http://www.amywelborn.com/reviews/lynch.html


What can one possibly learn about life from the dead?

A great deal, according to writer Thomas Lynch. It may even be, he reflects,
that death and how we approach it is profoundly expressive of our stance
towards life, whether we intend it to be so or not:

"…the meaning of life is connected, inextricably, to the meaning of death;
that mourning is a romance in reverse, and if you love, you grieve and there
are no exceptions….and if death is regarded as an embarrasment or an
inconvenience, if the dead are regarded as a nuisance from whom we seek a
hurried riddance, then life and the living are in for like treatment." (p.
25)

Thomas Lynch comes by his insights on such mortal matters honestly: besides
being the author of three books of poetry and an American Book Award
nominated book of essays, he’s also the funeral director at Lynch & Sons
Funeral Home in Milford, Michigan.

*The Undertaking: Life Studies from the Dismal Trade*, was published in 1998
to wide praise. In the essays, some of which previously appeared in *Harper’s,
The London Review of Books, The Paris Review, *and* The New Yorker*, Lynch’s
lifetime spent in the company of corpses and the grieving (his father was a
funeral director, as well) provides a telling framework for observations on
faith, family, sexuality, community and, of course death.

Undertaking and poetry might seem an odd combination to some, but the two
vocations have, in Lynch’s experience, profoundly nourished each other:

"Funeral directors have a variety of interests," Lynch pointed out in a
recent telephone interview, " mine are reading and writing. Reading is an
extension of writing, and vice versa. I’ve always written and published
poems, and there are few poets who don’t have a day job." Besides, he added,
"I like being a funeral director."

Lynch’s sense of the importance and meaning of undertaking led one reviewer
of *The Undertaking*, Susan Jacobi of *The New York Times*, to accuse him of
penning nothing less than an apologia for an irredeemably exploitive
profession. Lynch ackowledges the potential for abuse, but points out,

"Can funeral directors take advantage of people? Certainly, so can any
business. The difference is that I’m accountable by name, on the sign in
front of my business. If we do a good job, you can praise us by name, if we
don’t you can gossip aobut us. My sense of things is that fundamentally, I
have to treat people properly."

"I’m more interested in the meaning of funerals and the mourning that people
do. It’s not a retail experience. It’s an existential one."

In his essays, Lynch tells stories of his fellow townspeople – their lives
and deaths, their grieving. Embedded in his recounting of the preparation of
bodies and the placement of graves, is a clear sense, even though he never
specifically defines it as such, of this work as a ministry tending to the
deepest questions and most heart-rending wounds human beings endure.

He tells of a schoolgirl, abducted from the bus stop, raped,savagely beaten,
and stabbed. The embalmer could have done nothing but declare a closed
casket the only option. "The pay was the same," as Lynch writes. "Instead,
he started working. Eighteen hours later the girl’s mother, who had pleaded
to see her, saw her. She was dead, to be sure, and damaged; but her face was
hers again, not the madman’s version…Wesley Rice had not raised her from the
dead nor hidden the hard facts, but he had retrieved her death from the one
who had killed her." (84)

Considerations of such tragedy leads Lynch to reflections on faith and
spirituality throughout his essays, rooted in part in the Catholic faith in
which he was raised and which remains a basic reference point:

“I am Catholic in the way," he says, "that you can’t not be a Catholic once
you are. I describe myself as a devoutly lapsed Catholic because I have so
many questions, but the questions wouldn’t even form unless I’d been given
this language of Catholicism, which is an advantage."

Lynch’s faith was formed by his parents who, while both Catholic, approached
spiritual questions from different perspectives.

"My mother’s faith was certain, she knew who would be in heaven and who
wouldn’t." Lynch grew up in a home, like many Catholics, in which petty
complaints were put into perspective by the crucifix hanging in every room,
a reminder of "the bad day against all others were measured" (95) and one in
which "faith and grace made suffering a part of the way we make our journey
back to God."(97)

His father was not so sure. He witnessed enough senseless death and tragic
accidents to convince him that "God took some days off."

Lynch’s essays reflect both shades of fatih. He writes of how the
confrontation with death indeed moves us to ask the questions we must ask
and how "events unfold in ways that make us think of God. They achieve, in
their happening, a symmetry and order that would be frightening if assigned
to Chance." (61)

But he also must ask, along with his father, where God was the night a
family from his town was traveling through Kentucky on their way to the
purported apparition site in Conyers, Georgia. Some boys heaved a cemetery
stone they'd stolen from an overpass, sending it crashing into the family’s
van, killing their daughter. "If God’s will, shame on God is what I say. If
not, then shame on God. It sounds the same. I keep shaking a fist at the
Almight asking where were you on the morning of the thirteenth? The alibi
changes every day." (56)

Lynch reflects that , "Faith is not all certainty. Faith is doubt and
wonder. All is required is that I have exactly the same faith I read about
in Jesus’ life. When he got to Gethsemane, he had doubts and he had wonders,
too."

Thomas Lynch’s home of Milford, Michigan is located in Oakland County, which
has another famous resident: Jack Kervorkian, and in one of his essays,
Lynch confronts the issues of assisted suicide and abortion.

Lynch began his thoughts on the matter by saying simply, "Slopes are
slippery." His argument, which he says he purposefully renders without
reference to religion so non-religious people will listen, rests on a
critique of the hopelessness, defiance of nature and inevitable consequences
of purposeful killing. He asks, "Is it possible to assist the ones we love
with their dying instead of assisting with their killing?… Is there a way to
care for these needy people without declaring another open season, a general
Right to Die or Right to Choice or Right to Assisted Suicide?" The
fundamental problem, Lynch says, is that our culture as enshrined "choice,"
forgetting that the content of choices are what matter morally. And, he
adds, in his view, "The Church’s thinking on these issues about life is
pristine. They mess up so much when it comes to sexuality, but they’ve got
the mortality down."

There is more in *The Undertaking* – thoughts on marriage, parenthood,
Ireland and writing. There’s an absolutely riveting essay on, of all things,
a poem about an artichoke, the mysteries of art, and the even greater
mysteries and joys of life between men and women.

Thomas Lynch isn’t finished, of course. He has more work to do – more
funerals to direct, more grieving to comfort, and more writing. He is
currently at work on a second collection of essays, entitled *Bodies in
Motion and at Rest *, to be published in 2000.

Lynch began writing about the care of the dead in this way as a fulfillment
of a pledge to his father, who had asked, when his son first starting
finding success as a poet, "when I’d write a book about funerals." (xviii)
In doing so, this marvelous, insightful writer has offered readers , not
just a glimpse into a specific profession, but a lens through which we’re
invited to see the journey more clearly and to discover that there is no
reason to be put off by what seems at first to be the strange, perhaps even
frightening work of this poet-undertaker .

After all, the sense of the word "undertaking" reaches further than funerals
and caskets. It encompasses any struggle, and work, and perhaps even can be
stretched to include the ultimate undertaking – life itself. And so we
recognize an ennobling, deeply spiritual cast to the short, difficult and
joyous days of our own live as Thomas Lynch asks us, "Which undertaking is
it then that does not seek to make some sense of life and living, dying and
the dead?"(xix)
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