- Title: The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare
- Edited by: Michael Dobson and Stanley Wells
- Year Published: 2001 (Oxford University Press)
- Year Purchased: 2001/2002
- Source: Unknown
- About: Everything you could want to know about Shakespeare, his works, and his era, this volume is an accompaniment to the Oxford Shakespeare. Dense, detailed and, like any encyclopedia, culled from a diverse, sometimes contradictory set of sources, it is one of the definitive texts on the king of all playwrights. It’s a cornerstone of my Shakespeare collection. Bonus points for the handsome coffee table treatment, complete with beautiful photographs and illustrations.
- Motivation: I was that lone teen in high school English Literature class who was thrilled whenever Shakespeare showed up on the syllabus. I grew up to study Shakespearean Theatre (yep, that’s a thing). I’m still passionately keen for the Bard of Avon, whose works comprise one of my favourite linguistic and literary playgrounds.
- Times Read: Cover-to-cover:1/As resource: countless
- Random Excerpt/Page 482: “Translation, the rendering of Shakespeare texts into another language, is inalienably part of the process whereby Shakespeare has been, and is being, received in non-English-speaking countries. Hence Shakespeare translation has not only (1) linguistic but also (2) theatrical and cultural-even political-aspects.”
- Happiness Scale: 10+++
Monthly Archives: June 2012
A Reading List a Mile Long: Bas Bleu Summer 2012 Edition
When it comes to books, I am straight-up greedy. I offer no apologies, only slow, regretful sighs that I cannot own all the books I want to read. Or read all the books I want to read. I could probably spend all of my waking time reading, until it carried over into my dreams, making my life a soft, sweet, contented whirl of words. Other people’s words. Oh. At this point, I would cease to be a writer. Maybe this isn’t such a good idea after all, but you get my drift. Books-I need them in my life. These are the volumes and literary-related goodies making me drool and pant and dream. Enjoy! Continue reading
The Dead Writers Round-Up: 6th-8th June
- Thomas Mann was born on 6/6/1875. “A great truth is a truth whose opposite is also a truth.”
- Elizabeth Bowen was born on 6/7/1899. “Art is one thing that can go on mattering once it has stopped hurting.”
- Gwendolyn Brooks was born on 6/7/1917. “Art hurts. Art urges voyages-and it is easier to stay at home.”
- Dorothy Parker died on 6/7/1967. “I shall stay the way I am because I do not give a damn.”
- E.M. Forster died on 6/7/1970. “America is rather like life. You can usually find in it what you look for. It will probably be interesting, and it is sure to be large.”
- Henry Miller died on 6/7/1980. “An artist is always alone-if he is an artist. No, what the artist needs is loneliness.”
- Thomas Paine died on 6/8/1809. “A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong gives it a superficial appearance of being right.”
- George Sand died on 6/8/1876. “Admiration and familiarity are strangers.”
- Marguerite Yourcenar was born on 6/8/1903. “A young musician plays scales in his room and only bores his family. A beginning writer, on the other hand, sometimes has the misfortune of getting into print.”
[All images are in the Public Domain and are courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.]
Quote
“And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.”-Sylvia Plath
A Year in Books/Day 148: Rebels Pretenders & Impostors
- Title: Rebels Pretenders & Impostors
- Author: Clive Cheesman & Jonathan Williams
- Year Published: 2000 (St. Martin’s Press)
- Year Purchased: 2001
- Source: History Book Club
- About: Rebels Pretenders & Impostors covers all manner of aspirants to various thrones and seats of power throughout the centuries. Armed with intrigue, deceit and delusion (and often shored up by a skewed sense of destiny), the majority of these fake kings, faux queens and misguided rebels ended up on the wrong side of history. Built on strong research and excellent writing ,while remaining fast-paced, this short book resides in the middle ground between popular history and academic study. It is fun food for thought.
- Motivation: History, how I love thee! Academic or popular, you are both alright in my book.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 137: “Nor are the Stuarts the only British royal dynasty from whom people claim to descend. The end of the house of Tudor did not inspire either constitutional crisis or a romantic sense of loss in the same way as the events of 1688, but the Tudor monarchs are for many heroic figures, larger than life, loved and hated in equal measure, and with plenty of significance for political and national questions that are still debated. It is not surprising therefore that several individuals have presented themselves as their legitimate descendants.”
