The Tender Land: A Family Love Story
An extraordinary memoir of a family haunted by tragedy: “I’ve read very few contemporary novels that can rival Finneran’s nonfiction.” —Jonathan Franzen
 A superb portrait of family life, this “absorbing and thoughtful” memoir is a love story unlike any other (Library Journal). The Finnerans—Irish Catholic parents with five children in St. Louis—are a seemingly unexceptional family whose lives are upended by a catastrophic event: the suicide of the author’s fifteen-year-old younger brother after being publicly humiliated in junior high school.
 
A gentle, handsome boy, Sean Finneran was a straight-A student and gifted athlete, especially treasured by every member of his family. Masterfully, the book interweaves past and present, showing how inseparable the Finnerans are, and how the long accumulation of love and memory helps them survive their terrible loss.
 
“Unforgettable in its restraint and quiet beauty,” The Tender Land is a testament to the always-complicated ways in which we love one another (Publishers Weekly). In quietly luminous language, Kathleen Finneran renders the emotional, spiritual, and physical terrain of family life—its closeness and disconnection, its intimacy and estrangement—and pays tribute to the love between parents and children, brothers and sisters. In doing so, she “reminds us of how complicated, unique, and fragile an organism the family is” (The Boston Globe).
 
“[Great writers] change us. Kathleen Finneran fits in this niche. . . . Her prose sings.” —USA Today
 
“Beautifully written . . . Like life itself, this memoir evokes both sadness and joy.” —St. Louis Post-Dispatch 
1111827046
The Tender Land: A Family Love Story
An extraordinary memoir of a family haunted by tragedy: “I’ve read very few contemporary novels that can rival Finneran’s nonfiction.” —Jonathan Franzen
 A superb portrait of family life, this “absorbing and thoughtful” memoir is a love story unlike any other (Library Journal). The Finnerans—Irish Catholic parents with five children in St. Louis—are a seemingly unexceptional family whose lives are upended by a catastrophic event: the suicide of the author’s fifteen-year-old younger brother after being publicly humiliated in junior high school.
 
A gentle, handsome boy, Sean Finneran was a straight-A student and gifted athlete, especially treasured by every member of his family. Masterfully, the book interweaves past and present, showing how inseparable the Finnerans are, and how the long accumulation of love and memory helps them survive their terrible loss.
 
“Unforgettable in its restraint and quiet beauty,” The Tender Land is a testament to the always-complicated ways in which we love one another (Publishers Weekly). In quietly luminous language, Kathleen Finneran renders the emotional, spiritual, and physical terrain of family life—its closeness and disconnection, its intimacy and estrangement—and pays tribute to the love between parents and children, brothers and sisters. In doing so, she “reminds us of how complicated, unique, and fragile an organism the family is” (The Boston Globe).
 
“[Great writers] change us. Kathleen Finneran fits in this niche. . . . Her prose sings.” —USA Today
 
“Beautifully written . . . Like life itself, this memoir evokes both sadness and joy.” —St. Louis Post-Dispatch 
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The Tender Land: A Family Love Story

The Tender Land: A Family Love Story

by Kathleen Finneran
The Tender Land: A Family Love Story

The Tender Land: A Family Love Story

by Kathleen Finneran

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Overview

An extraordinary memoir of a family haunted by tragedy: “I’ve read very few contemporary novels that can rival Finneran’s nonfiction.” —Jonathan Franzen
 A superb portrait of family life, this “absorbing and thoughtful” memoir is a love story unlike any other (Library Journal). The Finnerans—Irish Catholic parents with five children in St. Louis—are a seemingly unexceptional family whose lives are upended by a catastrophic event: the suicide of the author’s fifteen-year-old younger brother after being publicly humiliated in junior high school.
 
A gentle, handsome boy, Sean Finneran was a straight-A student and gifted athlete, especially treasured by every member of his family. Masterfully, the book interweaves past and present, showing how inseparable the Finnerans are, and how the long accumulation of love and memory helps them survive their terrible loss.
 
“Unforgettable in its restraint and quiet beauty,” The Tender Land is a testament to the always-complicated ways in which we love one another (Publishers Weekly). In quietly luminous language, Kathleen Finneran renders the emotional, spiritual, and physical terrain of family life—its closeness and disconnection, its intimacy and estrangement—and pays tribute to the love between parents and children, brothers and sisters. In doing so, she “reminds us of how complicated, unique, and fragile an organism the family is” (The Boston Globe).
 
