In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson Is Buried by Amy Hempel
"In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson Is Buried" by Amy Hempel explores themes of mortality, friendship, and the coping mechanisms people employ in the face of death. The narrative follows a young woman who visits her dying college roommate in a Los Angeles hospital. Throughout their time together, the narrator shares seemingly trivial facts and anecdotes, perhaps as a way to distract from the gravity of the situation. The contrast between light-hearted storytelling and the somber reality of illness underscores the emotional weight of the visit.
As the protagonist grapples with her friend's impending death, she reflects on past fears and anxieties, acknowledging her friend's right to be afraid. Their interactions reveal a complex bond, where the narrator's attempts at humor juxtapose the stark reality of loss. The story culminates with the friend’s burial in a cemetery marked by a memorial to entertainer Al Jolson, serving as a poignant reminder of life's transience. Meanwhile, the narrator's journey toward confronting her own fears, like flying and the unpredictable nature of life, adds layers to her character development. Ultimately, the narrative invites readers to contemplate the intricate nature of grief and the ways it shapes human connections.
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In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson Is Buried by Amy Hempel
First published: 1985
Type of plot: Psychological
Time of work: The 1970's
Locale: Los Angeles, California
Principal Characters:
The narrator , an unnamed womanHer dying friend , a former college roommate
The Story
The unnamed narrator, a young woman in her twenties, has come to visit her former college roommate, who is dying in a Los Angeles hospital. The friend asks the narrator to tell her useless stuff that she will not mind forgetting. Much of the story thus consists of meaningless bits of trivia told by the narrator; for example, that insects can fly through rain without getting wet and that no one owned a tape recorder in the United States before Bing Crosby did. The narrator also tells her friend that when scientists taught the first chimp to talk, it lied, and about a "hearing-ear dog" who wakes up a deaf mother and drags her into her daughter's room because the child has a flashlight and is reading under the covers.
When the doctor enters the hospital room, the narrator goes to the beach, a few miles west of the hospital, where she recalls being afraid of earthquakes and flying—neither of which her friend feared—when they were college roommates. However, she knows that her friend is now afraid and that she will not try to talk her out of her fears, for she feels her friend has a right to be afraid. When she returns to the hospital, she finds a second bed in the room and knows that her friend expects her to stay; she thinks that the friend wants every minute: "She wants my life." The narrator continues to joke with her dying friend, reading her a story from the newspaper about a man who robbed a bank in Mexico City by pointing a brown paper bag containing a barbecued chicken at a bank teller, only to be tracked down by the chicken's smell. Because the story makes her friend hungry she goes out and buys ice cream bars, which they eat in the hospital room while watching a movie on television.
When the dying woman is given an injection to make her sleep, the narrator also goes to sleep and dreams that her friend is a decorator who adorns her house in black crepe and bunting. When she awakens, she says that she must leave; she thinks of getting in her convertible in the parking lot and driving to Malibu, stopping for wine and dinner and picking up beach boys. "I would shimmer with life, buzz with heat, vibrate with health, stay up all night with one and then the other." Her sick friend becomes angry, storms out of the hospital room, and hides in a supply closet from which she must be coaxed by nurses.
The story ends with the friend being buried in Los Angeles, in a well-known cemetery where a memorial to the film star and singer Al Jolson is visible from the freeway. The narrator enrolls in a fear-of-flying class, but she sleeps with a glass of water on her nightstand so that she can see whether it is the earth or herself that is shaking. She recalls the story of the chimp that was taught to talk with sign language. When its baby died, it stood over it, hands moving with animal grace, forming the words, "Baby, come hug, Baby, come hug . . ."