There was something poignant about reading Amy Krouse Rosenthal’s memoir, Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life. I checked it out of the library when I read her piece in The New York Times, “You May Want to Marry My Husband,”http://nyti.ms/2mFk0fE. Rosenthal wrote the essay when she knew she was dying of ovarian cancer. Ten days after the piece appeared, she died.

Because Rosenthal’s memoir was published in 2004, before she started publishing her children’s books, it doesn’t discuss them. Instead, it’s very honest about her family, her feelings, her friendships, but it doesn’t sugarcoat her faults. It’s a clever format that I haven’t seen for a memoir. She begins with an almanac that puts her life and book in context, what was popular when she wrote it, everything from news stories to children’s names. She follows that with writings that led to the memoir. Then, she dives into an alphabetic discussion of her life.

Rosenthal read the entry “Encyclopedia” in an encyclopedia. One of the pertinent quotes said, “constructed like an onion, the different layers enclosing the heart”. Rosenthal took that to heart, revealing thoughts and emotions. Dreams, fears, her husband and how she met him. She talks about introducing one friend to another, and feeling left out. She talks about things she’s been into, such as coloring, and puts them in chronological order. Because the entries are in alphabetical order, random topics seem to come up. But, they all combine to give us a glimpse into Rosenthal’s life.

At times, Amy Krouse Rosenthal’s thoughts are nothing out of the ordinary. And, then there are comments that touch the heart. Under “Rainbows” she says there should be some sort of ritual associated with rainbows. “Or see a rainbow, put a dollar in a jar; then when you leave home at eighteen, your mother sends you off with your rainbow money.” Just think about that – “your rainbow money”. I want rainbow money in my life.

Why is Rosenthal’s memoir heartbreaking while other biographies are not? Those people lived as well. Perhaps it’s because her death is so fresh. Perhaps it’s because of that essay about her husband, and the love she knew she was leaving behind. Knowing what we know now, that Rosenthal died on March 13 at fifty-one, the final entry is heart-breaking. It’s “You”. She says perhaps you think I don’t matter. “But I was here. And I did things.” The final line of that entry is, “I was here, you see. I was.” Yes, Amy Krouse Rosenthal was.

Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life by Amy Krouse Rosenthal. Crown Publishers. 2004. 220p.

*****
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