“[Great writers] change us. Kathleen Finneran fits in this niche. . . . Her prose sings.” —USA Today
 
“Beautifully written . . . Like life itself, this memoir evokes both sadness and joy.” —St. Louis Post-Dispatch 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780547349282
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Publication date: 06/11/2003
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 84,064
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Kathleen Finneran was born in St. Louis and is a graduate of Washington University. She was the recipient of a Whiting Writers’ Award in 2001. The Tender Land is Finneran’s first book. She lives in St. Louis.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

The Evidence of Angels

To those who have seen The Child, however dimly, however incredulously,
— W.H. Auden

My mother believes she gave birth to an angel. She told me so when I stopped by one day for lunch, and though we have never discussed it, I imagine she told Michael, Mary, and Kelly just as matter-of-factly. "I think there was a reason he was only here for a short time," she said. "I think he was an angel sent to save someone."

My father was sitting across from me at the kitchen table. From merely looking at his face, I can usually tell exactly what he is thinking, especially if anything has been said that either of us might consider questionable. He has communicated silently with me since I was a child, staring at me from across a room or in the rearview mirror of the car until I look up to see what he wants to tell me. It is an unspoken language of astonishment, criticism, and condemnation. It has always kept us close.

The first time my father communicated with me this way I was five. He had picked me up from kindergarten. Usually my mother picked me up, but it was a beautiful fall day, and even though he was still in the construction business, and good weather was a commodity, my father was splendidly carefree sometimes, coming home early and taking us on long drives to undisclosed destinations, special places he wanted to show us. But before we could go to wherever we were going that day, we had to drop off a boy in my class. His mother drove us to school and mine drove us home. When he saw that my father had come instead, the boy ran for the front seat, where I usually sat, so I climbed in back and sat behind my father. As he started the car, my father looked at me in the rearview mirror as if to say he recognized what the boy had done, usurping the seat that should have been mine. When we got to his house, the boy told my father to pull all the way up to the top of the driveway, as close to the front door as he could. "Closer. A little closer," the boy said. It was something my mother did every day without direction, the boy having instructed her the first time we took him home. He hated to walk any farther than he had to. Now the boy sat up high in the front seat to see out past the hood of the car, saying, "Just a few more feet." My father looked at me in the rearview mirror again. "Here is a real baby," his eyes said. I felt privileged then, and I didn't fight for the front seat later that day, as I usually did when we picked up Michael and Mary from North American Martyrs, the school I would go to the following year when I started first grade. Instead, I stayed in the back to watch in the rearview mirror for anything else my father might want to tell me.

It was almost twenty years later, and many words had passed unspoken between us by the time my mother revealed her belief that my younger brother, Sean, was an angel. It was a few weeks after Sean's death, and she spoke with such certainty and composure that I longed for my father to look at me and let me know what he was thinking. But he kept his eyes cast toward the table and continued to eat his sandwich without the slightest reaction, leaving me to wonder whether my mother's assessment of Sean's life and death was something he had already accepted, maybe even agreed with. He was unwilling to look at me, to meet my eyes in a way that might trivialize my mother's faith. Or perhaps the possibility of what she said consoled him, as it must have consoled my mother. Maybe the trauma of losing their fifteen-year-old son was lessened by believing his life was more than it might have been. Maybe faith has that effect.

My mother's faith has always been a natural, constant, almost practical part of our household. Her days begin and end in prayer. Each morning she sits in the living room with a large glass of instant iced tea and roams page by page through her prayer book, offering up her prayers for the living, her hopes for the dead. It is a time of privacy, but one she conducts in plain view, fielding her family's early morning inquiries calmly and quietly without ever looking up. When I still lived at home — as a child, as a teenager, and even as a young adult — I used to take my cereal into the living room, sit cross-legged on the couch across from my mother's chair, and eat my breakfast while she prayed. I never spoke and she never acknowledged me, until, having finished my cereal, I would get up to leave and she would hold her glass of tea toward me, asking if I'd mind adding more ice. It was a ritual. It was a way to participate, if only peripherally, in my mother's routine.

I don't have the same kind of faith as my mother, and as I sat there that day eating lunch with my parents, I turned her belief about Sean into something more like metaphor, though I knew that was not how she meant it. To her, Sean was not merely angelic; he was an actual angel. And I knew if I asked the obvious question — which of us was he sent here to save — she would have many answers. Maybe it wasn't just one of us. Maybe it was all of us. Or maybe it was someone we never even knew.

After we finished lunch, my mother got up and stood at the sink, staring out the kitchen window.

"Tom, the bird feeders are almost empty," she said to my father, and, turning to me, "We had a cardinal come this morning. I saw him sitting on the back fence when I woke up, and then he kept coming closer until he was right here on the windowsill. It's such a thrill to see that red in winter."

