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Matthew Logelin - Two Kisses for Maddy: A Memoir of Loss & Love

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Copyright 2011 by Matt Logelin Lyrics in chapter 7 from Fatalist Palmistry are - photo 1

Copyright 2011 by Matt Logelin

Lyrics in chapter 7 from Fatalist Palmistry are copyright WHY?/Yoni Wolf. Lyrics in chapter 10 from I Remember Me are copyright David Berman. Lyrics in chapter 16 from Last Tide are copyright Mark Kozelek.

All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Grand Central Publishing
Hachette Book Group
237 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10017

www.HachetteBookGroup.com
www.twitter.com/grandcentralpub

First eBook Edition: April 2011

Grand Central Publishing is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
The Grand Central Publishing name and logo is a trademark of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

ISBN: 978-1-609-41878-6

for madeline.

I am not a writer.

At least, I didnt think I was. But in your hands you hold a book that I wrote.

I wish I hadnt had a reason to write this thing. On the morning of March 25, 2008, my life was the best I ever imagined it could be; an instant later, everything would change. More on that soon, but first I want to share a couple of stories.

Ive always been of the mind that great art can only come from a place of immense pain (mostly because I hate happy music), and that the resulting work is beautiful because it is motivated by the purest and most authentic of emotions: sadness. Ive never believed so strongly in this axiom as I did in the two moments Im about to describe

September 2000. I was living in Chicago, working my way through the first year of graduate school. While reading Marx, Weber, and Durkheim for my sociological theory class, I discovered a song that, more than any other had so far, altered my perspective: Come Pick Me Up by Ryan Adams. It was the kind of song I wished I could writeit was sad, it was funny, and it included the word fuck. But I loved it mostly because it was sad. The words made me feel something Id never felt before: hearing the swelling pain of that song made me yearn for the kind of heartache that would allow me to create somethinganythingso amazing.

After listening exclusively to this song for a couple of days, I called my girlfriend to tell her about it. I think I could probably write a song like this, but youve been way too good to me. Liz and I had been dating for just over four years at that point, and we had what I considered a nearly perfect relationship. She had never caused me the kind of agony that would allow me to tap into whatever creative side may have been hiding deep within me. And as much as I wanted to write The Next Great Depressing Song, I was glad that I hadnt had the abilityor the needto do so.

May 2006. I was living in India for a work assignment, and half way through my stay, Liz came to visit. I took a few weeks off so we could travel the country and see things we never imagined wed have a chance to see. I had a long list of places for us to visit, but Liz insisted we get to one site in particular: the Taj Mahal. Standing in front of one of the Seven Wonders of the World, we listened to our guide tell us the story of how it came to be. He explained that the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan had ordered its construction to fulfill a promise to his wife. Legend has it that on her deathbedshortly after giving birth to their childshe asked her husband to build her a monument that would forever be known as the most beautiful in the world.

I rolled my eyes, wondering if the story was even true or if it was something the guides fabricated to make female tourists swoon, but Liz was feeling every word of it. She stared in awe at the mausoleum, her eyes welling with tears and her lips agape. Her sweaty hand squeezed mine tighter and tighter as our guide continued the story. When he finally finished, Liz turned to me and said, You would never do something like this for me.

She was rightI cant build anything. I can barely hang a picture on the wall. But I never imagined a need to do such a thing.

As I began putting this book together, these two stories stuck in my head, and they swirled around and intertwined and coalesced while I wrote it and revised it. They were a huge spark. I hadnt forgotten about that song, and I hadnt forgotten about that trip, but before Liz died, I had forgotten exactly what theyd meant to me.

I know that this book is no Come Pick Me Up and its most certainly no Taj Mahal, but it is my attempt to turn my sadness into something beautiful. It is mine. Mine for Liz. And no matter what, I know that she would be proud of me.

And I guess you could say that I am a writer now. But I really wish I wasnt.

it seemed obvious

(though probably only to us),

that wed

spend the rest of

our lives

together.

I met my future wife, the future mother of my child, at a gas station. It was a Tuesday in late January 1996, and we were both eighteen years old. Though we lived fewer than two miles apart, this was only the second time we had met, as we went to different high schools and ran with different crowds. But that night, when she saw me just a few feet away, Liz Goodman waved and said, Are you Matt Long-lin? She mispronounced my name, but it was close enough. An awkward and shy teenager lacking a lot of self-confidence, I was shocked when this beautiful blonde girl started talking to me. It was weird at firstgirls like Liz didnt talk to boys like me, so I figured she thought I worked at the gas station and she needed some help filling her tank. I responded with a confused look and sheepish Yeah. Thats me, and continued filling my own tank. I was instantly captivated by Lizs gregariousness, her moxie, and, of course, her beauty. She stood at exactly four feet eleven inches tall, but carried herself like she was six feet one. Years later, she would tell me that I had impressed her by holding the door open for her when we walked into the little store to pay. I would counter with my surprise that an act as small as that could convince her to see past my unquestionably awkward looks.

We went on our first date that Friday, January 26. Three days later, standing in her parents driveway, Liz let the L word slip from her lips. I responded with a smile, a kiss, and an I love you, too, and we were both positive that this was it: wed both found the person of our dreams. We were just a few months away from heading off to college in different states (I was staying put at St. Johns in Minnesota, while Liz was off to Scripps in California), so we became almost inseparable, wanting to make the most of the short time we had left together in the same town.

During my spring break trip to Mexico, I purchased calling cards with money that ordinarily might have been used on beer and admission to clubs, and spent almost the entire trip talking to Liz from pay phones while my friends got drunk and made out with random girls. Im pretty sure I was the only eighteen-year-old male in Mazatln doing this on his spring break. A month after my return from the trip, Liz was off to Spain, spending three weeks living with a host family as part of a program designed to get high school seniors out of their comfort zones and into a new environment. While there, she used her dads calling card to talk to me multiple times each day, running up a phone bill so enormous and so shocking that to this day her dad still remembers the amount, down to the penny. As fall approached and we prepared to head off to college, we promised each other that the distance would not come between us. Thanks to these short practice runs, we were confident that wed be one of those rare high school couples that would make it all the way through our college years with our relationshipand sanityintact.

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