The Growing Seasons
An American Boyhood Before the War
by Samuel Hynes
List Price: $14.00
Pages: 304
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0142003964
Publisher: Penguin

Samuel Hynes is Woodrow Wilson Professor of Literature Emeritus at Princeton University and the author of several major works of literary criticism, including The Auden Generation, Edwardian Occasions, and The Edwardian Turn of Mind. Hynes's wartime experiences as a Marine Corps pilot were the basis for his highly praised memoir, Flights of Passage. The Soldiers' Tale, his book about soldiers' narratives of the two world wars and Vietnam, won a Robert F. Kennedy Award. A fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, he lives in Princeton, New Jersey.
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Q: One of the more moving sections of The Growing Seasons occurs when you accompany your father to the home where he and your mother were married. Though your father had no strong ties to a particular place, he wanted to visit where he spent part of his childhood. How often do you return to Minneapolis? Are the houses where you grew up still standing?
SH: Between the time of my graduation from the University of Minnesota in 1947 and the publication of The Growing Seasons, I rarely visited Minneapolisno more than half a dozen times. Yet I continue to think of myself (with a certain pride) as a Midwesterner, and Minneapolis remains my home townmore familiar and more comfortable to me than any other place I've lived.
Q: News of the war moved very slowly compared to today's standards. You left Minneapolis for Seattle with very few signs of the war around you. Upon your return, Minneapolis was preparing for its own form of battle. Would you have been more or less eager to enlist in the Marines if you'd had the whole story up front?
SH: If you mean, would I have enlisted if I foresaw what my war would be like, yes, I'm sure I would have. I had what some people call "a good war"that is, an interesting one among young men I liked. I loved flying, and still do. If you mean, if I understood the huge human cost of the warthe 60,000,000 dead (mostly civilians)I might, perhaps, have paused. But in spite of the dying it still seems to me to have been a just and necessary war.
Q: In recalling various teachers by whom you were taught, you prefer certain styles and, of course, certain teachers. How did those teachers affect your own teaching?
SH: I don't think my teaching was affected by any of my high school
teacherscertainly none of them was a model for me. But at the University of Minnesota I was taught by a great writer who was also an exemplary teacher and a good manRobert Penn Warren. I'd like to think I learned some of his virtues.
Q: This is a very personal and unsentimental memoir. Publishing such a book often brings people out of the woodwork to concur with or contest how events are portrayed. Has anyone approached you since publication to refute your claims? Are there any relationships you've reestablished after publishing this book?
SH: My reconnection with friends of my youth began while I was researching the book, and went back for my fiftieth high school reunion. I found that friends whom I hadn't seen for forty or fifty years were still my friends, and the old conversations were simply taken up again. It was a moving experience. So was seeing all those old faces, with the young faces looking out of them. That's when I knew I'd have to write the book.
Q: Your first memoir, Flights of Passage takes up where The Growing Seasons leaves off. How did writing the two books differ? Which was more difficult emotionally? Logistically?
SH: Flights was an easier book to write because the war provided an historical armature that gave the book shape, and because it provided me with stories that were more dramatic, and more significant, than an ordinary young man's life could provide. Growing Seasons was more difficult, partly, I think, because I'd written Flights, and knew more about the problems of memoir-writing, which is more like writing a novel than it is like writing the literary history I'd written before. Emotionally, both books stirred up memories, and both forced me to know myself differently, and more fully, I think. As for logistics, Flights presented no problems: I had my logbooks, which record my flying day-by-day, with armaments, targets, all that. The Growing Seasons required a good deal of research into Minneapolis police files, newspapers, and other people's memorieswhich then had to be written as a boy's experiences.
Q: How did this memoir come about? When writing it, did you start with memories and fill in the facts? Or were factsfrom newspaper stories to old yearbooksthe framework of the narrative?
SH: See above. I began filling notebooks with stories and phrases about my young days even before I published Flights, so I suppose I had the intention to write Growing Seasons for some ten or twelve years before I actually began to block it out and write it. The framework of the narrative grew as I wrote, but began as roughly chronological stages of my growing. I intended that both the space of the book and the vocabulary should expand as I grew; but I don't know if any readers have noticed that.
Q: With few exceptions, most of your friends growing up were boys. Today, the gender lines within friend groups are often blurred. Do you think the accident involving Rosemary Murphy might have been prevented if boys and girls had interacted more as friends? Do you think the accident affected the way you viewed and treated women as time moved on?
SH: I learned from Rosemary Murphy's accident what pain and suffering look like. And perhaps the lesson that dangerous stunts may have consequences (though I'm afraid I never really learned patience, or prudence, or cautionas the reader of Flights will see.) The lesson of how a man should treat a woman is one I've spent my whole life learning, and am still not all the way to the complete answer.
Q: What are you working on now?
SH: I've just begun writing a book about the young Americans who flew on the Western Front in the First World War. It's not a military history, more an interweaving of personal narratives of many of those pilots, some of them famous, more of them unknown and unimportant in the war story, but interesting, touching, sad in their own (often short) lives. I want to capture how they lived, how they flew, how they dealt with fear, how they killed, how they died. Paris and London, wine and women will be there, too. I'm interesting in the ways in which their lives were like my own in the next war, and the ways they were different. But it's early days, and the book will take on its own identity as we proceed together.
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Excerpted from The Growing Seasons © Copyright 2012 by Samuel Hynes. Reprinted with permission by Penguin. All rights reserved.
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