It’s evening in Jackson, Tennessee. The sky looks like a Monet sunset. I am at the fairgrounds. About to deliver my one-man show from the mainstage.
Tonight’s event benefits local libraries in Madison County.
I have met many librarians today. Small, white-haired ones. Tall, middle-aged ones. Elderly librarians who smell like bath powder and wear Reeboks. Most of them are sipping white wine and giggling a lot.
And I love these people. Because I am a product of libraries. More specifically, I am a product of librarians.
I was 11 when my father’s suicide happened. I dropped out of school the next week.
It was simple, really. One day, I just quit going to school. At first it was pretty cool. I thought I was getting away with something outlandish. And I was. I was getting away with the destruction of my own future.
It was one of the stupidest decisions I ever made. Even worse than the time I was dared to eat a lizard.
My family’s personal life was in shambles. My mother was a mess. Everything was
upside down in our world. I just quit. And nobody even noticed.
Those were different times. We were different people. But I never quit reading.
It was a summer day when I first walked into a tiny library to remedy my own mistake. I was a teenager. The library was an old converted one-story house. White clapboards. Shutters. Tin roof. Hanging ferns. The whole deal.
The woman behind the counter looked like Aunt Bea, only more so. She said, “Why aren’t you in school today?”
“I don’t go.”
She just looked at me from over her glasses. This painfully ridiculous boy before her.
“You don’t go?” she said.
“No, ma’am. I dropped out.”
She removed her glasses and looked at me. It was maybe the first time anyone her age had really looked at me. Not just glanced.
Looking back,…