Vista Del Mar

A Memoir of the Ordinary

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Adoption, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Vista Del Mar by Neal Snidow, Counterpoint
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Neal Snidow ISBN: 9781619028067
Publisher: Counterpoint Publication: June 1, 2016
Imprint: Counterpoint Language: English
Author: Neal Snidow
ISBN: 9781619028067
Publisher: Counterpoint
Publication: June 1, 2016
Imprint: Counterpoint
Language: English

This remarkable book joins the company of “self-work,” deep acts of memory that serve to illuminate the present by shining the clear light of careful regard on the past. The book finds company in the work of D J Waldie’s Holy Land, Didion’s Slouching Towards Bethlehem, and the profound My Struggle by Karl Ove Knausgaard.

In 1996 Neal Snidow found himself at a personal impasse as he and his wife struggled in vain to have a child. Locked in sadness at their predicament, in mid-career as a college teacher and unpublished writer, and at the first daunting steps of open adoption, as a kind of solace Neal began taking black and white photos of his old neighborhood in southern California. The film was slow, the camera on a tripod, the process awkward, and the goal no more than Garry Winogrand’s famous dictum that he made pictures “to find out what something will look like photographed.”

But as this process unfolded and the images began to accumulate, slowly but surely the pictures unlocked the past, and he began to delve into family history, opening out the secret and the unspoken and evoking the lost pleasures and losses of the beach town where he had grown up. The chapters that followed, like the photos that now accompanied them, were quietly observant of an ordinary surface around which gathered an aura of struggle, gaiety and loss. He titled the book Vista Del Mar, for the street that ran past his old apartment to the edge of the Pacific, and gave it the subtitle a memoir of the ordinary in testimony to the everydayness of the experiences he explored. The chapters move back and forth in time and place, to Virginia, to a homestead in Wyoming, to depression-era Nebraska, to the Second World War. Aunts, uncles, ancestors, beach denizens, characters of film noir, and finally a miraculous new baby, all populate the pages which despite the struggles they relate conclude on a major chord of reconciliation and hope.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This remarkable book joins the company of “self-work,” deep acts of memory that serve to illuminate the present by shining the clear light of careful regard on the past. The book finds company in the work of D J Waldie’s Holy Land, Didion’s Slouching Towards Bethlehem, and the profound My Struggle by Karl Ove Knausgaard.

In 1996 Neal Snidow found himself at a personal impasse as he and his wife struggled in vain to have a child. Locked in sadness at their predicament, in mid-career as a college teacher and unpublished writer, and at the first daunting steps of open adoption, as a kind of solace Neal began taking black and white photos of his old neighborhood in southern California. The film was slow, the camera on a tripod, the process awkward, and the goal no more than Garry Winogrand’s famous dictum that he made pictures “to find out what something will look like photographed.”

But as this process unfolded and the images began to accumulate, slowly but surely the pictures unlocked the past, and he began to delve into family history, opening out the secret and the unspoken and evoking the lost pleasures and losses of the beach town where he had grown up. The chapters that followed, like the photos that now accompanied them, were quietly observant of an ordinary surface around which gathered an aura of struggle, gaiety and loss. He titled the book Vista Del Mar, for the street that ran past his old apartment to the edge of the Pacific, and gave it the subtitle a memoir of the ordinary in testimony to the everydayness of the experiences he explored. The chapters move back and forth in time and place, to Virginia, to a homestead in Wyoming, to depression-era Nebraska, to the Second World War. Aunts, uncles, ancestors, beach denizens, characters of film noir, and finally a miraculous new baby, all populate the pages which despite the struggles they relate conclude on a major chord of reconciliation and hope.

More books from Counterpoint

Cover of the book True Tales of Lust & Love by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The Dogs are Eating Them Now by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book Café Neandertal by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book Killing King by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The Faith to Doubt by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The Quiet Streets of Winslow by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The Education of a Young Poet by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book Old In Art School by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The Little Brother by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The Love Lives of the Artists by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book Ghosts of Afghanistan by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The People's Advocate by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book The Age of Persuasion by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book Goddess of Love Incarnate by Neal Snidow
Cover of the book Year of the Comets by Neal Snidow
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy