Linda J. Alexander 2008-11-17
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Lily Dale is a New York town, infamous for its residents . . .not necessarily those you see but the ones you can't see. It's been on the map as a Spiritualist community for over 100 years. Residents you can see, and there are lots of them, too, are avowed Spiritualists. They open their community each summer to the curious and all looking for an answer to the great unknown questions--what happens after we die? Do we die? Is there an afterworld?
Residents of Lily Dale, the physically alive and those who move in and out via the spirit world, speak directly to a deep belief in a world where death is simply a loss of the physical body. The life of the spirit lives on and on. So we know way ahead of time what they think.
The author, Christine Wicker, was the religion reporter for the Dallas Morning News. She's clearly a seeker and the book is as much her search for answers as about the town and what it represents. Maybe it was my perception from the title, which told me the book would give us the truth, but I came away from this book a bit let down. I felt as if it was presented as a literary experiment, a reporter's journey into the unknown. She'd give readers her assessments of what the truth might be based on Lily Dale itself, not undeniable fact. I was ready for author/subject interaction, and hoped to hear Ms. Wicker's thoughts on what Lily Dale represented to her.
I didn't get that. It was as if she maybe didn't get the answers she hoped for so she simply didn't offer her impressions. She seemed still skeptical despite her affection towards Lily Dale's locals, and she was even in awe of some of them.
Christine Wicker is a talented writer. The book is lively, full of colorful, entertaining, enlightening characters. I even had an urge to consider my own pilgrimage to Lily Dale . . . and in the final count, maybe that's what the author intended. Maybe she just wanted the mystique and curiosity to continue to flow.
Ms. Wicker could not or didn't want to commit. As she put it, "One minute I could believe, and then someone would push me too far." I guess she didn't want to push any of her readers too far.