- Happiness Scale: 9
Voices from the Grave #22: Sylvia Plath Reading ‘The Stones’
‘The Stones’ by Sylvia Plath.
This is the city where men are mended
Daily Diversion #12: Gazebos Remind Me of Sinclair Lewis
A Year in Books/Day 147: Bare Blass
- Title: Bare Blass
- Author: Bill Blass
- Year Published: 2002 (HarperCollinsPublishers)
- Year Purchased: 2010
- Source: My lovely momma
- About: The loosely structured autobiography of the great American fashion designer is a fun, quick and riveting read. His perspective on national and international society of the mid-to-late 20th-century is considerably more interesting that what I expected. His retelling of his journey from the Indiana boy he never quite left behind to sophisticated man-of-the-world is complex, humorous and compelling, with detours that I never suspected. Yet, his writing voice is exactly what you would expect: barbed, candid, and smooth. By story’s end, it is obvious why he was welcomed with open arms by high society. Bonus: The book includes his apparently famous recipe for meatloaf.
- Motivation: It was $1.00. My mom knew that I would find it interesting, as I am a fashion history hobbyist. Well played, Momma. Well played.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 72: “Actually, what I was shooting for was swagger-a cross between Damon Runyan and the Duke of Windsor, or what fashion editor Sally Kirkland, after seeing my first show, called “the Scarsdale Mafia look.” I loved the expressive masculine style of the thirties. I didn’t give a damn about tastefulness.”
- Happiness Scale: 8
A Year in Books/Day 146: A Memoir of Jane Austen
- Title: A Memoir of Jane Austen and Other Family Recollections
- Author: J.E. Austen-Leigh
- Year Published: 1870/This Edition: 2002 (Oxford University Press)
- Year Purchased: 2002/2003
- Source: Unknown
- About: J.E. Austen-Leigh was Jane’s nephew, the son of her eldest brother. He was nineteen when his famous aunt died; his impressions of her were published 53 years later. Although there are more scrupulous works of scholarship available, this memoir is the closest we will ever get to the ‘real’ woman (other than her surviving letters and fiction). On the other hand, one can argue that a writer’s works are the best representative of their true self and that everything else-character, mannerisms, speech patterns, habits, loves, hates and proclivities-is the fiction. That is a bit deeper than I want to dive in this mini-review, so hold on to that thought if you’d like; I’m sure I will cover it here some other day. Where were we? Ah, yes! Jane as presented in the bosom of her family hearth and home, by her nephew. As biased as it obviously is, it is a really fantastic book. It is of key importance to Austen scholars and fans alike. This edition also includes reminiscences by her brother Henry and nieces Anna and Caroline, which is a touch that nicely rounds out the portrait of this truly compelling woman.
- Motivation: I love Jane Austen. Pick your jaw up off of the floor, you must be shocked.
- Times Read: 2
- Random Excerpt/Page 1: “More than half a century has passed away since I, the youngest of the mourners, attended the funeral of my dear aunt Jane in Winchester Cathedral; and now, in my old age, I am asked whether my memory will serve to rescue from oblivion any events of her life or any traits of her character to satisfy the enquiries of a generation of readers who have been born since she died.”
- Happiness Scale: 10
The Dead Writers Round-Up: 2nd-4th June
- Thomas Hardy was born on 6/2/1840. “And yet to every bad there is a worse.”
- Barbara Pym was born on 6/2/1913. “My thoughts went round and round and it occurred to me that if I ever wrote a novel it would be of the ‘stream of consciousness’ type and deal with an hour in the life of a woman at the sink.”-Excellent Women
- George S. Kaufman died on 6/2/1961. “When I invite a woman to dinner, I expect her to look at my face. That’s the price she has to pay.”
- Franz Kafka died on 6/3/1924. “A book must be the ax for the frozen sea within us.”
- Allen Ginsberg was born on 6/3/1926. “America, how can I write a holy litany in your silly mood?”-America
- Harry Crosby was born on 6/4/1898. “When I like people immensely, I never tell their names to anyone. It is like murdering a part of them.”
- Arna Bontemps died on 6/4/1973. “There will be better days when I am gone And healing pools where I cannot be healed”-Nocturne at Bethesda
[All images are in the Public Domain and are courtesy of Wikimedia Commons]

