- Title: Stanislavski A Biography
- Author: Jean Benedetti
- Year Published: 1988/This Edition 1990 (A Routledge Book)
- Year Purchased: 1992/1993
- Source: The Book Harbor, Columbus
- About: An exhaustive account of the theatrical genius’ influential life.
- Motivation: I was a theatre student and, as an extension of my great love for the nation’s literature, infatuated with all things Russian.
- Times Read: 3
- Random Excerpt/Page 106: “The enthusiasm, the passions which the production aroused were unprecedented. Stanislavski experienced in full measure that electric flow of energy which passes from stage to auditorium and back not only when the
performance is exciting but when ideas, feelings and convictions are shared.”
- Happiness Scale: 10
Author Archives: maedez
A Year in Books/Bonus Full-Length Review: The Outermost House*
With its breathtakingly evocative retelling of a year spent living on a remote Cape Cod beach wedded to solid and careful craftsmanship, ‘The Outermost House’, first published in 1928, is an indispensable classic. It contains a treasure-trove of amateur naturalist Beston’s descriptions of the local terrain and animal-life, especially the many species of migrating birds, set side-by-side with his lush and emotional reactions to the never-still life force unfolding around him. It is sated, brim-full, with the author’s uncanny yet non-judgmental wonder at his milieu. Beston dwells magnificently on the minutia of his surroundings, firing his awed and reverent accounts of the movements of the tides and peregrinations of diverse animal species with soaring, deft prose. From the changing sound of the surf to the ages-old tragedy of ship-wreck, ‘The Outermost House’ is a vivid and vigorous representation of the rhythm of coastal life in its many forms. It is a broad yet hypnotically intimate account of the primitive and plenary pageant of life that was even then slipping into the confines of the modern world. Beston’s lovely and enduring masterpiece never bows to sentimentality but maintains an instinctive and sympathetic understanding of the enigmatic ordering of nature.
*First published in the Atomic Tomorrow, February 2005.
A Year in Books/Day 20: The Outermost House
- Title: The Outermost House A Year of Life on the Great beach of Cape Cod
- Author: Henry Beston
- Year Published: Original Edition-1928/This Edition-2003 (An Owl Book Henry Holt and Company)
- Year Purchased: 2004
- Source: Bas Bleu
- About:
Henry Beston’s classic masterpiece details his year spent on Cape Cod ,in a house of his own design, amidst nature’s ever-changing cruelty and splendor.
- Motivation: I was moved by a really stellar reader review in the Bas Bleu catalogue. I’m immensely satisfied that I did, as it subtly yet powerfully changed my life.
- Times Read: 2
- Random Excerpt/Page 118: “One great sea drowned all the five. Men on the beach saw it coming and shouted, the men on the deckhouse shouted and were heard, and then the wave broke, hiding the tragic fragment in a sluice of foam and wreckage. When this had poured away, the men on the afterhouse were gone. A head was visible for a minute, and then another drifting southward, and then there was nothing but sea.”
- Happiness Scale: 10++
A Year in Books/Day 19: Twilight at Monticello
- Title: Twilight at Monticello The Final Years of Thomas Jefferson
- Author: Alan Pell Crawford
- Year Published: 2008 (Random House)
- Year Purchased: 2010
- Source: Book-of-the-Month Club
- About: A microscopically close telling of the third President of the United States’ final years.
- Motivation: Honestly? This was automatically sent to me after I forgot to mail in the silly little book club card declining the honor. I kept it and finally decided to read it a few months later.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 196: “Jefferson had envisioned his “academical village” as a beacon of Enlightenment learning in the New World. By late 1820, however, he had come to regard the University of Virginia as an outpost of strict construction, fighting a rearguard action to determine how the U.S. Constitution was to be interpreted and applied. These may or may not have been mutually exclusive educational functions. But if they could not be reconciled, it was clear to Jefferson which should take precedence.”
- Happiness Scale: 9
A Year in Books/Day 18: A Simple Story
- Title: A Simple Story
- Author: Elizabeth Inchbald
- Year Published: 1791/this edition 1988 (Oxford University Press)
- Year Purchased: 2006
- Source: A now-defunct Buffalo, New York bookstore
- About: An audacious yet thoughtful novel by a truly trailblazing female writer, ‘A Simple Story’ should be read by anyone claiming an interest in women’s history or fine literature.
