Back in 1961, when women wore shirtwaist dresses and joined garden clubs and drove legions of children around in seatbeltless cars without giving it a second thought; back before anyone knew thereโd even be a sixties movement, much less one that its participants would spend the next sixty years chronicling; back when the big wars were over and the secret wars had just begun and people were starting to think fresh and believe everything was possible, the thirty-year-old mother of Madeline Zott rose before dawn every morning and felt certain of just one thing: her life was over.
Despite that certainty, she made her way to the lab to pack her daughterโs lunch.
Fuel for learning,ย Elizabeth Zott wrote on a small slip of paper before tucking it into her daughterโs lunch box. Then she paused, her pencil in midair, as if reconsidering.ย Play sports at recess butย do notย automatically let the boys win,ย she wrote on another slip. Then she paused again, tapping her pencil against the table.ย It is not your imagination,ย she wrote on a third. Most people are awful.ย She placed the last two on top.
Most young children canโt read, and if they can, itโs mostly words like โdogโ and โgo.โ But Madeline had been reading since age three and, now, at age five, was already through most of Dickens.
Madeline wasย thatย kind of childโthe kind who could hum a Bach concerto but couldnโt tie her own shoes; who could explain the earthโs rotation but stumbled at tic-tac-toe. And that was the problem. Because
while musical prodigies are always celebrated, early readers arenโt. And thatโs because early readers are only good at something others will eventually be good at, too. So being first isnโt specialโitโs just annoying.
Madeline understood this. Thatโs why she made it a point each morning
โafter her mother had left and while her babysitter neighbor, Harriet, was busyโto extract the notes from the lunch box, read them, then store them with all the other notes that she kept in a shoebox in the back of her closet. Once at school she pretended to be like all the other kids: basically illiterate. To Madeline, fitting in mattered more than anything. And her proof was irrefutable: her mother had never fit in and look what happened to her.
โ
It was there, in the Southern Californian town of Commons, where the weather was mostly warm, but not too warm, and the sky was mostly blue, but not too blue, and the air was clean because air just was back then, that she lay in her bed, eyes closed, and waited. Soon she knew thereโd be a gentle kiss on her forehead, a careful tuck of covers about her shoulders, a murmuring of โSeize the dayโ in her ear. In another minute, sheโd hear the start of a car engine, a crunch of tires as the Plymouth backed down the drive, a clunky shift from reverse to first. And then her permanently depressed mother would set off for the television studio where she would don an apron and walk out onto a set.
The show was calledย Supper at Six,ย and Elizabeth Zott was its indisputable star.