Above the kitchen window, a placard painted with flowers read, "What you are is God's gift to you. What you make of yourself is your gift to God." One of the many aphorisms that could be found hanging in our house, it was painted to look like a cross-stitch sampler and reminded me of the prayers my mother embroidered that hung above the bed Mary and I shared when we were little. One of the prayers — "Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep. If I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take" — confused me. I didn't understand the word keep in terms of preservation. To me, it meant possession, permanent or otherwise. It meant asking my mother "Can we keep it?" whenever a stray animal wandered into our yard. It meant our neighbors keeping our goldfish while we were on vacation. Saying the prayer, I thought we were asking God to hold on to our souls — to keep them — while we slept, and I imagined God gathering them up every night and storing them somewhere, a large warehouse of souls being guarded until we got up again. And this is why I was confused: If God was already keeping our souls during the night, which we had prayed for him to do in the first place, it didn't make sense to ask him — if we died — to take what he already had. When I asked my mother about this, I wasn't able to explain my confusion clearly, and feeling frustrated by this inability, I kept my other questions to myself. How did God know what time we were going to wake up? I wondered. Did our souls come back automatically as soon as our eyes opened? What if my soul got mixed up with Mary's? Sometimes I woke up on her side of the bed and she woke up on mine, with no memory of how it happened. Did God have a system to keep track of such stuff?

As a child, saying that prayer every night, lying in bed below the sampler my mother had stitched, I never considered the possibility that any of us would die in our sleep. Just as I never thought it would happen when, if Michael, Mary, and I had been fighting, my mother made us apologize before we went to bed, telling us we would feel bad forever if one of us died during the night and we never got the chance to say we were sorry. But now it had happened, and I knew, too well, what my mother meant. Sean hadn't died in his sleep, but his death was sudden. None of us thought one day that he would not be here the next. And though we had no quarrels with him that had gone unforgiven, it didn't matter. He had killed himself. For the rest of us, there could be no greater guilt. We had not seen his pain, and for that we would always be sorry.

My father went outside to fill the bird feeders. Watching him, my mother tapped on the window and pointed toward the fence. The cardinal had come back. "Come see," she told me. The cardinal flew closer to my father and followed him as he finished filling the feeders. It was the food, of course, that the cardinal was following, but when my father came back into the house, the cardinal, instead of perching on one of the feeders, sat on the empty birdbath and stared at the kitchen window as if it were waiting for someone to come out again, and then it flew up and stood on the windowsill, as it had when my mother saw it that morning, and looked at us through the glass.

"Hi, pretty bird," my mother cooed. "Hi, pretty boy." We had been watching the cardinal for only a few minutes when Kelly came home. The youngest of us, she was twelve and still in grade school when Sean died. I was twenty-four, Mary and Michael two and four years older.

Kelly threw her coat on a chair and her books on the table. "What are you looking at?" she asked.

"A cardinal," my mother answered.

"What's the big deal about a cardinal?" Kelly went to the refrigerator and got out the milk and then pushed herself between us at the window. She was the only child now of what my mother referred to as her second family, Sean and Kelly born so many years after Michael, Mary, and me. She looked at the cardinal, then turned to my mother. "Don't even try to say that's Sean," she said, and seeing a smile on my mother's face, my father and I started laughing.

"I mean it," Kelly said. She was blunt about everything, including my mother's beliefs, and I imagined her rolling her eyes at the idea of Sean as an angel. "Yeah, right," she'd say, ready to tell us all the ways he wasn't.

When my mother went out to sprinkle some seeds on the windowsill, I thought the cardinal would fly away, but it didn't. My mother said something to it and then she came back in and stood at the kitchen sink again, watching it through the window. "What's wrong, little guy?" she asked. "Aren't you hungry?" The cardinal looked at her for a few minutes and then flew off to the telephone wire, the tree, and out of the yard altogether. "Goodbye, little guy," my mother said. "Goodbye, pretty red bird."

As I stood there with her, watching nothing now, I thought about how much she and Sean sounded like each other. They both talked easily and openly to animals, using the same tone of voice, sometimes even the same words. "Goodbye, little guy," my mother called out to the cardinal. "Go on, little guy, you're free now," I had once heard Sean say to a frog. We had been riding our bikes on the river road that runs along the Illinois side of the Mississippi, just north of where we lived in the suburbs of St. Louis. It was a Saturday near the end of October, a few weeks after Sean's fifteenth birthday, and we had planned a longer ride than the one we usually took to the Brussels Ferry and back. This time, instead of touching the ferry sign and turning around, we would board the Brussels Ferry with our bikes, ride up the other side of the river to a ferry farther north, cross, and come back down. Sean hoped to reach the town of Hamburg. "Brussels and Hamburg in the same day," he said. It was his dream to ride to all the towns in Missouri and Illinois with European names. Florence, Rome, and Athens. Frankfurt, Strasbourg, Vienna, Versailles.

"We'll pass through Batchtown and Nutwood, too," he told me. He had drawn a map and slipped it into the plastic sleeve of his handlebar bag. Batchtown and Nutwood meant as much to him as Brussels and Hamburg. It was the names of places that he loved.

