Annie at Tinker Creek ( | Volume: 1, Issue: 1)

Annie at Tinker Creek

AH article image

Authors: Bruce Watson

Historic Era:

Historic Theme:

Subject:

| Volume 1, Issue 1

TINKER CREEK, VA — The creek flowed for millions of years but the world beyond its banks was too busy to notice. Then in 1971, a young woman from nearby Roanoke began dropping by.  

She called herself “a fugitive and a vagabond, a sojourner seeking signs.”  “I am no scientist,” she wrote.  “I explore the neighborhood.“ She spent two years along the creek, wandering, studying, jotting thoughts. No body of water since Walden Pond had enjoyed such a loyal bard.  And when A Pilgrim at Tinker Creek came out in 1974, American letters had found the “true heir” to Thoreau.

Annie Dillard worried that she had "shot my lifetime wad. Pilgrim is not only the wisdom of my 28 years but I think it's the wisdom of my whole life.”  Yet she grew into “the writing life,” tapping her inquisitive soul to write essays, novels, poetry, a memoir of childhood, even a book about writing. Readers marveled. How could a mind contain such multitudes?

She was born in Pittsburgh, into “a house full of comedians.” Her mother was delightful and defiant. “She taught us to curtsy, she taught us to play poker.”  During the McCarthy era, Dillard recalled in An American Childhood, her mother filled out a job application. Asked “Do you favor the overthrow of the government by force or violence?” her mother thought a moment, then wrote. . . Violence.

Her father was an oil company executive by day, a Bohemian dreamer by night. Tall and lean, Frank Doak had played drums in a jazz band, started a novel, smoked marijuana before it became popular, and in middle age quit his job to sail downriver to New Orleans.

Encouraged to wonder, Annie grew up a reader, a dabbler, a tomboy. At college in Virginia she married her poetry professor, R.H.W. Dillard, wrote her Master’s thesis on Thoreau, then went in search of adventures. When she discovered Tinker Creek, rivers already flowed inside her.

Playful but profound, Dillard observed insects and came away disgusted yet amazed. 

She imagined a time lapse film of earth’s creation and envisioned all the burrowing life beneath the tree where she stood. No sentimentalist, she saw a hard-bitten yet wondrous Nature, bountiful creator of butterflies and bats and beetles, yet cruel enough to kill them all.

“I had been my whole life a bell, and never knew it until at that moment I was lifted and struck.” — Annie Dillard

Watching a mockingbird fall, then fly, she spun a worldview. “The fact of his free fall was like the old philosophical conundrum about the tree that falls in the forest. The answer must be, I think, that beauty and grace are performed whether or not we will or sense them. The least we can do is try to be there.”

After being there long enough to fill 20 notebooks, Dillard retired to a library carrel. Fueled by coffee, Coke, chocolate milk, and cigarettes, she crafted her journal into fifteen chapters that spanned a year at Tinker Creek. She took time out