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Bring Me a Unicorn: Diaries and Letters of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1922-1928 (1971)

door Anne Morrow Lindbergh

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Diaries and letters of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1922- 1928.
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Mostly really fine. Quite poetic, etc. Young sheltered educated girl falls for Lindbergh, a man of action ! Sometime a little long-winded. I love her writing. I'm going to read most of her memoirs now (several volumes to go)! Sad to think of the tragedy to come in the next one. ( )
  kslade | Dec 8, 2022 |
[b:Bring Me a Unicorn: Diaries and Letters of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1922-1928|307079|Bring Me a Unicorn Diaries and Letters of Anne Morrow Lindbergh, 1922-1928|Anne Morrow Lindbergh|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1173592189s/307079.jpg|298051] is a compilation of letters and diary entries written by Anne Morrow Lindbergh between 1921 and 1928, which encompasses the meeting of her future husband, Charles Lindbergh. She is a remarkably observant and eloquent writer, even in personal correspondence and musing meant only for herself at the time they were written. She has been a fascinating individual for me over the years--such a beautiful woman, so elegant and poised, and such a courageous soul in the way she handled the tragedy to come, which was all too personal and yet all too public. This book predates that time, and reveals how little prepared she must have been to have such a fate befall her.

She seemed to recognize how fragile life could be, however, writing in 1927:

A day at Helen’s: a big, summery, chintzy house, empty and still and cool. And Helen playing Brahms and Cesar Franck. A still, perfect moment, framed neither by time nor by space but high apart, above these. Still, caught--the drop of water from the eaves, swelling, about to fall, but now whole, crystalline, perfect. These moments are so rare, so few, for anyone--those moments of perfection.

What a lovely diary entry this is! I probably would have written “had a nice with Helen.” I’m glad she had more imagination than I.

Her first encounter with Lindbergh is so special an entry, since it is not a speculation of what she thought, but her exact thoughts put to paper:

Colonel Lindbergh was there--a very nice boy, very nice, but we hardly took it in, or at least were a little annoyed--all this public-hero stuff breaking into our family party. What did I expect? A regular newspaper hero, the baseball-player type--a nice man, perhaps, but not at all “intellectual” and not of my world at all, so I wouldn’t be interested. I certainly was not going to worship “Lindy” (that odious name, anyway).

Ha! Not the most auspicious of first impressions.

Quite a bit of her pennings are about various encounters with him, the development of their friendship, and her worries that Lindbergh might be interested in her older sister, Elizabeth, or just being nice to her because he felt a duty toward her father, who was an Ambassador to Mexico. Some of her thoughts are so sweet, and so reminiscent of first loves we might all have had, that I could not but smile.

The feeling of exultant joy that there is anyone like that in the world. I shall never see him again, and he did not notice me, or would ever, but there is such a person alive, there is such a life, and I am here on this earth, in this age, to know it!

Of course, he did notice her and they embarked on what might have been a fairytale, but then life never is a fairytale, is it?

I was particularly struck by a portion of her diary and letters that dealt with the suicide death of a close friend at college.

If only I had talked to her after vacation--if only I had gone up to her room--if I could have just caught her in that gust of despair that must have come over her suddenly.

I wondered if this dealing with the loss, the guilt, the “what ifs” that accompany any premature death, might not have helped her when her own terrible tragedy came. She expresses so much of compassion and faith and composure, and yet she asks all those questions that each of us would and do.

Is there anything beautiful, is there anything good, anything lovely in this world, if such things can happen?

And as if an omen to her, the foreshadowing of things to come:

A nightmare of reporters, papers, reports, clues, detectives, questioning.

I could not help wishing I could see her mother’s replies to these heartfelt, questing letters, in which she is reaching out for both comfort and to make some sense of things. What did her mother say? And, how might that have helped her forge the inner strength she was to need so sorely later in life?

I very much enjoyed reading about this remarkable woman. I often think the women behind the famous men are more intriguing than the men themselves. I fell in love with Anne Morrow Lindbergh when I read, A Gift From the Sea, and this collection of her letters reinforced that feeling that she was someone quite special. I shall continue to pry into her life. I have a biography sitting on my physical bookshelf and I understand that there are two other volumes of her letters and diaries.

On an aside note, I cannot help lamenting that we have lost the art of letter writing. I details the thoughts and feelings of a person so much more than any of our more modern technology does. Who writes passages in an email. Where will the blogs be in one hundred years? And, how genuine are they anyway, when they are written for mass consumption. These letters are so personal and heartfelt--meant only for the eyes of the friend or relative to whom they are written; the diary so unassuming and honest, an attempt to record feelings and sort out the soul. I am happy that they have survived for all of us to see, but I am equally happy that they were never meant to be seen at all.
( )
  mattorsara | Aug 11, 2022 |
The first volume of Lindbergh’s diaries and letters, in which she meets her future husband.
Anne Morrow Lindbergh, born Anne Spencer Morrow (June 22, 1906 – February 7, 2001) was a pioneering American aviator, author, and the spouse of fellow aviator Charles Lindbergh. She resided in Connecticut.
  MasseyLibrary | Feb 28, 2018 |
Bring Me a Unicorn is the first in a series of autobiographies by Anne Morrow Lindbergh. It covers her life from 1922 to 1928. I have to say Anne's writing is delightful. I admire how brutally honest she is with herself. Her letters home are typical of any college kid, "sorry this is so rushed...I have been frightfully busy!" She is also typical in her growing interest in Colonel Lindbergh. She feels she is not in his league but mentions him more and more in her diary entries. You could see her attraction grow until she finally admits that she loves him. The photographs are great. They represent (visually) what was happening in Anne's world at that present time. ( )
  SeriousGrace | Jan 19, 2014 |
Covering the years from 1922 to her engagement to Charles Lindbergh in 1928, this collection of excerpts from her diary and letters gives us a picture of a young woman growing up in the powerful and privileged upper classes of American society. Her life after college appears to be a series of dinners, receptions and parties all to relieve boredom. Names are dropped such as Vanderbilt, Lamont, Morgan on many pages. Her father was the ambassador to Mexico thus we are exposed to the privileged life she led there.
A good snap shot of life at the top of American society in the 1920's as well as a limited view of Lindbergh, the aviator from a more personal perspective. ( )
  lamour | Aug 3, 2013 |
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