In which I make my teenage self very happySeptember 29th, 2008 @ 7:01 am
I tired to be all smart and crap in high school. I really got into art history and visiting museums with my friends. We would go out to JB’s restaurant (one small step up from Denny’s) and sit and talk about books and poems and art.
During this time I also go into visiting used book stores. I loved buying books that had been read and loved previously. There was something extra special about reading a copy of “Gone with the Wind” that was covered in coffee stains and notes in the margins. To me this just felt more like the way a book should be read.
I would visit the used book store and come home with piles of paperback books to fill my time with. I read the classics as well as books I had bought solely based on the cover and the wear and tear. One visit to the bookstore ended with a hardback book I picked up because the description on the book sounded interested to “pretending to be smart” teenage Isabel.
The story traces the travels of six young people who tour Europe and Africa in the 1960’s searching themselves and a meaning for their lives in a world where they have no control in their own affairs.
I fancied myself somewhat of a hippy, so a book about hippies sounded right up my alley. And so I bought “The Drifters” by James A. Michener and started to read it. From the first chapter about Joe, a Vietnam draft dodger, this book captured my attention. It’s actually quite odd that I loved this book as much as I did. There was nothing similar between my life in small town Utah, as a devout Mormon, to the characters in the book that traveled around Europe experimenting with drugs and having random sex.
They were truly hippies and I truly wasn’t.
So the book follows this group of kids from all over the world. They each have their own story and reason for ending up in Torremolinos, Spain. But that’s where they end up, at the Wilted Swan bar in Torremolinos. James A. Michener writes about Torremolinos like it’s some kind of magical place for people who love life. The front of the book had a map of all the locations in the novel. I studied where Torremolinos was in Spain and just assumed it was a mythical location that had been dreamt up for the sake of the novel.
Meanwhile I lived in Utah, where it snowed all the time and the only beaches were ones near salt lakes and chemical filled lakes.
Over the next years I read and reread “The Drifters” any chance I got. I wrote a paper about it for my high school English class as well as one of my college English classes. I tried to talk my friends into reading it and often quoted passages to boyfriends.
As far as I recall I never convinced anyone to read it.
Until about three years ago when I loaned my paperback copy to my BFF May. (My hardback copy has since been lost.) I’m not sure that I really believed she would read it. And if she did read, I wasn’t sure she would like it.
But she did read it. And she did like it. She also asked me how in the heck 17 year old Isabel had gotten her hands on that book? She understood that it really wasn’t the typical book a 17 year old who is stuck lives in Utah would read. I agreed with her and recounted the story of just finding it in a random used bookstore and being drawn to it.
And yet I never got online and looked up anything about the book. It was like this little gem of a secret that was mine alone. I took it with me when we went on vacation so I could read about these kid’s travels while I traveled.
(Mexico 2005. Reading “The Drifters” on the beach.)
And still, I never really thought much about where the book was set.
That is until The King and I were driving to our destination outside of Malaga, Spain and I saw this sign.
I freaked. The King was all “I told you this place existed and that we’d be driving through it!”
I was all “I don’t remember!! HOLY CRAP!”
And then I freaked out a little more.
I sat in the car trying to channel my teenage self. I pictured myself sitting alone in the bedroom of my youth, reading “The Drifters” and dreaming of far away places. Places that I never ever for one second could have dreamed I would one day visit. I wanted teenage Isabel to know that I was there.
I was in Torremolinos.
Days later, on our way back to the airport to fly to Formentera, we took a little detour and drove around Torremolinos. I didn’t see a bar called the Wilted Swan. I didn’t see anyone that looked like Joe or Yigal or Gretchen or Cato.
But I was there. I was in Torremolinos. And that’s all I cared about.
Teenage Isabel was happy.
So tell me, what book local would you like to visit? And why?
15 Comments
Addictions · Back in the Day · Me · Vacations






















