Telling Secrets
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Frederick Buechner
Frederick Buechner is the author of more than thirty published books and has been an important source of inspiration and learning for many readers. A prolific writer, Buechner’s books have been translated into twenty-seven languages. He has been called a "major talent" by the New York Times, and "one of our most original storytellers" by USA Today. A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, Buechner has been awarded honorary degrees from institutions including Yale University and Virginia Theological Seminary.
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Reviews for Telling Secrets
75 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Another excellent book from Buechner, he describes some of the difficulties of being a parent. The difficulty of losing the only parent he really remembered being there for him and life in general...
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5quite, quite interesting and very quick to read. I'm going to read all his other stuff now too.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A father's suicide and a daughter's anorexia exemplify the sort of secret that radically modifies an individual and, in turn, can be modified by being told. The fiction of noted theologian/novelist Buechner ( A Long Day's Dying, LJ 1/1/50) has been called "psychological." His nonfiction, too (including Whistling in the Dark, LJ 7/88) explores his comprehension of the soul rather than exhorting. This slim memoir does well what Buechner has become noted for doing: showing with subtlety the stark nature of being one thinking being among many. His prescription for the church to look at Alcoholics Anonymous for a modern model is compelling.
1 person found this helpful
Book preview
Telling Secrets - Frederick Buechner
INTRODUCTION
This is my third venture into autobiography, and I launch it on the world with the same misgivings as in the case of the earlier two. It is like telling somebody in detail how you are before they have asked the question, How are you? Indeed, it isn’t like it; it is it. But I do it anyway because I need to do it. After forty years of writing books, I find I need to put things into words before I can believe that they are entirely real.
When it comes to putting my own life into words, however, the doubts persist even so. Are the events I describe anything like the way they really happened? As I look back over them, I think I see patterns, causal relationships, suggestions of meaning, that I was mostly unaware of at the time. Have I gotten them anything like right? E. M. Forster says that a story is a narrative of events arranged chronologically as in the king died, and then the queen died,
whereas a plot, although also a narrative of events, concentrates more on the because of things as in the king died, and then the queen died of grief.
This account is full of becauses. The question is, Have I actually discovered them, or, after long practice as a novelist, have I simply made them up? Have I concocted a plot out of what is only a story? Who knows? I can say only that to me life in general, including my life in particular, feels like a plot, and I find that a source both of strength and of fascination.
In The Sacred Journey and Now and Then I dealt mainly with the headlines of my life, like getting born, my father’s early death, school, marriage, ordination, and so on. There are a few headlines in this book as well, but by and large it resembles more the back pages of the paper where I have always thought the real news is anyway—the reviews, an obituary or two, a couple of in-depth reports, the editorial and op-ed sections. It is the interior life especially that I have tried to deal with here because during the last fifteen years or so that this account covers I have found more and more that, like the back pages, it is in the interior where the real news is.
I have called this book Telling Secrets because I have come to believe that by and large the human family all has the same secrets, which are both very telling and very important to tell. They are telling in the sense that they tell what is perhaps the central paradox of our condition—that what we hunger for perhaps more than anything else is to be known in our full humanness, and yet that is often just what we also fear more than anything else. It is important to tell at least from time to time the secret of who we truly and fully are—even if we tell it only to ourselves—because otherwise we run the risk of losing track of who we truly and fully are and little by little come to accept instead the highly edited version which we put forth in hope that the world will find it more acceptable than the real thing. It is important to tell our secrets too because it makes it easier that way to see where we have been in our lives and where we are going. It also makes it easier for other people to tell us a secret or two of their own, and exchanges like that have a lot to do with what being a family is all about and what being human is all about. Finally, I suspect that it is by entering that deep place inside us where our secrets are kept that we come perhaps closer than we do anywhere else to the One who, whether we realize it or not, is of all our secrets the most telling and the most precious we have to tell.
ONE The Dwarves in the Stable
ONE November morning in 1936 when I was ten years old, my father got up early, put on a pair of gray slacks and a maroon sweater, opened the door to look in briefly on my younger brother and me, who were playing a game in our room, and then went down into the garage where he turned on the engine of the family Chevy and sat down on the running board to wait for the exhaust to kill him. Except for a memorial service for his Princeton class the next spring, by which time we had moved away to another part of the world altogether, there was no funeral because on both my mother’s side and my father’s there was no church connection of any kind and funerals were simply not part of the tradition. He was cremated, his ashes buried in a cemetery in Brooklyn, and I have no idea who if anybody was present. I know only that my mother, brother, and I were not.
There was no funeral to mark his death and put a period at the end of the sentence that had been his life, and as far as I can remember, once he had died my mother, brother, and I rarely talked about him much ever again, either to each other or to anybody else. It made my mother too sad to talk about him, and since there was already more than enough sadness to go round, my brother and I avoided the subject with her as she avoided it for her own reasons also with us. Once in a while she would bring it up but only in very oblique ways. I remember her saying things like You’re going to have to be big boys now,
and Now things are going to be different for all of us,
and to me, You’re the man of the family now,
with that one little three-letter adverb freighted with more grief and anger and guilt and God knows what all else than it could possibly bear.
We didn’t talk about my father with each other, and we didn’t talk about him outside the family either partly at least because suicide was looked on as something a little shabby and shameful in those days. Nice people weren’t supposed to get mixed up with it. My father had tried to keep it a secret himself by leaving his note to my mother in a place where only she would be likely to find it and by saying a number of times the last few weeks of his life that there was something wrong with the Chevy’s exhaust system, which he was going to see if he could fix. He did this partly in hopes that his life insurance wouldn’t be invalidated, which of course it was, and partly too, I guess, in hopes that his friends wouldn’t find out how he had died, which of course they did. His suicide was a secret we nonetheless tried to keep as best we could, and after a while my father himself became such a secret. There were times when he almost seemed a secret we were trying to keep from each other. I suppose there were occasions when one of us said, Remember the time he did this,
or, Remember the time he said that,
but if so, I’ve long since forgotten them. And because words are so much a part of what we keep the past alive by, if only words to ourselves, by not speaking of what we remembered about him we soon simply stopped remembering at all, or at least I did.
Within a couple of months of his death we moved away from New Jersey, where he had died, to the island of Bermuda of all places—another house, another country even—and from that point on I can’t even remember remembering him. Within a year of his death I seem to have forgotten what he looked like except for certain photographs of him, to have forgotten what his voice sounded like and what it had been like to be with him. Because none of the three of us ever talked about how we had felt about him when he was alive or how we felt about him now that he wasn’t, those feelings soon disappeared too and went underground along with the memories. As nearly as I can find out from people who knew him, he was a charming, good-looking, gentle man who was down on his luck and drank too much and had a great number