I used to read Dandelion Wine every summer, in June, because it is so evocative of the season, pulsating with the blossoming warmth of possibility offered by yet another magically carefree intercession in my regular life. I don't really have time to read Dandelion Wine anymore, but I still think of it at every summer's beginning and close.
I adore autumn, I do. But even now, at 28, there is something positively devastating to me about the end of summer.
When I was younger, my favorite holiday was July 4th. I know, I know...weird. There are no presents or really even

Oh...those summer nights.
I'm nervous to be old enough to start feeling nostalgic about my younger days, but summer nights in Utah when I was growing up were simply the most spectacular gift offered by nature. The dry desert days would just bake the earth and then, at night, all that heat was released, creating an intoxicating mix of warmth and darkness, all set to a backdrop of crickets chorusing away. Summer dances were full of possibility, and one of my first experiences with love was full of the blissful carefree blooms of summer flirtation. He would drive me home in his open-top Jeep, and I would lean back, drinking in the overwhelming profusion of stars cluttering the sky. I never needed a sweater.
I think my profession continues to promote this sense of summer as a period of my life outside the numbing structures of time. Since I teach, I get my summers off (in theory) and am rarely beholden to solid deadlines, and though I always have great plans for all the work
The song-birds leave us at the summer's close,
Only the empty nests are left behind,
And pipings of the quail among the sheaves.
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "The Harvest Moon"
So, summer ends. Or, more accurately, ended last Monday. But this, too, is what makes summer so remarkable: it is fleeting, a rare gift, and something to dream of and remember in that dark, dreadful dungeon known as February. In Dandelion Wine, they preserve the eponymous liquid in bottles in the basement, and in the winter, when they simply cannot bear the cold greyness anymore, they get it out and have a thimble full: sunshine in a bottle. I just have my memories of summer to last me through the rest of the year, but this...this is enough.
7 comments:
Gorgeous. (Even though I am an autumn person...I love when the air starts to turn cold.)
Very beautifully written. You revel in lyrical adjectives (I like to as well) so your posts are always very enjoyable for me to read. It made me almost nostalgic about summer. But I am usually very glad for the season to end because by then the heat has gotten to me. I love how here in Utah Sept hits and the weather turns crisp overnight, it is like sweet release.
Okay, let's get that book written. (I read your blog to Syd as our morning read.)
I'm a longtime blog stalker, first time commenter.
I love your blog. This entry is especially so beautifully written. I share your love for summer. I could feel my bare feet on the warm midnight asphalt as I enjoyed your tribute.
Thanks!
kt - cousin of an inlaw's friend etc...
Perfect. Darling, you say it so well and it looks beautiful. I miss you terribly. This lets me remember that our own romance was born over a summer, the drives up the canyon, out by the lake, staying out talking in parking lots. But this year I can't wait for the fall as it brings us both home.
Lindsay, thank you so much for speaking of such lovely things. The passing of summer is definitely worthy of notice, and we too take note, only it is the turning of all thoughts to football. The crisp air in the morning is really the foreshadowing of football, and the 4th of July just 6 more weeks until football. You add such rich dimension to our lives! Thank you again for signing up to be a Livingston! You are heaven sent in all ways!The world is a better place with you in it, I mean it.
Love forever, Momma
I've listed Dandelion Wine as among my five favorite books since I was 10, yet never knew anyone else to have read it, let alone every summer. I've never minded mowing the lawn after Ray's stirring defense of that noble task. Nice entry.
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