Urbane Renewal
Claire Messud, the best-selling author of The Emperor's Children, discovers the grown-up pleasures of her adolescent playground
- By Claire Messud
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Harvard Square was our other main destination, and there, more comfortably, we could pretend we were intellectuals, smoking clove cigarettes in the Algiers coffeehouse and sitting through obscure foreign films at the Orson Welles, the chilly cinema then on Massachusetts Avenue between Harvard and Central squares. Once, a friend and I found ourselves there enduring an interminable porn flick, two 15-year-old girls surrounded by a scattering of older men, misled by a good review in the countercultural weekly and by the fact—surely a moral good?—that the film was Brazilian. At Oonagh's, a secondhand clothing store just beyond the Harvard Book Store, we actually made purchases, and for many years I kept a men's velvet dressing gown I'd picked up there, even though its navy silk lining was in tatters, because it seemed to me, obliquely, to evoke the sort of life I imagined I should lead.
The Boston of my adolescence had no markets, no bills to pay, no bike rides or backyards—and, most mysteriously, no homes. The boarding school had day students, to be sure, and some of them were my friends, and if I try very hard I can conjure a snippet of a kitchen on Beacon Hill or a bathroom in a house near Harvard Square. There were adventurous, isolated junkets on the subway out to Brookline and Newton, suburbs where the houses seemed dwarfed by foliage, lives of a sort to which I paid no attention at all, having imperiously decided (my parents were then living in similar suburbs, in Connecticut) that they were not for me. I know I visited such houses—Natasha's house, Elsa's house, Meg's house—but I remember nothing about them.
The prejudice, though, remained with me all these years, and against all logic. When house-hunting in Boston several years back, immensely pregnant and with a 2-year-old in tow, I stubbornly refused to consider Brookline or Newton, or in fact anywhere else where the public schools were any good, but instead cleaved willfully to my adolescent dream of who I was (the intellectual in Harvard Square!) and landed as close by as our resources would allow, upon a hill behind Somerville's Union Square, a mile from Harvard Yard, in an all-but-straight line that leads past my parents' grad student digs and the resurrected butcher Savenor's, where the late Julia Child no longer shops but we frequently do.
Unlike my earlier Boston lives, this one is not imaginary. It is bounded by playgrounds and car repairmen, by the endless two-block loop that is all our dachshund with back trouble can manage for her walks. It is a life of delicious mundanity, in which the supermarket run or the weeding of our tiny patch of yard is of recurring and vital importance. For unexpected thrills, we take the ferry to George's Island, across the glistening harbor, and picnic with our children in the ruined fort. It is unglamorous and glorious. If you'd told me, 20 years ago, that I would live in Boston for four years and know barely any more restaurants than when I arrived, I would have blanched. If you'd told me I would go to the symphony, or the opera, or the theater only about once a year and that the only films I would see would be rated G, I would have been horrified. My idea of myself, like my idea of home, was so very different. But Boston proves to be as wonderful a place for a boring real life as it was for an exciting but imaginary one. Until now, I had always contemplated the next move; now, I contemplate how to avoid it; which I think means that Boston is, after all these years, home.
Claire Messud has written three novels and a book of novellas.
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Comments (5)
I was delighted to find this article, while checking to see if any new work by Claire Messud has been published. She is a wonderful writer, charming and insightful. Please, Ms. Messud, your readers are waiting for your next novel!
Posted by L.Punzo on May 8,2008 | 03:26 PM
This captures both the vibrant dreams of youth and the strength of generations of residents. Boston is a wonderful city because it supports both. Every part of the city (even the less attractive bits) takes character from the dreams and accomplishments of wonderful people who lived there in the past and will live there in the future. Thanks so much for this "postcard from your own backyard" - it is absolutely lovely. Please write more.
Posted by CJ Burnett on April 5,2008 | 12:24 PM
I enjoyed reading this story and could identify with her feelings about imaginary youthful dreams and her current real life. How it seems to be mundane by all appearances; it really is a remarkable symphony of children and the environment. I loved how this story flowed and look forward to reading more from this writer. Thank you.
Posted by Linda Sirpilla on April 3,2008 | 04:40 PM
Like Warren, I like this story very much. Claire Messud's very intelligible writing and living style puts me in mind of some of the great authors of the 19th century. I hope you'll publish more of Ms. Messud's writings in Smithsonian Magazine. Thank you for publishing this story.-DJMarcou.
Posted by David J. Marcou on March 31,2008 | 01:09 PM
i like this story.
Posted by warren on March 25,2008 | 03:57 PM