Mathew Lyons

An obituarist’s search for the soul

Snatches of memoir, poetry and observation from a writer whose main preoccupation is recording the lives of others

Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke – whom Ann Wroe cites as a major inspiration. [Alamy] 
issue 16 September 2023

‘“Deep breath”, says the doctor. I take one and hold it.’ Thus begins the fourth chapter of Ann Wroe’s Lifescapes. It is apt because, although the book is part memoir, part essay on the art of biography, it is really about the breath of life itself. Wroe’s writing is intense and visionary, at times almost ecstatic. Reader, dive in.

Wroe has written weekly obituaries for the Economist for 20 years, seeking out seemingly ephemeral moments that unlock people’s lives. ‘Time and again,’ she says, ‘some incident in childhood is the key to a career.’ The composer Karlheinz Stockhausen was delighted by the sound his toy hammer made on pipes and buckets at his family’s farm. Thich Nhat Hanh, the father of ‘mindfulness’, was startled into a sense of nowness by ‘a draught of water from a natural well’.

The composer Stockhausen was delighted by the sound his toy hammer made on pipes and buckets

In Lifescapes it is fragments of other lives that dominate, particularly at first.

Comments

Join the debate for just £1 a month

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first three months for £3.

Already a subscriber? Log in