Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Patchett’s new collection of essays richly rewarding

- Mims Cushing

“These Precious Days: Essays,”

Ann Patchett (Harper)

If you are a fiction reader, you are probably familiar with Ann Patchett’s many noteworthy novels, among them “The Patron Saint of Liars,” “Bel Canto” and most recently “The Dutch House,” all published to great acclaim, along with five others. She has also written three works of nonfiction and a couple of children’s books. Perhaps you read her first book of essays, “This is the Story of a Happy Marriage.” Now comes along another collection, “These Precious Days.”

She says she writes essays while taking a break from working on her lengthy novels. “Essays never filled my days,” she says. “But they reminded me that I was still a writer when I wasn’t writing a novel.”

She tells us how homesick she was in her freshman year at Sarah Lawrence, and that she flew home to Nashville for Halloween, thanks to her cousins treating her to this “fantastic extravagan­ce,” then didn’t fly home for Thanksgivi­ng. She wrote “The First Thanksgivi­ng” at college, buying groceries for the meal with babysittin­g money and sneaking silverware from the cafeteria to use for her five invited guests. Using “The Joy of Cooking,” she pulled the dinner off. The college turned down the heat to the lowest possible temperatur­e before the pipes would freeze. Patchett used an open stove and burners on high to warm the dorm room. She declared the dinner “Brilliant.”

Another memorable essay is “Sisters,” where she writes about her mother, who was actually 26 years older than the author. People kept thinking they were sisters, they looked so alike. The startling comparison­s began when Patchett was 10 and continued until her mother’s death at almost 80.

Not surprising is her writing about her life as a writer and love for books. Patchett is the owner of Parnassus, a bookshop in Nashville and a boon to the city. She claims that one of her early influences is Snoopy – yes, the beagle, who is a writer wannabe.

Some of the essays go back decades, but Patchett also takes us through the pandemic and lockdown. The title essay is particular­ly moving. Tom Hanks’ assistant, Sooki, stays with Patchett in her basement apartment at her insistence. Sooki has cancer and remains there because of an autoimmune condition while the pandemic takes its course.

“My Year of No Shopping,” ”How Knitting Saved My Life. Twice” and “A Paper Ticket is Good for One Year” are some of the others titles readers might relate to. Essays of varying kinds can be enjoyed by all readers.

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