- Motivation: See above. Elizabeth Inchbald, a woman writing at a time when that was hardly a blessing, needs to be rediscovered. I squealed when I saw this book sitting in the stall. This edition also boasts a lovely Vigee Le Brun reproduction on the front cover.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 1: “It is said, a book should be read with the same spirit with which it has been written. In that case, fatal must be the reception of this-for the writer frankly avows, that during the time she has been writing it, she has suffered every quality and degree of weariness and lassitude, into which no other employment could have betrayed her.”
-
Happiness Scale: 9
Quote
“What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure.”-Samuel Johnson.
A Year in Books/Day 17: King of Comedy
- Title: King of Comedy
- Author: Mack Sennett with Cameron Shipp
- Year Published: 1954/This Edition: 1990 (Mercury House)
- Year Purchased: 1994/1995
- Source: Walden Books
- About: This autobiography of one of the progenitors of film-and the creator of The Keystone Kops and
Sennett Bathing Beauties-needs to be taken with a generous grain of salt. Fortunately, even a well-scrubbed telling of the heady early days of Hollywood-where Sennett oversaw Charlie Chaplin and Mabel Normand at the start of their careers-remains considerably more entertaining than fiction.
- Motivation: Mabel Normand, Mabel Normand, Mabel Normand! Oh, and a genuine-behind-the-scenes peek at movie-making when it was still being invented and defined.
- Times Read: 3
- Random Excerpt/Page 138: “We became scientists in custard. A man named Greenburg, who ran a small restaurant-bakery near the studio, became a pie-throwing entrepreneur. Our consumption was so enormous that this man got rich. After several experiments he invented a special Throwing Pie, just right in heft and consistency, filled with paste and inedible. He lost most of his eating customers when he began to sell them throwing custards by mistake.”
- Happiness: 9 for atmosphere/6 for veracity
Voices from the Grave #2: Robert Lowell Reading ‘Epilogue’
‘Epilogue’ from ‘Day by Day’ (1977).
Yet why not say what happened?
A Year in Books/Day 16: Secrets of the Flesh
- Title: Secrets of the Flesh A Life of Colette
- Author: Judith Thurman
- Year Published: 1999 (The Ballantine Publishing Company)
- Year Purchased: 2005/2006
- Source: Barnes & Noble clearance rack
- About: This perceptive, well researched biography of the great French writer and sensualist is the one to top.
- Motivation: Colette was intelligent, talented, witty, complex , contradictory, fluid and far ahead of her time. Perhaps best of all, she was never boring.
- Times Read: 2
- Random Excerpt/Page 215: “Colette herself thought it “worth remarking” that the intimate friends of her years as a vagabond, “the true and faithful ones,” were all “luckless and irremediably sad.” She considered that it might be “the solidarity of unhappiness that unites us” but decided that it wasn’t. She “attracted and retained the depressives, the solitaires,” she reasoned, because they were simply fellow misfits, unencumbered by families or convention, and “dedicated to a life of seclusion or wandering, as I am.”
- Happiness Scale: 9 1/2
The Dead Writers Round-Up: 14th-18th January
- John Dos Passos was born on 1/14/1896. “A man’s got to work for more than himself and his kids to feel right.”
- Lewis Carroll died on 1/14/1898. “I can’t go back to yesterday because I was a different person then.” (‘Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland’)
- Tillie Olsen was born on 1/14/1912. “Women have the right to say: this is surface, this falsifies reality, this degrades.”
- Anaïs Nin died on 1/14/1977. “Good things happen to those who hustle.”
- Jean-Baptiste Moliere was born on 1/15/1622. “A learned fool is more a fool than an ignorant fool.”
- Earl Wilson died on 1/16/1987. “If you wouldn’t write it and sign it, don’t say it.”
- Anne Brontë was born on 1/17/1820. Anne was the last-born of the Brontë brood and the author of 2 novels (‘Agnes Grey‘ and ‘The Tenant of Wildfell Hall‘).
- Betty Smith died on 1/17/1972. “Look at everything as though you were seeing it for the first time or the last time. Then your time on earth will be filled with glory.”
- Gregory Corso died on 1/17/2001. “The most important of the beat poets…a really true poet with an original voice.”-Nancy Peters.
- A.A. Milne was born on 1/18/1882. The A.A. stood for Alan Alexander.
- Rudyard Kipling died on 1/18/1936. “Gardens are not made by singing ‘Oh, how beautiful,’ and sitting in the shade.”
