl, which
was probably just as well.
Not your fault, he told himself. Not your fault. You came up over the hill,
and she was running, she ran right into you, you swerved but it wasn't enough. She
ran into you and there was that noise, that horrible thunk of metal that
resonated in your chest like your heart imploding. It wasn't your fault.
He
was a long way from believing.
###
Judith Arnold’s current release, GOODBYE TO ALL THAT, has hit multiple bestseller lists on Amazon. Unlike THE APRIL
TREE, it’s a comedy. You can find links
to it and all of Judith’s available books at her web site:
www.juditharnold.com.
Wow, what a story, Judith! And what an excerpt. Looks great!
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to read THE APRIL TREE. I have GOODBYE TO ALL THAT on my TBR stack! A few more pages of edits, and I'm diving in.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to read THE APRIL TREE. I have GOODBYE TO ALL THAT on my TBR stack! A few more pages of edits, and I'm diving in.
ReplyDeleteWow, that sounds like an incredible story. I love the story of how The April Tree came to be.
ReplyDeleteI'm late to the party on this but I really loved the excerpt!
ReplyDeleteOh this is gripping, Barbara. I am so happy you finally wrote (finished) this and that it sold so easily and quickly. Yes, you were born to write.
ReplyDeleteLove your April Tree excerpt!What an emotional read. I understand why this book would leave you wrung out.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to read it!!!
Diane
An undertaking like this must have felt so good to complete. And now it's going to be published (not that I had any doubt.) Kudos!
ReplyDeleteI'm so happy for you, Barbara. It's inspiring to read your story and know that you kept going to the last page. Congratulations! I'm eager to know how it all unfolds, for you and in the book.
ReplyDelete