240
When I call memories to mind, this is what surfaces: her voice on the answering machine, “You have reached the Faltus-Meltesen residence”. An image of her, smirking at us over glasses (am I inventing this?) as she read the paper in the afternoon sun. I remember being intimidated by her sarcastic insight, her refusal to bullshit the way other parents did. I remember the delicate touches she made to their home, like the tiny statue of a frog that perfectly matched the colors of the bathroom, or the collection of souvenir and vintage teacups in the dining room, each one a tiny, perfect world.
Indeed, that house on Richland Avenue is perhaps the perfect example of what I think Julia might mean by the “geography of memory”. Julia’s family no longer lives there though the house itself still exists. All the rooms are clearly defined in my head—the locations of the record player, the organized dry foods closet, the Christmas tree in the living room, and the little wallpapered antechamber all unchanging, fixed in time and space. Although some of those items have moved along with Julia’s family, they are still somehow bound to that location. Although I can’t recall many details about Susan, I can see her reflected through my memories of her beautiful home.
When I work to remember, I see some of these aspects of Susan in Julia and her sister as well: Julia’s attention to detail and eye for decorating, her love for small tokens, patterns, and books. The way Simone’s outward dislike of sentimentality can be turned upside-down by the carefully crafted art she creates, in particular, a series of three-dimensional felt models of their childhood home.
Like the house, Susan no longer exists in a tangible way, but is pinpointed to a certain place in my mind. If you visited 240 Richland now you wouldn’t find her. Imagine instead a map, where little pinpoints track the travels of Julia, Simone and Jay. Those small red dots, moving locations that follow the hearts and minds of those that loved her, are where she can now be found.










