Tinkers by Paul Harding

Posted October 27, 2010 by Whitney in Review / 7 Comments

Tinkers by Paul HardingTinkers
by Paul Harding
Published by Bellevue Literary Press
Publication Date January 1st 2009
Source: Bought
Genres: General Fiction
Goodreads

An old man lies dying. Propped up in his living room and surrounded by his children and grandchildren, George Washington Crosby drifts in and out of consciousness, back to the wonder and pain of his impoverished childhood in Maine. As the clock repairer’s time winds down, his memories intertwine with those of his father, an epileptic, itinerant peddler and his grandfather, a Methodist preacher beset by madness.
At once heartbreaking and life affirming, Tinkers is an elegiac meditation on love, loss, illness, faith, and the fierce beauty of nature.


A tinker is a mender of pots, kettles, pans, etc. Therefore, Tinkers is a very fitting title for this Pulitzer Prize Winning novel as every character is somehow wounded with their past  and in some respects is far beyond mending.

George Washington Crosby, a lover of the workings of clocks lies dying and reflects upon his life. George had a very different childhood, his father was a traveling salesman and epileptic.  Every evening the family would wait for Howard to return before starting dinner until one night he didn’t come home.

Howard and his wife, Kathleen find ways to hide his epilepsy from their children, the blood from severe convulsions, sudden tiredness or a dazed look with simple white lies.  That is until they witness a grand mal  seizure that questions the safety of the family.

   “There was the ring of pots and buckets.  There was also a ring in Howard Crosby’s ears, a ring that began at a distance and came closer, until it sat in his ears, then burrowed into them.  His head thrummed as if it were a clapper in a bell. Cold hopped onto the tips of his toes and rode on the ripples of the ringing throughout his body until his teeth chattered and his knees faltered and he had to hug himself to keep from unraveling.  This was his aura, a cold halo of chemical electricity that encircled him immediately before he was struck by a full seizure.”

 

    “What is it like to be full of lightning?  What is it like to be split open from the inside by Lightning?    Howard use to imagine that it was like the rupture of a fit.  Although he never remembered them, he had the sense that, although there was cold before the chills after, during his seizures his blood boiled and his brain nearly fried in its skull pan.  It was as if there were a secret door that opened on its own to an electric storm spinning somewhere out on the fringes of the solar system.”

I am epileptic myself and grew an immediate liking towards Tinkers, not necessarily because I could relate  but because Paul Harding did what I felt to be an accurate portrayal of  the disorder in both descriptions and a sense of how it was viewed in the 1920s. His writing is so elegant and puts the experience of an epileptic convulsion into delicate dialect, with a plethora of excruciating detail.   As for the view of the 1920s I will only touch on briefly, so as not to give too much away but is exceedingly accurate and pulled at my heartstrings under the realization that the actions were true and took place under a century ago.

Even though I am focusing on the neurological side of this novel there is much more to it.  Tinkers also possess an understanding of forgiveness, acceptance and fulfillment in one’s life and circumstances.  For being such a petite novel,  Tinkers is a very powerful read.

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7 responses to “Tinkers by Paul Harding

  1. My book club toyed with reading this one but as we have a member who is battling Stage 4 breast cancer, we didn't feel like we wanted to do a book about dying. But it does sound like it would have made a great selection.

  2. Kim

    Sounds like a very interesting book. My father developed epilepsy later as an adult, not sure why. Surprisingly I never saw him have a seizure. Even with medicine, however, stress seemed to aggravate his condition. True, back then people suffered in silence.

    I see you are reading "Sweetness". Hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

  3. Jinky– Thanks, isn't it an interesting read?

    Vaishnavi & Brenna– Tinkers is a great book. I think you'd both enjoy it.

    Lisa– The death wasn't sad at all, if anything George was at peace with his life. At times I found the novel to be almost uplifting.

    Kim– I sorry to hear your father developed epilepsy I hope he has it under control. My seizure activity also increased during stressful situations, nerves/anticipation can play a big part in triggering a seizure. You're right, the stigma and speaking out has increased dramatically since Howard's era.

    Felicia– It is encouraging that treatment or understand has advanced somewhat but still has a long way to go; both in neurological and other disorders.

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