My grandmother Dolores Friesen passed away over a year ago now. Her estate has been divided between my mom, my aunt, and my uncle. But from this, I received an unusual heirloom, and the story, though not particularly interesting, is kind of worth sharing.
I was getting ready to visit my family over Christmas, and in one of my conversations with my mother, I mentioned that I was thinking of getting a kindle to take advantage of some of the really cheap books that were available. She mentioned that she still had Grandma’s kindle and that it hadn’t been used in a year, but if it still worked, I could have it. It hadn’t been touched because my mom had her own Kindle, so it made sense for me to take it.
My grandma Dolores loved to read. She always had a book going, and when she got older the Kindle was a great option because she could increase the print size as needed. She used the Kindle so much that she got a second one so that one would always be charged. So, when I left Nebraska after my visit, I brought a gently used, purple-cased 8th generation Kindle Fire.
Some kids inherit photo albums and china, I get an e-reader. To be fair, I do also have some more traditional things from my grandma, like my silverware (which I love). But this strangest of all heirlooms is just as special to me. I remember seeing it plugged in and laying on the arm of her chair, as much a part of the furniture as the TV stand or the side table.
When I got to my house in Texas, I plugged in the long-dead tablet before going to bed. The next day, I opened the front of the purple case and hit the power button. The device came to life like it always had. I tapped the “Kindle Books” icon and for a moment, I froze.
There it was, the last book that my grandmother had read on this Kindle over a year ago. The print was comically large and the screen too bright, but there it was. It was a book called Knife Edge, a crime thriller, nothing earth-shattering. But at that moment, I thought about how this Kindle came to me. I know that at some point, my grandmother was reading this book, and at this point, she put it down. And never picked it up again. This book will remain unfinished forever, the last book she read. She couldn’t have known, and she definitely never thought that her granddaughter would be the next to open the book.
I wouldn’t have just opened the book she was reading when she was alive, but here I am. It feels intimate, like I got some special insight into her last days on this side of Heaven. And this isn’t even any particularly special book. It wasn’t a favorite book, it wasn’t anything she wanted to pass along. It’s like seeing the last grocery list a person made, it’s just what was there. There’s something surreal about it.
And I’m here having this experience over a tablet, of all things. A piece of technology that will outdate and break entirely too soon, something that no one expects to pass on. My grandmother’s Kindle? Really? That just sounds weird to say. But it’s not the circuits and diodes, the battery and processor that make this kindle special to me. It’s the hours that my grandmother spent reading and playing games on it. And knowing my Grandma Dolores, she would want me to use it.
I logged out from the long-unused Amazon account and logged in to mine. I turned down the brightness and reduced the print size, then set it to dark mode because that’s how I like it. It’s my Kindle now, but it will always remind me of my grandma. A strange heirloom for sure, but one that feels very fitting for the age of technology in which we live. The print is small and the books are different, but I’ll keep the case. She picked it, and I think that her Kindle should stay in that case. And, to be perfectly honest, I like the purple.
Thank you for reading. Like I said, it’s kind of an odd story, but it’s also kind of beautiful.