Originally posted by
terriwindling at
On friendship http://windling.typepad.com/blog/2013/10/friends.html
"Friendship has never seemed both more important and less relevant than
it does now," writes
Jessica Vivian Chiu in a beautiful essay on friendship for the Paris Review. "The concept surfaces primarily when we worry over whether
our networked lives impair the quality of our connections, our
community. On a nontheoretical level, adult friendship is its own
puzzle. The friendships we have as adults are the intentional kind, if
only because time is short. During this period, I began to consider the
subject. What is essential in friendship? Why do we tolerate difference
and distance? What is the appropriate amount to give?"
She then goes on to explore the friendship between writers Sherwood Anderson, Theodore Dreiser, and the sculptor Wharton Esherick. You can read the full essay
here.
Considering how important friendships have been in my own life and in the lives around me, I find it baffling that the joys, sorrows, and complexities of friendship (and for me personally, women's friendships) have not been a central theme in literary and other arts. Yes, the ocassional book or film (and, rarer still, painting or song)...but the numbers are small compared to works dedicated to romance, family dynamics, and personal journeys in which friendships are fleeting or relegated to second tier roles.
Yet for many of us, our friends are family; and often in our young adulthood it's friendship that lasts while romances come and go. Meeting someone with the potential to become a close friend can feel almost as giddy as falling in love; and certainly the end of a friendship can be just as painful as divorce. Sometimes worse.
I'd like your help today in recommending works of art (in all fields) on the subject of friendship. For example, my favorite novel to date on the subject of friendship is
Elizabeth Wein's brilliant Code Name Verity, a gorgeously written and harrowing story about the friendship between two young female pilots in World War II. To me, this book captures the absolutely intensity of the bond between best friends. My favorite memoir on the the subject is Testament of Friendship by
Vera Brittain (author of the better-known World War I era memoir Testament of Youth). This beautiful book is about Brittain's deep relationship with fellow writer, feminist, and politcal activist
Winifred Holtby. (Close runners-up would be A World of Light by
May Sarton,
a fascinating book in which the author looks at the friendships that
formed her world from her mid-twenties to her mid-forties; and Truth and Beauty by
Ann Patchett, about her complicated, rather difficult friendship with fellow writer
Lucy Grealy.)
My favorite biographical work about friendship is The Red Rose Girls by
Alice Carter, about the artists Jessie Willcox Smith, Elizabeth Shippen Green and Violet Oakley.
And you? What do you recommend on the theme of "friendship," in any form of art?
Good friendships aging like good wine: The photographs above, from top to bottom, are of me and my dear friend
Ellen Kushner back in the 1980s (photographed by
Beth Gwinn); Ellen and me again n 2006 (photographed by
Nina Kiriki Hoffman); and Ellen, Tilly & me during Ellen's visit to Chagford, with
Delia Sherman and
Kathleen Jennings, this week. (The first photo by me, the second photo by Ellen.)