Perhaps one of the most compelling of individual dreams
is to have a place of one’s own. Whether
that be a study, studio, off-limits bedroom, basement hideaway or personal
garage, many of us yearn for a secluded place situated to our own personalities,
where our will was law.
Author Michael
Pollan (born 1955) found himself in much the same place shortly before the
birth of his first son, Isaac. A writer
and editor for Harper’s Magazine and
a columnist for House & Garden,
Pollan moved to a few acres in rural Connecticut in the late 1990s. But while there, he began to dream of a
little shack, a ‘writer’s hut’ where he could work, look at nature and collect
his thoughts.
This dream took Pollan on a personal odyssey. Though more at home with words and concepts
than tools and building materials, Pollan decided to build his own little
writer’s hut behind his home. He hired
an architect to design it up-to-code, but, other than that, he strove to build
it himself with just the help of a local handyman.
The project, which should’ve taken just two months, took
more than a year and taught Pollan a great deal about both the natural and
theoretical worlds. Though buildings
first exist as constructs and drawings on pieces of paper, they must be
translated into solid, three-dimensional entities. And, more importantly, the materials must
first be converted from raw materials – trees, stones, etc. – before they can
be turned into building components.
While building, Pollan developed a new understanding of
wood, of the complications that come with the execution of plans, and of landscape. He investigated the mysteries of architecture,
as well as such philosophies as feng shui
and postmodernism. He also had
something of an imaginary dialogue with Henry
David Thoreau (1817-1862) who faced many of the same challenges while
building his shack at Walden Pond, and much of Pollen’s book detailing his
experience, A Place of My Own: The Education
of an Amateur Builder, is a prolonged discussion with the now-dead
philosopher.
A Place of My Own benefits from Pollan’s jaunty writing
style, as well as from his self-deprecating honesty. He admits upfront that he is not handy, that
he has no grasp of math, and that the idea of building something is entirely
alien to his experience. However, he
also felt that dealing in a purely theoretical world of words and ideas kept
him separate from some vital part of the human experience. Moreover, he also believed that our
technological advances had somehow separated us from some component of our
basic humanity, and that building something that would last – like his writer’s
hut – was a way of reconnecting with that missing link.
Here is Pollan on why he did it: For if the wish for a room of my own answered to a need I felt for the
literal and psychic space, the wish to build it with my own hands, though
slower to surface, may have reflected some doubts I was having about the sort
of work I do. Work is how we situation
ourselves in the world, and like the work of many people nowadays, mine put me
in a relationship to the world that often seemed abstract, glancing,
secondhand. Or thirdhand, in my case,
for I spent much of my day working on other people’s words, rewriting,
revising, rewording. Oh, it was real
work (I guess), but it didn’t always feel that way, possibly because there were
whole parts of me it failed to address.
(Like my body, with the exception of the carpal tunnel in my
wrist.) Nor did what I do seem to add
much, if anything, to the stock of reality, and though this might be a dated or
romantic notion in an age of information, it seemed to me this was something
real work should do. Whenever I heard
myself described as an “information-services worker” or a “symbolic analyst,” I
wanted to reach for a hammer, or a hoe, and with it make something less virtual
than a sentence.
A Place of My Own is a fascinating meditation on our
relationship to man-made spaces, as well as how we incorporate ourselves into
nature. The main flaw of the book,
however, is that it seems as if Pollan has never had an unrecorded thought, and
many of his ruminations pad a fascinating story with irrelevancies. Think of A Place of My Own is much like the
world’s longest New Yorker article –
filled with great stuff, sometimes numbingly repetitious or padded, but
ultimately rewarding. Recommended for
anyone who is feeling penned in by our modern world.
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