“I was going to bed when the moonlight entered my door. I
got up, happy of heart. There was no one to share this happiness with me, so I
walked over to the Chengtien Temple to look for Huaimin. He, too, had not yet
gone to bed, and we paced about in the garden. It looked like a transparent
pool with the shadows of water grass in it, but they were really the shadows of
bamboos and pine trees cast by the moonlight. Isn’t there a moon every night? And
aren’t there bamboos and pine trees everywhere? But there are few carefree
people like the two of us.”
I have often thought of this passage in the many years since
I first read about Su Tungpo. It is true that we can see the moon most nights,
that we can follow its monthly circuit around our earth. Its beauty is
dependable, as are the trees and luminous clouds which set it off against the
night sky. We have only to lift our eyes.
The decade which A Moon Every Night chronicles is one
of increasing global ties between nations. The Cold War is declared over,
though ethnic conflicts continue. Communications technology grows
exponentially, with satellites, the Internet and cell phones. Container ships
continue to reshape global trade and passenger travel between countries reaches
new highs. All of these things lead to increased cultural exchange, of which
our characters, the Mikkelsons, take full advantage.
Line’s kids are now young adults. Christopher spends a
couple of years in the Peace Corps and Heather takes a winemaking internship in
Chile. Fern and Ivy go with their parents to Edinburgh, where Stephen has taken
a lectureship. Fern becomes captivated by archaeology. We cannot follow all of
this activity, but it echoes throughout Line’s world. Though she faces very
physical manifestations of homesickness, Line studies the gardens, herbal
healing and Celtic history available to her in Scotland. When at home in Santa
Cruz, she becomes involved in the growing hospice movement.
Marty’s interests have turned toward the countries on the
Pacific Rim. She travels to China and returns home to study tai chi,
calligraphy and tea ceremony. These interests help, but do not assuage the pain
of a bittersweet love affair with someone who is married. Paul goes back to teaching
when he realizes that Mother finds it hard to live at the lake by herself in
the summers. Thus he spends more time with her on the Minnesota lake
that is the Mikkelsons’ heritage. Paul and Marie perform as a musical duo
throughout the state, but Marie’s light is flickering and Mother’s goes out
during this decade.
Line, Marty and Paul Mikkelson are well aware of the moon’s
path across the sky at night. Endowed by their parents and Scandinavian
ancestors with a strong sense of connection to the natural world, they are
sometimes more carefree, sometimes less. As they grow older and their children
grow up, they confront themselves and the lives they have made for themselves,
mindful of place, of the world evolving around them. Hearts and minds united,
they are each in their different ways open to the “thin places” where the core
of reality shines through.