Mona Simpsons
ANYWHERE BUT HERE
Mona Simpson is both a novelist and a poet, and her talents are prodigious.
Le Anne Schreiber, The New York Times Book Review
Mona Simpson has a remarkable gift for transforming the homely cadences of plain American speech into something like poetry a stunning debut.
John Ashbery
A raw, amazing, heart-breaking portrayal of a sort that hasnt turned up in anything else Ive read.
Alice Munro
An amazing novel. Mona Simpson joins those female literary starsColette, Willa Catherwhose voices are uniquely recognizable, always their own.
Gail Lumet Buckley, Vogue
Simpson has already earned a place beside domestic pioneers like Anne Tyler and Alice Munro. She has not only shaken the family tree, she has plucked it from its soil to expose its tangled system of roots.
Sven Birkerts, Chicago Tribune
Anywhere But Here is a family affair made real, a journey into the tortured heart of the American Dream. Simpsons novel is an evocative portrait of a mother who is the lonely, hapless monster in all of us, mistaking fame for success, bondage for love, and the daughter who rejects her, becomes her, loves her, survives her.
Jayne Anne Phillips
It has all the bite and poignance of a life unfolding a moving, extraordinary achievement.
Gail Caldwell, Boston Globe
There have been many novels about mothers and daughters but Simpson has found a very special, achingly real, yet often funny way of portraying such a relationship that speaks directly to our times. We are in the presence of a major new literary talent.
Cleveland Plain Dealer
A brilliant novel Anywhere But Here is a book about two women, but Simpson makes them seem like the world.
Laurie Stone, Village Voice
The voices in Anywhere But Here have beauty, vitality, and sadness. They tell of arrivals and departures in reminding, confiding tones that Mona Simpson owns entirely. This book is necessary.
Mary Robison
Crafted with the assurance and virtuosity of a seasoned storyteller.
Wall Street Journal
A rich, deeply moving novel.
People
Simpsons prose is at once effortlessly casual in tone and also an instrument of genuine subtlety. Her novel takes your breath away.
Los Angeles Herald Examiner
Books by Mona Simpson
Anywhere But Here
The Lost Father
Vintage Contemporaries Edition, January 1992
Copyright 1986 by Mona Simpson
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published, in hardcover, by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., in 1986.
Some stories in this work were originally published in the following publications: North American Review and The Paris Review. What My Mother Knew was originally published in Mademoiselle. Approximations and Lonnie Tishman were originally published in Ploughshares.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Simpson, Mona.
Anywhere but here.
(Vintage contemporaries)
I. Title.
PS3569.I5117A8 1988 813. 54 91-50230
eISBN: 978-0-307-76536-9
The author wishes to thank the Corporation of Yaddo, the MacDowell Colony, VCCA, the Transatlantic Henfield Foundation, The Beards Fund, the Kellogg Foundation, and The Paris Review for their support during the writing of this book. Also, the author would like to thank Allan Gurganus, Elizabeth Hardwick, Robert Asahina, Robert Cohen, Lionel Shriver, and George Plimpton for multiple and generous readings.
v3.1
For Joanne,
our mother,
and
my brother Steve
CONTENTS
There are three wants which can never be satisfied; that of the rich wanting more, that of the sick, wanting something different, and that of the traveler, who says, anywhere but here.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
ANN
1
ANYWHERE
W e fought. When my mother and I crossed state lines in the stolen car, Id sit against the window and wouldnt talk. I wouldnt even look at her. The fights came when I thought she broke a promise. She said thered be an Indian reservation. She said that wed see buffalo in Texas. My mother said a lot of things. We were driving from Bay City, Wisconsin, to California, so I could be a child star while I was still a child.
Talk to me, my mother would say. If youre upset, tell me.
But I wouldnt. I knew how to make her suffer. I was mad. I was mad about a lot of things. Places she said would be there, werent. We were running away from family. Wed left home.
Then my mother would pull to the side of the road and reach over and open my door.
Get out, then, shed say, pushing me.
I got out. It was always a shock the first minute because nothing outside was bad. The fields were bright. It never happened on a bad day. The western sky went on forever, there were a few clouds. A warm breeze came up and tangled around my legs. The road was dull as a nickel. I stood there at first amazed that there was nothing horrible in the landscape.
But then the wheels of the familiar white Continental turned, a spit of gravel hit my shoes and my mothers car drove away. When it was nothing but a dot in the distance, I started to cry.
I lost time then; I dont know if it was minutes or if it was more. There was nothing to think because there was nothing to do. First, I saw small things. The blades of grass. Their rough side, their smooth, waxy side. Brown grasshoppers. A dazzle of California poppies.
Id look at everything around me. In yellow fields, the tops of weeds bent under visible waves of wind. There was a high steady note of insects screaking. A rich odor of hay mixed with the heady smell of gasoline. Two or three times, a car rumbled by, shaking the ground. Dry weeds by the side of the road seemed almost transparent in the even sun.
I tried hard but I couldnt learn anything. The scenery all went strange, like a picture on a high billboard. The fields, the clouds, the sky; none of it helped because it had nothing to do with me.
My mother must have watched in her rearview mirror. My arms crossed over my chest, I would have looked smaller and more solid in the distance. That was what she couldnt stand, my stubbornness. Shed had a stubborn husband. She wasnt going to have a stubborn child. But when she couldnt see me anymore, she gave up and turned around and shed gasp with relief when I was in front of her again, standing open-handed by the side of the road, nothing more than a child, her child.
And by the time I saw her car coming back, Id be covered with a net of tears, my nose running. I stood there with my hands hanging at my sides, not even trying to wipe my face.