From Old Notebooks Review

From Old Notebooks
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Words are Evan Lavender-Smith's main tool to express what's in between words: experiences, thoughts, memories, feelings. What cannot be touched, Lavender-Smith captures. The writing is outstanding, and I'm reading this book with no pauses. Ulysses, his son and daughter, Derrida, football, Kierkegaard, writing, death, and films--all are the leading actors of this strange memoir. When he writes about fatherhood, you can almost see his son's footprints on the pages in an effort to touch what the son calls "my moon." Beautifully written, clever, witty, and sensitive.

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From Old Notebooks is a memoir, a novel, a poem, an essay -- a self-styled memoivel -- which exemplifies how love of language and literature enriches our lives, and explores, often with great humor, the many pitfalls confronting a young writer and father on his journey to maturity. Each entry in From Old Notebooks is literally that -- an idea written in a writer's draftbook. Within this unconventional format, Lavender-Smith is able to tell us the story of his life while ruminating on subjects ranging from fatherhood to philosophy, art, football, music, politics, TV, teaching, fear of death, and everything in between. In the process, Lavender-Smith lays bare the day-to-day trials and tribulations of an artist confronted by the pressures of culture, family, writing, and, simply, being. Witty, original, poignant and deeply insightful, From Old Notebooks is a coming-of-age story, an ode to writing and reading, to living and loving -- a celebration of 'human thought in all its glory, all its mundanity.'

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