cover image Third Ear: Reflections on the Art and Science of Listening

Third Ear: Reflections on the Art and Science of Listening

Elizabeth Rosner. Counterpoint, $27 (240p) ISBN 978-1-64009-551-9

“Dialogue is happening all around us,” according to this lyrical blend of memoir and science. Novelist Rosner (Survivor Café), the daughter of German- and Polish-born Holocaust survivors, recounts growing up in a multilingual household in Upstate New York, where her parents’ accents marked them as outsiders. Recalling how she and her parents have struggled to listen to each other, Rosner describes how when she was a child, she covered her ears and chanted “English” whenever her mother tried to sing Russian lullabies, and contends that her parents coped with trauma from WWII by yelling at her. Though her mother died suddenly at age 70 before Rosner had a chance to make amends, she suggests that her relationship with her father improved toward the end of his life and offers a poignant account of listening with him to the audiobook of Survivor Café, which Rosner wrote about his experiences at Buchenwald. Interspersed with the personal narrative are passages about sound’s role in the natural world; for instance, Rosner explains that humpback whales “compose ever-changing songs to communicate,” and that elephants can “talk” by making rumbling noises other elephants detect through their feet. Rosner justifies the unlikely juxtaposition of personal recollections and animal trivia by suggesting that both demonstrate how, in the words of naturalist David G. Haskell, “to listen... is to be open to the vitality and creativity of life.” This soothes the soul. (Sept.)