- Title: Webster’s Dictionary of American Writers
- Year Published: 2004 (Barnes & Noble)
- Year Purchased: 2005
- Source: Barnes & Noble clearance rack
- About: A dense, delightfully thorough history of every American writer of merit, popularity or notoriety since the 17th Century.
- Motivation: I gobble up data like Wheaties or mac and cheese. I write about dead writers. I love history.
- Times Read: Cover-to-cover-1/As reference tool-countless.
- Random Excerpt/Page 65: “Grandson of the inventor of the adding machine, Burroughs was born into wealth and graduated from Harvard University in 1936. While living in New York, he met Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac and became one of the early core members of the group that would become known as the Beats. He became addicted to heroin around 1945 and would remain a junkie for almost 15 years. While living in Mexico in 1951, he killed his second wife in an attempt to shoot a glass off her head at a party. He fled Mexico and wandered through the Amazon region, continuing his experiments with drugs, experiences described in ‘The Yage Letters’ (1963), his 1953 correspondence with Allen Ginsberg.
- Happiness Scale: 9
Author Archives: maedez
[Mae’s Writing Days] Ghosts of Projects Past
As most of you know, I recently rearranged my writing studio. Okay, full disclosure time: I’m still actively working on it, after nearly 3 weeks of mostly dedicated effort. It may look lovely to the casual observer but, lurking beneath the neat surface, is my hideous secret: it’s really a mess. Tucked inside of the cabinets and chests and drawers is a dark, sloppy, sordid underbelly of….paper. Continue reading
A Year in Books/Day 32: The Great American Bars and Saloons
- Title: The Great American Bars and Saloons
- Author: Kathy Weiser
- Year Published: 2006 (Chartwell Books, Inc.)
- Year Purchased: December 2010
- Source: A wedding gift from a dear friend.
- About: Although hardly a sociological study, ‘The Great American Bars and Saloons’ IS deeper than the average coffee-table volume. With limited text, it is up to the period photographs to tell their history: they do so with gritty, unflinching, and fascinating detail. You can almost smell the mixture of whiskey, sweat and sawdust.
- Motivation: We have weird friends who obviously appreciate our own weirdness.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 10: “Because the saloon was usually one of the first and bigger buildings within many new settlements, it was common that it was also utilized as a public meeting place. Judge Roy Bean and his combination saloon and courtroom in Langtry, Texas was a prime example of this practice. Another saloon in Downieville, California, was not only the most popular saloon in town, but also held the office of the Justice of the Peace. In Hays City, Kansas, the first church services were held in Tommy Drum’s Saloon.”
- Happiness Scale: 7
A Year in Books/Day 31: Ernest Hemingway A to Z
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Title: Ernest Hemingway A to Z
- Author: Charles M. Oliver
- Year Published: 1999 (Checkmark Books)
- Year Purchased: 2004/2005
- Source: Unknown book seller, Upstate New York
- About: Every knowable fact about Hemingway, contained in one large volume. With photographs.
- Motivation: I’m of 3 or 4 minds about Hemingway the writer, and many more about Hemingway the man. However, since I write about dead writers, I knew this would be a useful reference tool. I also love-love!-any kind of encyclopedia.
- Times Read: Cover-to-cover-1/as reference-countless
- Random Excerpt/Page 348: “In criticizing her husband’s writing, Catherine Bourne says, in ‘The Garden of Eden’ , that a wastebasket is “the most important thing for a writer”. She later burns his stories and the reviews of his second novel in a wastebasket.”
- Happiness Scale: 8
Quote
“Substitute “damn” every time you’re inclined to write “very”; your editor will delete it and the writing will be just as it should be.”-Mark Twain
Voices from the Grave #4: Ted Hughes Reading ‘The Thought-Fox’
‘The Thought-Fox’ from ‘Hawk in the Rain’ (1957).
