Sunday, August 27, 2023

"The Book of Charlie," David Von Drehle - A Review

 A joyful read before summer ends…

 

Sydney M. Williams

 


The Book of Charlie, David Von Drehle

August 27, 2023

 

“Throughout his life, Charlie never imagined things to be any worse – or any better – than they really were,

for he had learned at an early age that life is never as sure as we might think, nor as hopeless as it might appear.”

                                                                                                                                The Book of Charlie, 2023

                                                                                                                                David Von Drehle (1961-)   

 

This is not about Charles I, II, or III. It is not about Charles Martel, or John Steinbeck’s Poodle. It is about an ordinary man and his extraordinary life. It is also a history of the changes that transformed people’s lives during the Twentieth Century, told through the life of Dr. Charles Herbert White. If you get an adrenalin rush when your plane goes ‘wheels up,’ if you thrill to a train whistle in the night, or if you the open road says to you, adventure!, you will love the story of this man on his way to 109. 

 

Von Drehle begins by noting that his children once asked him to write a book just for them. He was stymied, felt incapable. The world had advanced so much from when he grew up. What lessons could he impart? Then one summer morning, in 2007, he opened the door of the house he and his family had just moved into in Kansas City. Across the road was an elderly man washing a car, his girlfriend’s car, a plum-colored Chrysler PT Cruiser. Charlie was bare-chested, dressed in old swimming trunks. He was 102.

 

He was a remarkable man, Charlie: “He had decided many years earlier how he would face the world…He understood that, whether we sail to a new continent or simply travel from one day to the next, we are always headed into the unknown. Charlie had learned to treat the unknown as a friend…”

 

Born in Galesburg, Illinois, Charlie grew up in Kansas City at a time of disruptive innovation. Rodgers and Hammerstein’s 1943 song “Kansas City,” originally sung by Gene Nelson in Oklahoma, was about that change. The show was based on Oklahoma becoming a state in 1907, two years after Charlie’s birth. The lyrics illustrate what his formative years witnessed:

 

“Everything’s up to date in Kansas City;

They’ve gone about as fer as they can go.

They went and built a skyscraper seven stories high,

About as high as a building ought to grow.”

 

When Charlie was eleven his father, a minister, was killed in a freak elevator accident in one of those buildings. His mother, to make ends meet, took in borders, some of whom were doctors, which decided Charlie on a career in medicine. Musical, as well as adventuresome – his trip to Los Angeles in a Model T Ford with two friends in 1923, and his return by hopping freight cars is worth the price of the book – he taught himself the Saxophone and played it to pay his way through Northwestern Medical School. As a doctor in World War II, he studied and then, in private practice, pioneered the field of anesthesiology.

 

As for his long life, Von Drehle writes: “Charlie accepted his fortune and lived in the moment.” “What began among the horses and wagons of Galesburg, Illinois,” the author writes, “more than a century earlier, came to a close in a world transformed.” His book is a beautiful rendition of a long life well lived.

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