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Wednesday, September 06, 2023

The Memory of Running (1999) by Ron McClarty

 1001 Novels: A Library of America
The Memory of Running (1999)
by Ron McClarty
East Providence, Rhode Island
Rhode Island: 8/9

    The Memory of Running  came as a real surprise with a very quirky origin story.  Author Ron McClarty is best known as an actor (he was a main character on the Spencer for Hire tv show.  He wrote this book, a heroes quest story about an obese Vietnam veteran reeling from the deaths of his elderly parents in an auto accident.  Cleaning out their house, he finds a death notice for his estranged, mentally ill sister from Los Angeles which sends him on a journey across America on a bicycle, as he struggles with his memories of growing up with a mentally ill sister.

   When McClarty wrote the book he couldn't find a publisher so he created his own Audiobook version (McClarty is a notable Audiobook narrator- the winner of many "Audies").  Author Stephen King listened to the Audiobook and wrote about it in his Entertainment Weekly column and the rest is publishing history!  From the perspective of the 1001 Novels project, this hardly qualifies as a Rhode Island- the present of the book is a cross-country journey on a bike, and the flashbacks are very focused on the interactions between the narrator and his family.

  The theme of the mentally ill sister ripping the family apart has been a major issue in three of the last five books I've read in the 1001 Novels: A Library of America. It's amazing to me that the characters in these books let their whole entire lives be governed and ruined by a mentally ill sibling or family member. Some of these literary families are working class, others are upper middle class, but they all let their entire lives- personal and professional be ruined by a psychotic child. Well, ok.  Personally, I don't think having a sub-optimal family situation is a reason to be totally enslaved by it. 

  The Memory of Running has some moments, but most of it reads like a book length montage scene of Forrest Gump running across America with dangerous misunderstandings and a host of sad, sad stories. 

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