Archives of joy Reflections on animals and the nature of being

Jean-François Beauchemin, 1960-

Book - 2023

"Two mismatched ducks quarrel amorously. A tortoise basks on a rock in the sun. Four deer ceremoniously visit a writer's garden to announce the arrival of a newborn fawn. In Archives of Joy, renowned poet, essayist, and novelist Jean-François Beauchemin turns his poetic and playful gaze to memories of animals he has known throughout his life, from fleeting encounters to deep relationships. With each meeting, Beauchemin returns to a simple thought: that joy in nature is an essential counterweight to the inescapable awareness of the brevity of life. In short, humorous, and often dreamlike vignettes, Beauchemin meditates on the mysteries of existence, the alchemy of memory, and the entwinement of the animal world with our own--wheth...er he's nursing an injured bird back to health, deciphering the gaze of a judgmental cat, or keeping company with a workhorse nearing its death. His life as a writer and his beloved pet dogs and cats feature often, as do the creatures he encounters in his garden, at farms, or on woodland walks: sparrows, crows, deer, foxes, horses, and cows. Deeply restorative, imaginative, and dreamily poetic, Archives of Joy is a memoir that will stay with readers long after its final page."--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Anecdotes
Published
Vancouver : Greystone Books 2023.
Language
English
French
Main Author
Jean-François Beauchemin, 1960- (author)
Other Authors
David (Linguist) Warriner (translator)
Physical Description
152 pages : illustrations ; 20 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781771649322
  • Author's Note
  • In the Forest
  • Splash
  • The Soul
  • Dreamer
  • A Visitor
  • A Writer's Life
  • Announcement
  • Running
  • Before I Was Born
  • Useful
  • Happy People
  • Adjectives
  • Carefree
  • Apollinaire
  • A House Sparrow
  • Be Convincing
  • A Donkey
  • A Crow
  • War Wounded
  • Real Life
  • Peace
  • A Fox
  • Indifference
  • Two Ducks
  • Body and Thought
  • Rainy Night
  • Logic and Destiny
  • Behind the Shed
  • Inner Life
  • Kinship
  • First Steps
  • During Death
  • Enigmatic Questions
  • Imagination
  • Sleepless Night
  • Root Cellar
  • Whistling Bird
  • What Would I Have Been?
  • The Modern World
  • Comma
  • Poetry
  • Trees
  • Woe Is Me
  • God's Journal
  • Winter 1975
  • What There Is in My Memory
  • A Supreme Discretion
  • Vocabulary
  • Everyday Life
  • Four Dogs
  • Spring
  • Faith in the Future
  • Glory
  • Wing
  • Beauty, Patience
  • Fleeting Friendship
  • Manuscript
  • In the Field
  • Strolling
  • Dizzy
  • Where Dreams Begin
  • Purity
  • A Woodpecker
  • Joie de Vivre
  • A Hare
  • In the Garden
  • Sources
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

French Canadian poet, essayist, and novelist Beauchemin presents a series of short, musing essays about his encounters with animals. Referring to the work as a "bestiary of memory," the author embraces his past as he reflects on moments he's spent with the other denizens of his world in observations on each interaction that move from the practical to the metaphysical. Beauchemin writes about a visit with God on his eighth birthday (he felt that God came to apologize for the grief he caused the author by giving dogs such a short life expectancy), how useful he felt when he helped a cow give birth, how calm washed over him during the event, and how his sorting through his ambitions by enumerating them to his pet mouse gave him the confidence to become a writer. His "reality of imperishable memory" is beautifully limned in poetic phraseology as the joy he finds in other lives translates into a philosophy of life and the core of his work. Illustrated with line drawings, this is a lovely, meditative volume

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.