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Patricia Hampl launches her new book "The Art of the Wasted Day" at the Weyerhaeuser Memorial Chapel

“Vivid, passionate, bursting with ideas and insights, Patricia Hampl's new book is a summation of a lifetime of sensitive searching and thinking.   A love story, a meditation on death, travel, Americanness, Catholicism, integrity and Montaigne, this beautiful journey is finally about the education of a soul.”  --Phillip Lopate

“The art of Patricia Hampl is the art of a lyrical, contemplative self, a self as instrument attuned to the world’s vibrations. Through reflection and investigation, vignette and daydream, she roams centuries and continents in this book, searching for what she calls ‘the combustible energy of the soul.’” --Margo Jefferson

A spirited inquiry into the lost value of daydream and ease, and the primacy of the imagination

Modern life only seems to become increasingly hectic and stressful, as we try to cram more into each day.  In her sparkling new book, acclaimed author Patricia Hampl argues for the necessity of daydreaming and leisure in our over-amped lives.

Written out of a lifelong fascination with daydreaming, The Art of the Wasted Day is a picaresque travelogue of leisure.  Hampl visits the homes of several exemplars of leisure from the past, who made repose and seclusion their goal, indeed their art form.  She journeys to rural Wales to explore two eighteenth-century aristocratic Irish ladies who ran off to live a life of retirement, becoming celebrated for their gardens and their determined isolation, and then on to Bordeaux to the chateau of Montaigne – the hero of the book – who retreated to his ancestral home, simply to sit in his tower and write what was passing through his mind.  Hampl braids her own life stories into these pilgrimages:  lazing her days away as a young girl, daydreaming under a beechnut tree; undertaking a retreat at a Benedictine monastery; floating down the Mississippi River in an old cabin cruiser boat, a “sheer, dreamy waste of time” that turns out, after all of her international questing, to be the greatest travel experience of her life.  

The job of being human, Hampl suggests, is getting lost in thought, and only leisure can safeguard reflection.  The Art of the Wasted Day is a timely, compelling, beautifully written celebration of the purpose and appeal of slowing down and letting go.
 
Patricia Hampl is the author of six prose works, including A Romantic Education and, most recently, The Florist's Daughter. Her work has appeared in many publications, including The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and Best American Essays. The recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and the MacArthur Foundation, she lives in St. Paul.

Date: 04/16/2018
Time: 7:00pm - 8:00pm
Place:

Weyerhaeuser Memorial Chapel, Macalester College
1600 Grand Avenue
St Paul, MN 55105
United States