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- BOOKS, Page 68Running Deep
-
-
- By R.Z. SHEPPARD
-
- MIDSTREAM
- by Le Anne Schreiber
- Viking; 309 pages; $18.95
-
-
- By the time she was 33, Le Anne Schreiber had a resume to
- light up the Zeitgeist. With a marriage behind her, a master's
- degree from Stanford and a graduate fellowship at Harvard, she
- came to New York City as a writer for TIME. Her coverage of the
- 1976 Olympics led to a job as editor in chief of Billie Jean
- King's short-lived magazine womenSports. Within eight months
- of joining the New York Times, Schreiber became the first woman
- to run its sports department.
-
- And the first woman to quit. "I rode a rocket of
- unprecedented opportunity," she writes. But two years of
- prodding a herd of jock journalists led to the discovery that
- "there was nothing I wanted to do less than spend 80 hours a
- week administering a staff of 59 men and one woman in producing
- three editions a day."
-
- Fair enough. Being a point person in the workplace
- revolution carries a high risk of getting shot. Schreiber
- retreated to a deputy editorship at the Times Sunday Book
- Review, a backwater, it turned out, that was not quite the
- backwater she had in mind. In 1985, single and approaching the
- middling age of 40, she left Manhattan for the eddying pace of
- a trout stream in upstate New York. The scene was set for a
- life of house renovation, fishing, reading and writing. Instead,
- Schreiber was jerked back to old realities by the news that
- her mother was dying of cancer.
-
- Writing in the journal form, Schreiber balances her new life
- against her mother's death. She achieves this satisfying parity
- with emotional integrity and literary tact that suggest a depth
- of experience the author only hints at. Wisely. The results are
- clear and lasting observations rather than self-justifying
- trendy confessions.
-
- Descriptions of trout fishing, house repair, medical
- treatment and mistreatment lead to deeper connections. The
- stream that rushes behind Schreiber's house and the life that
- dwindles from her mother's body contain mysteries that must be
- skillfully lured to the surface. Among the enigmas is the
- nature of mother-daughter relationships. The moving paradox
- here is that Schreiber is never more of a daughter than when
- she must mother her dying parent.
-
- Midstream may remind a few of Ludwig Lewisohn's Mid-Channel.
- Sixty years ago, this journalist also tired of Manhattan's
- temptations and asked, "How do you live from within outward?
- From what ultimate satisfactions do you derive your poise, your
- power, your courage in the face of this apparently empty
- universe, of age, of death?" Schreiber offers some honest
- answers.
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