Very Good Lives by J.K. Rowling: A Review

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“Had I really succeeded at anything else, I might never have found the determination to succeed in the one arena where I believed I truly belonged.” – Very Good Lives, J.K. Rowling

As a high school teacher, I have sat through a lot of graduation ceremonies. A lot. Graduations, like any ceremony, tend to follow fairly prescribed routines and it is really only when someone gets up to speak – a valedictorian, a visiting dignitary – that there is a chance to make a unique mark among all the pomp and circumstance. So maybe it was as a result of having sat through all these occasions that I was interested reading what J.K. Rowling had to say when she was asked to deliver the commencement address at Harvard University.

Rowling’s rags-to-riches story is well known, so when I saw her two themes were the benefits of failure and the importance of imagination, I thought she would be speaking about her experiences writing Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone as an impoverished single mom.

I’ll admit I was being a bit cheeky in the September Line Up about my decision to purchase this book (which can effectively be read in less than twenty minutes) but in truth, proceeds from the purchase of the book go to Lumos, a charity founded by Rowling to help disadvantaged children and to provide financial aid for students attending university. The speech is complimented by simple but appealing graphics and I couldn’t help but think as I read it about what a beautiful gift it would make, maybe for someone starting a new chapter of his or her own life (please, no more Oh, The Places You’ll Go!) or someone who might need to see a failure as a chance to start fresh, or imagination as a means of changing the world around them.

 

“As is a tale, so is life: not how long it is, but how good it is, is what matters.” – Seneca

Rowling’s discussion of failure does not include how many publishers turned down her manuscript before she finally landed a book deal; instead, she focuses on the failures in her own life as being opportunities. After all, once you hit rock bottom (and Rowling’s experiences included a failed marriage, trying to raise her child on her own and having no money to speak of) there is nowhere to go but up. She does not romanticize the difficult parts of her life and she reminds readers that while the media likes to portray her life as having a fairy-tale ending, there was no way she could have known at the time that there was any light at the end of the tunnel. Instead she focuses on the benefits of failure: when you have tried and failed again and again, failure helps you to see yourself and what you value more clearly. As she herself states, if she had not failed as so many other things, she may never have found the courage to do what she really wanted to – write.

Her discussion of imagination is interesting too in that it is tied to her real-life experiences. As a young woman, Rowling worked in the UK for Amnesty International. Her experiences there both exposed her to the horrors people around the world were facing (many such people went through her office on a regular basis) and to the incredible kindness and reliance people can embody despite living through trauma. Rowling argues that it is through imagination that we can put ourselves into another person’s shoes and that once done, it is impossible to be blind and deaf to the suffering of others. Imagination is not just for the conjuring of fictional worlds but also allows us to move beyond our own life experiences to connect with the experiences those outside our reach. She also underscores that when we live a life of privilege – as many in her Harvard audience that day did – it is even more important to use imagination as a tool for empathy because otherwise privilege can act to insulate one from others’ realities. In Rowling’s mind, imagination is the tool that spurs us to act, to help, and to better understand.

I’m not going to say that this should be on the top of your to read pile, but I do think the speech reveals some important insights about the roles of failure and imagination and opportunities to consider them in new ways.

September Line Up

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First of all, I want to say thank you everyone who took the time to send me encouragement on my first blog post. Putting my little blog into the big wide world is slightly scary so I really appreciated the support and I really hope you will continue to come visit me here so we can talk books.

I wanted to give you an idea of the books I’ll be reviewing in September, in case you want to read along – maybe some of them are already lurking in your TRP … time to dust them off! Remember the theme for the month is to try something new or look at something old in a new way so with that in mind, here’s the line up:

September 1: Better than Before  by Gretchen Rubin. As I mentioned in my first post, this is a non-fiction book that focuses on how to make and break habits. Seems like a good place to start at the beginning of a new school year.

September 8: Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman. I have to admit, I am a novel snob. They are my first and deepest love so they will pop up regularly on the blog. This novel looks at something old (a love story) in a new way – the protagonist and her love interest are well, weird (the book jacket describes Eleanor as having, “deadpan weirdness and unconscious wit” and her love interest as, “the bumbling and deeply unhygienic IT guy from her office”). So, Romeo and Juliet, they ain’t.

September 15: Very Good Lives: the Fringe Benefits of Failure and the Importance of Imagination by J.K. Rowling. This is actually a published version of a speech Rowling gave at Harvard University. I’m sure you can find it online but I bought the book because, really, she needs the money, poor girl. I’m excited to read it because I think that failure gets a bad rap a lot of the time and as a teacher and a mom, I know that sometimes the most valuable learning experiences we have are from when we fail. Ahem, like when my students or kids fail, we don’t need to get into #momfails here.

September 22: Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Adichie is a Nigerian-born author and I have read her novel,  Half a Yellow Sun and her short story collection, The Thing Around Your Neck (despite the aforementioned novel snobbery). I really like the way her work examines both Nigerian and Western experiences because it helps you to see things from new perspectives so I am looking forward to reading this one.

September 29: Drunk Tank Pink by Adam Alter. This book looks at how the subconscious shapes our thoughts, feelings and behaviour and besides that awesome title, I decided to add another non-fiction book to this month because my husband read it and talked about it so much that I decided to read it too. It’s also recommended by Malcolm Gladwell in case you don’t want to take my husband’s word for it.

So that’s the line up, folks. There will also be a children’s or YA pick at some point during the month for a Throwback Thursday and I will put out one Bonus Book Blog to try to entice you into reading one of my favourites. Happy reading, everybody!