After the first few miles, Sean's map was already unreadable. It was the same with every map he made, drawn meticulously and sized to slip into the special handlebar bag he had bought to hold his maps in place so that he could read them while he rode. We never got very far before they were obscured by things he saw and stopped for, rocks and wildflowers mostly, leaves and weeds and sometimes money. This time it was two giant fern fronds full of spores and some tiny orange flowers that were blooming beside them. He planned to scrape the spores off the ferns and look at them under his microscope. The flowers? They were pretty.

"Did you know that people used to think that carrying fern spores could make you invisible?" he said.

We were passing all our favorite places — the house with the word PIES painted on the porch rail, the fish-fry stand where we always stopped for soda. We were on a mission: Hamburg or bust.

"When was that?" I asked.

"I can't remember. The Middle Ages maybe. I read it somewhere."

"You mean like they'd put the spores in their pocket or something and then think they were invisible? Couldn't they see themselves? Even if there weren't mirrors, they could still see their bodies."

"Maybe they became invisible to other people but not to themselves."

"Either way, it doesn't make much sense."

"Your gears are slipping," he said.

"Only the low ones."

"How can you stand riding that way?" he wondered.

When we reached the small park where we always stopped for lunch, we walked our bikes across the grass to a picnic table that stood beneath a tree beside the river.

"Table, tree, trash can," Sean said. "This would be a good place to teach Sarah the letter t."

"You're teaching Sarah the alphabet already?"

"No, but someday I will be," he said. Mary's daughter, Sarah, was four months old and not much time went by that Sean wasn't talking about her. He took his unclehood seriously, riding his bike to Mary's nearly every day to see her and supplying us with daily updates on what she was doing. "Table, tree, trash can" was the kind of thing he said a lot during those days, as if he had altered the way he experienced the world, or his expression of it, to meet the needs of his newborn niece. One of the things she needed most, he decided, was to know the name of everything she encountered. "School bus, Sarah," he would say as he pushed her in her stroller. "Car, Sarah. Stop sign. Sprinkler, Sarah. Kitty. C'mere, kitty," he would say. We had all grown used to his stopping mid-sentence to name something whenever she was with us. "Home, Sarah," I heard him say once when they returned from a walk. "Home, Sarah," he whispered as he lifted her, sleeping, out of her stroller.

He was already looking forward to the time when she would talk. "What do you want to tell me?" he would ask her, and she would kick her legs a little, fix her eyes on him, and smile. "Do you want to tell me about your duckie?" he would ask, waving it in front of her face, and he would rock and talk, taking both their parts, asking her questions and answering them for her.

"I wonder what her first word will be," he would say sometimes, but he would be dead before she said it. "Door," she would say one day, watching us walk through it. "Door," she would tell us again as we kissed her goodbye.

Table, tree, trash can. It was a spare assessment of the surroundings, but it was accurate. There was not much else around.

"River, clouds, sky," Sean said, and he looked at me and grinned.

"Boy, bike, bird. Snap out of it," I said.

He squinted toward the sky, then touched my arm. "Where's the bird?" he asked.

When we reached the picnic table, he threw down his bike. "Oh no! Oh God!" he screamed, and he started to cry.

Near the center of the table, a frog was stuck in a pink mound of bubble gum. If it had struggled to free itself, it had given up, and it sat there panting, its body expanding and contracting so fiercely it looked as if it would soon explode. A brown river frog, it had turned gray.

"Somebody did that to him," Sean cried. He took a cup out of his bag. "Go get some water from the river," he said, and when I returned, he was stroking the frog's back with his finger as he worked his pocketknife under the gum. He stuck his finger in the water and then ran it, wet, over the frog's back. "Do that," he told me, and then he began digging deep below the wad of gum, almost into the wood of the table, to keep from cutting the frog. He had stopped crying, but his eyes and face were wet with tears.

"Maybe he just jumped into it," I said.

"No. Somebody did it to him. Some fucking asshole," he said. I had never heard him talk like that.

"How do you know?"

"Because frogs have strong legs. If he jumped on this, he could jump out of it. He might take some gum with him, but he wouldn't get stuck."

He paused for a moment to wipe his face on his sleeve, and then he pointed his knife at an indentation where the frog's front feet were stuck. "See?" he said. The same mark — the size of a thumbprint — encircled the back feet. "Someone held him down. Real funny," he said.

He freed the wad of gum from the table and lifted the frog. The gum looked like a small pink pond beneath the frog's body. It reminded me of a ceramic figurine my mother had on her dresser of a little bird swimming on a puddle of blue porcelain.

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "The Tender Land"
by .
Copyright © 2000 Kathleen Finneran.
Excerpted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Title Page,
Contents,
Copyright,
Dedication,
Epigraph,
Acknowledgments,
The Evidence of Angels,
Two Summers,
New Year's Day, 1990,
As My Father Retires,
Acts of Faith and Other Matters,
The Tender Land,
About the Author,

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