Bailey
How would you explain this passage from "The Yellow Birds"? “I hadn’t known what I was doing then, but my memories of Murph were a kind of misguided archaeology. Sifting through the remains of what I remembered about him was a denial of the fact that a hole was really all that was left, an absence I had attempted to reverse but found that I could not. There was simply not enough material to account for what had been removed. The closer I got to reconstructing him in my mind, the more the picture I was trying to re-create receded. For every memory I was able to pull up, another seemed to fall away forever. There was some proportion about it all, though. It was like putting a puzzle together from behind: the shapes familiar, the picture quickly fading, the muted tan of the cardboard backing a tease at wholeness and completion.”
Jul 28, 2015 4:52 PM
Answers · 2
My interpretation is that the writer is missing Murph and is trying to recreate memories unsuccessfully.
July 28, 2015
What specifically do you need help with? It is an extended metaphor that compares the writer's memories of Murph to a misguided archaeological dig. But the description sounds more like playing in the sand to me.
July 28, 2015
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