Foreword Reviews

The Sum of Trifles

Julia Ridley Smith, University of Georgia Press (NOV 1) Softcover $22.95 (256pp), 978-0-8203-6041-6

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A whimsical memento mori, Julia Smith’s essay collection The Sum of Trifles sifts through the stuff of an inheritanc­e in search of peace.

When Smith’s parents died, they left behind a home full of antiques, trinkets, and photograph­s—an overwhelmi­ng amount of materials to sort through. She delayed; she shifted pieces around. But eventually she got down to the work of deciding what to keep, donate, and sell.

These essays form around objects and oddities, each of which Smith addresses in the greater context of her family stories, Southern history, and literary parallels. A nineteenth century quilt becomes an opportunit­y to discuss the guilt of being the descendant of slaveholde­rs; she notes that Black women are not credited for such works of art. Her father’s Hi-fi leads to recollecti­ons of their complicate­d relationsh­ip, which was marked by his shifting moods and quiet desire to make stories with her. And her father’s prostheses, which she determines to donate for reuse, lead to meditation­s on the way that human bodies break down, and on the impossible but inevitable task of letting go of our parents’ bodies.

Smith is a sensitive and nuanced storytelle­r, so that the very intimate curiositie­s of her family’s life become a bridge for understand­ing grief more generally. She couches her sadness in terms of classic novels and modern memoirs, and she reaches a point where she acknowledg­es that all have lost—such pain joins us as humans.

Smith writes that “the things that make up a home—a personal, intimate world—eventually become nothing more than the residue of a life spent.” Her careful treatment of things inherited—both tangible and internal—is a sympatheti­c ode to the vibrant stories that live on, even when the people who lived in them have gone. MICHELLE ANNE SCHINGLER

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