1. I do not do well with the last minute. If I can, I'll arrive at movies early, finish my cooking for family dinner early, come to the airport really early, and so on. In that spirit, I arrived at Gonzaga University around 6:15 for tonight's 7:30 Gonzaga Symphony performance.
When I arrived, the scene around the Myrtle Woldson Performing Arts Center puzzled me.
The parking lots were nearly full.
More people than I expected were strolling into the building.
Once in the lobby, the number of people hanging out and the number of people walking into the performance hall to be seated gob smacked me.
I took out my phone.
I opened my Google Wallet.
I checked my ticket.
I laughed at myself.
I arrived for the symphony concert several days early.
The Gonzaga Symphony will play on February 10.
My sometimes confused -- maybe addled? -- mind was at it again.
2. I asked a person wearing an official looking pair of slacks, vest, and name tag on a lanyard what was happening this evening.
"It's a book event," she answered and when I joked that I had come early for the symphony, she chuckled and said, "Well, why don't you go over there and buy a ten dollar ticket and attend. It's supposed to be very good."
So I did.
Then I realized what I'd stumbled into.
Tonight was the next in the Spokesman Review's series of conversations with authors called Northwest Passages.
I attended two Northwest Passages events in 2025, I'd seen publicity for tonight's event, but I'd forgotten <clears throat> that it was tonight.
So, I purchased a bottle of water, found a seat, and prepared to listen to Spokane writer Jess Walter interview David Guterson, the author of Snow Falling on Cedars, about his new novel Evelyn in Transit.
3. I can't remember <clears throat> ever having my sometimes scrambled mind work in my favor so well.
I loved this event.
Jess Walter interviewed David Guterson with wit, intelligence, insight, and generosity.
He led Guterson to talk about his book as if they were members of the ideal book club.
Guterson discussed his lifelong engagement with the eternal questions of life: What is the meaning of life? What is a well-lived life? How do we make our way as flawed persons in a fallen world? I understood his low-key, humble, unassuming ponderings to be spiritual, existential, and ongoing. He asks questions of himself and the world we live in not looking for answers, but as a way of continuing to search, to dig, to remain open to possibilities, self-revision, and surprise. And he works to keep it light. Guterson discussed that he is careful to compliment the seriousness of his writing with humor, hoping that his readers will never think he is imposing either certainty or a way of seeing the world upon them, but is opening the way for readers to join him in his searching, through the stories he tells.
To my utter delight, Guterson and Walters discussed the inseparable relationship between the characters and worlds they imagine and bring to life and the music of their language, how the music of their language, that is, their writing style, changes to meet the demands of the characters they develop and the worlds these characters inhabit.
If you'd like to read a summary of Guterson's novel, a quick online search can take care of that.
Before too long, this program will be available on YouTube along with most of the other Northwest Passages programs, including when Kenton Bird discussed the book about Tom Foley he co-wrote with John C. Pierce. That event is here: Northwest Passages: Kenton Bird, author of "Tom Foley, The Man In The Middle"