Words to remember him by (headline)

What a BC English professor learned from her correspondence with the late writer and alumnus John L’Heureux (Abstract)

Lately, I’ve been missing a man I never met. John L’Heureux died on April 22, 2019, in Palo Alto, California. He was a prolific writer, a beloved teacher, and a former Jesuit priest. My first email exchange with him came in the spring of 2016, as I was nearing the end of my term as chair of Boston College’s English Department. John, who had earned a master’s in theology at BC in 1963, was circling back to his alma mater after a lifetime of achievement—as a contributing editor at The Atlantic; an author of more than twenty books of poetry, memoir, and fiction; and a longtime professor at Stanford University, as well as director of the school’s creative writing program. Now as he faced late-stage Parkinson’s disease, he and his wife, Joan, were planning a bequest earmarked for creative writing at Boston College.

Our initial exchanges made clear not only John’s intentions—to focus on what would directly benefit our students—but his sly wit: “Your Boston College writing concentration sounds wonderful and I hope that, dead, I’ll be able to do something useful for a student.”

In my opening letter to him, I praised his recent New Yorker short story, “Three Short Moments in a Long Life.” Before responding, John read one of my earlier novels so he could comment. Thus began our conversation, writer to writer. In an early letter he wrote, “Dying is easy; writing is hard.” I didn’t believe for a minute that dying was easy, but on display in that quip was his determination to face it with bravado and elegant sentences.

Headline

Your Boston College writing concentration sounds wonderful and I hope that, dead, I'll be able to do something useful for a student.
Suzanne Matson, Professor

How I enjoyed John’s humor, which somehow acknowledged deep feeling rather than deflecting it. He looked at death forthrightly, and allowed me to explore that mystery with him. He constantly and tenderly referred to Joan. We talked books, publishing, and dogs. Very near the end he gave me the greatest gift possible when he said, “I would so very much have liked to have you for a colleague…I like to think we would be close friends…I hope this spring is good for you and that you’ll find time to write. It’s a vocation and a demanding one.”

Last April, on Easter Monday, we lost this kind and courageous man. We retain the abundant legacy of his words, the example of his generous deeds, and the memory of his indomitable spirit. Lucky us.

Suzanne Matson is an English professor at Boston College; her latest novel is Ultraviolet.