Bindy’s Moon

By (author): Lloyd Ratzlaff

In a series of reflections focussed on his uneducated yet hard-working Mennonite family and touching on childhood exploits from shoplifting and go-kart racing to the juvenile fear of dying (which spontaneously arises during the rehearsal for an elementary school Christmas concert), Lloyd Ratzlaff takes readers on a journey from youth to philosophical maturity. Combining elegy and joyful nostalgia in a series of poetic essays, Ratzlaff recounts the struggles of his youth before analyzing his first marriage, his time at seminary school and as a minister, and examining life as the parent of adult children and closest confidante of a terminally ill friend.

Never straying far from his spiritual probing, the essays are informed largely by nature and the changing seasons which influence Ratzlaff’s life in seemingly magical ways. Small enlightenments arise from his interactions with the natural world, ranging from a spring equinox marking the seventh anniversary of his father’s death to the author’s ritual of waking to the songs of a robin who comes each spring to live on the riverbank across St. Henry Avenue. Even a small gopher scurrying off and standing like a signpost between graves signals an exploration of mortality.

Humour and honesty define this spiritual journey, as the boy who grew up speaking an ethnically Mennonite language discovers that the very rigidity and unease of this tongue will become, in part, the catalyst for his own writing and part of his spiritual movement as he “treads his endless path toward the present.” Bindy’s Moon invites readers to experience the challenges posed by scepticism and the simultaneous desire to believe, weighing the darkness of doctrinarism against the endless energy of the spirt. Ratzlaff gives us a unique example of what so many have experienced, combining humour, quiet reflection, and pearls of carefully considered wisdom, in a poignant prairie coming-of-age autobiography.

AUTHOR

Lloyd Ratzlaff

LLOYD RATZLAFF is the author of the literary nonfiction titles The Crow Who Tampered With Time, Backwater Mystic Blues, and Bindy’s Moon. His essays are also featured in several anthologies, including Sons and Mothers: Stories From Mennonite Men; Reading the River: A Traveller’s Companion to the North Saskatchewan River; and apart: a year of pandemic poetry and prose. A former minister, counsellor, and lecturer at the University of Saskatchewan, he has taught writing classes for READ Saskatoon, the Western Development Museum, and the University of Saskatchewan Certificate of Art and Design. He was a columnist for Prairie Messenger Catholic Journal through its last nineteen years of publication. He lives in Saskatoon.


Reviews

“Lloyd Ratzlaff turns a retrospective eye over times and places in his life and of those people who have nourished him and who he too has nourished on the spiritual roller-coaster that has been his life. Ratzlaff writes highly engaging prose that can be at times both surprising and disturbing, both witty and wise, but which always resonates with honesty. Bindy’s Moon is a wonderful, deeply moving read, cover to cover.” – Glen Sorestad

Bindy’s Moon is a wise and honest attempt to address the larger metaphysical issues that challenge us all. A keenly detailed, often lyrical exploration of love, loss, and courage.” – Tim Bowling

“While a personal narrative, Bindy’s Moon speaks to a larger element of myth, lore, and legend . . . Bindy’s Moon invites the reader in to a simple life quest: to care for and remember those we love.” – Lori A. May

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Excerpts & Samples ×
Outgrowing an old mythology in the intellectual sense is a first (and in hindsight relatively easy) step; bearing emotional freight is another matter. The “Bindy” for whom this book is named grew up with me speaking an ethnically Mennonite and religiously fundamentalist tongue. Despite its anathemas (or perhaps because of them), the language became a strop on which our words were keened, for Bindy until his death, and for me still to this day.

I am a latecomer to the creative arts. Arthur Miller called writing “a way of synthesizing all of one’s insides.” This is a philosophical tussle with Blake’s Old Nobodaddy throughout 1998, the year of Bindy’s dying. Partly it’s a confession (scary bi-polar genre, scorned at the newsstand end and extolled in St. Augustine), but also a kind of repentance of former uses of language in my own wordy careers as a minister, counsellor, and university instructor.

Reader Reviews

Details

Dimensions:

128 Pages
8.5in * 5.5in * .32in
200gr

Published:

March 31, 2015

Publisher:

Thistledown Press

ISBN:

9781771870542

Book Subjects:

LITERARY COLLECTIONS / Essays

Featured In:

All Books

Language:

eng

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