I imagine this midnight moment’s forest:
A Year in Books/Day 30: The Medieval World Europe 1100-1350
- Title: The Medieval World Europe 1100-1350
- Author: Friedrich Heer
- Year Published: 1961/This Edition: 1998 (WELCOME RAIN)
- Year Purchased: 2000/2001
- Source: Edward R. Hamilton Bookseller Company
- About: A modern, scholarly classic that remains enjoyably readable whilst sparing no attention to detail.
- Motivation: I felt a need to brush up on my Medieval European history. No, really.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page: “Our contemporary European societies, both Western and Eastern, in many ways continue to live on their medieval inheritance. History is the present, and the present is history. When we look more closely into the crises and catastrophes, the hopes and fears of our own day, whether we know it or not we are concerned with developments whose origins can be traced back directly or indirectly to their source in the high Middle Ages.”
- Happiness Scale: 9
A Year in Books/Day 29: The Gashlycrumb Tinies
- Title: The Gashlycrumb Tinies or, After the Outing
- Author: Edward Gorey
- Year Published: 1963/This Edition: 1991 (Harcourt Brace & Company)
- Year Purchased: 1999/2000
- Source: Gift from a friend
- About: The delightfully macabre master’s most famous, and oddly eloquent, Edwardian-esque alphabet.
- Motivation: I’m a squealing, hand-clapping Gorey fangirl.
- Times Read: Countless
- Random Excerpt: “H is for Hector done in by a thug.”
- Happiness Scale: Off the charts
A Year in Books/Day 28: Cinderella’s Big Score
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Title: Cinderella’s Big Score Women of the punk and Indie Underground
- Author: Maria Raha
- Year Published: 2005 (Seal Press)
- Year Purchased: 2010
- Source: Barnes & Noble clearance rack
- About: ‘Cinderella’s Big Score’ is a potent combination of music history and witty, trenchant beatdown on the punk patriarchy, served up with an awesome array of black and white photographs.
- Motivation: Come closer. Come closer still. You may not know it-after all, we’re fairly new acquaintances and I usually look so mild-mannered-but I’m a punk chick, old school. I’m also a feminist. This book is a dream come true.
- Times Read: 2
- Random Excerpt/Page 44: Exene Cervenka exudes pure power. This sense of assuredness emanates from a stark emotional purity and her ability to fully, bravely expose herself without posturing. She hits hight notes without compromise and her voice conveys a raw severity and nakedness, once prompting John Doe to extol: “She had poems that were obviously songs, plus she was cut from classic lead singer cloth. She was such a bad ass! I pretended to be, but Exene was the real thing. She had the ax to grind, the sadness of her mother’s death, and the unusual wiring that made it possible for her to throw a drink in somebody’s face and still be right. She totally delivered as a lead singer.”
- Happiness Scale: 10++
A Year in Books/Day 27: Vera
- Title: Vera [Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov]
- Author: Stacy Schiff
- Year Published: 1999/This Edition: 2000 (Modern Library Paperback Edition)
- Year Purchased: 2002/2003
- Source: Barnes & Noble Clearance Rack
- About: Vera Slonim Nabokov was never a writer. Nor, as far as it is known, did she ever harbor that ambition. She was, by a series of disturbing historical circumstances, something of a professional refugee. Although she held a number of jobs, the impossibility-and ultimate imprudence-of separating Vera from her husband and their famous 52-year-marriage jumps starkly from the page. To her husband and posterity’s great good fortune, she quietly trespassed outside the bounds of musedom: it is every bit as impossible to separate Vladimir from his wife and her contributions to his psyche and soul and, eventually, his literature.
- Motivation: Nabokov, Nabokov, Nabokov! So fantastic, revolutionary, disquieting (eh, I know his opinions on women writers and still I return to his words). This was a literary biography by proxy, in a way, as I knew it would be. The upshot was becoming acquainted with the enigmatic Vera.
- Times Read: 2
- Random Excerpt/Page 24: “Some things were to be insisted upon, on the other hand. Vera Slonim learned a great number of lessons from her father, only one of which was how to how to hold a thirteen-year-grudge, a lesson she would put to good use.”
- Happiness Scale: 10