- Title: Born for Liberty A History of Women in America
- Author: Sara M. Evans
- Year Published: 1989 (The Free Press)
- Year Purchased: 2001/2002
- Source: Unknown
- About: An intelligent, critical study of the changing nature of women’s place in American society.
- Motivation: I’m a feminist who enjoys a good, solid read on the subject.
- Times Read: 2
- Random Excerpt/Page 85: “By the 1830s the social worlds occupied by the genteel and by the working classes were distinct and rarely overlapped. A lack of familiarity with one another’s cultural patterns-and with the circumstances that explained them-quickly evolved into suspicion or contempt. Middle-class reformers often viewed the lower classes as a breed apart, and readily condemned their ideas of domestic comfort and standards of morals far below their own.”
- Happiness Scale: 9
Author Archives: maedez
“Be yourself. Above all,…
Quote
“Be yourself. Above all, let who you are, what you believe, shine through every sentence you write, every piece you finish.”-John Jakes
Poetic Grief
My husband’s Aunt died today. After soothing his immediate grief, the first thing my mind turned to was poetry, death poetry: one of the three essential subjects of literature (and life), along with birth and love. Every poet that I can think of has touched on the theme, often numerous times. This is a piece by Rainer Maria Rilke, offered here as a lovely and sad filler whilst we deal with more pressing events.
‘On Hearing of a Death’ by Rainer Maria Rilke
We lack all knowledge of this parting. Death
does not deal with us. We have no reason
to show death admiration, love or hate;
his mask of feigned tragic lament gives us
a false impression. The world’s stage is still
filled with roles which we play. While we worry
that our performances may not please,
death also performs, although to no applause.
But as you left us, there broke upon this stage
a glimpse of reality, shown through the slight
opening through which you disappeared: green,
evergreen, bathed in sunlight, actual woods.
We keep on playing, still anxious, our difficult roles
declaiming, accompanied by matching gestures
as required. But your presence so suddenly
removed from our midst and from our play, at times
overcomes us like a sense of that other
reality: yours, that we are so overwhelmed
and play our actual lives instead of the performance,
forgetting altogether the applause.
A Year in Books/Day 10: The Filmgoer’s Companion
- Title: The Filmgoer’s Companion Third Edition
- Author: Leslie Halliwell (with a Foreword by Alfred Hitchcock)
- Year Published: 1970 (Hill and Wang New York)
- Year Purchased: 1990’s
- Source: Antique Building, The Ohio State Fair
- About: A dense, 1,072 page listing of nearly every player in movie history (up to the 1960’s), complete with pertinent biographical and career data, this is an info junkie’s dream. There is nothing extraneous, with Halliwell offering up facts and not opinions.
- Motivation: I love old movie stars, especially those of the once-famous-now-obscure variety. For this reason, I collect vintage fan magazines and out-of-print, pre-1990’s genre books. Every cinema buff should own one edition of ‘The Filmgoer’s Companion’.
- Times Read: 2
- Random Excerpt/Page 7: “Speaking personally, I don’t know whether it is more flattering or disturbing to find oneself pinned down like a butterfly in a book which recounts all the macabre details of one’s career. But being a stickler for detail myself, I must, and do, submit; and I wish the enterprise well.”
- Happiness Scale: 10+++ (although IMDB is splendid, sometimes only a book will do)
Voices from the Grave #1: Robert Graves Reading ‘To Juan at the Winter Solstice’
‘To Juan at the Winter Solstice’ from ‘Poems 1938-1945’ (1946).
There is one story and one story only That will prove worth your telling
Voices from the Grave-Some Words of Introduction
Reading is thought of as a silent pursuit, a psychic communion between two intellects and imaginations: those of author and reader. Yet, the space between those points is filled with a cacophony of phantom voices; characters go about their business as they would in the real world: shouting, whispering, crying, laughing. Your voice, too, is heard, as you process your own ideas and opinions. The quiet, firm mastermind behind the subtleties of plot and style is there, guiding everything behind a mask of neutrality: gagged by choice but interacting with everyone, across an expanse of space and time that refuses to be confined.
If you have ever been to a book reading you know what a wonderful experience it is to hear a writer read from one of their works. Maybe their words have been echoing for years in your head, until the only voice associated with them is your own. Hearing them spoken by the person who strung them together in such a serendipitous way may be jarring or amazing, at first, but surely it is always exhilarating. When many of your favorite authors are of the long-dead variety, setting off to the neighborhood Barnes & Noble for a Thursday night listen-and-greet is out of the question.
If we cannot travel back to the 1920s to catch Edna St. Vincent Millay on one of her famous speaking tours, or to the 1960s to hear Sylvia Plath give a radio reading, we can do the next best thing. That realm-of-nearly-all-things-are-possible, the Internet, is accessible with a few clicks of the keyboard. We are going to gather our favorite clips of writers speaking and permanently park them right here, under the auspices of ‘Voices from the Grave’.
First up: Robert Graves.
The Dead Writers Round-Up: 9th-13th January
Gallery
This gallery contains 7 photos.
Simone de Beauvoir was born on 1/9/1908. “Art is an attempt to integrate evil.” Katherine Mansfield died on 1/9/1923. “Could we change our attitude, we should not only see life differently, but life itself would come to be different.” Countee … Continue reading
A Year in Books/Day 9: The Greek Myths: 1
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Title: The Greek Myths: 1
- Author: Robert Graves
- Year Published: First Published 1955/Reprinted 1969 (Penguin Books)
- Year Purchased: 2009
- Source: Goodwill
- About: This detailed and highly readable re-telling of various Greek myths almost reads like a compelling biographical dictionary.
- Motivation: As a child, I fell in love with Greek mythology. The adventures of the gods and goddesses, and the mortals (un)lucky enough to be consumed by their passions, seemed the natural next step along from fairy tales. Also: Robert Graves. I’m always happy to read anything he wrote. With nearly 150 published texts to his credit, I regularly stumble over ‘new’ works by this long-dead master.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 131: “Enraged because Zeus had confined their brothers, the Titans, in Tartarus, certain tall and terrible giants, with long locks and beards, and serpent-tails for feet, plotted an assault on Heaven. They had been born from Mother Earth at Thracian Phlegra, twenty-four in number.”
- Happiness Scale: 10 (for warm, fuzzy childhood memories and because mythology is better than any soap opera or reality program)
A Year in Books/Day 8: At Home A Short History of Private Life
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Title: At Home A Short History of Private Life
- Author: Bill Bryson
- Year Published: 2010 (Doubleday)
- Year Purchased: 2010
- Source: History Book Club
- About: In the author’s words, he set out to “write a history of the world without leaving home”. He accomplished this by equating the rooms in a typical Victorian home with their worldly counterparts (i.e. the bedroom=sex, the bathroom=hygiene).
- Motivation: I love Bill Bryson. ‘A Short History of Nearly Everything’ and ‘Bryson’s Dictionary of Troublesome Words’ are well-worn personal favorites. I am also a sucker for Victorian history; anything with a sociological aspect easily catches my fancy.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 181: “Not everyone got the hang of tea immediately. The poet Robert Southey related the story of a lady in the country who received a pound of tea as a gift from a city friend when it was still a novelty. Uncertain how to engage with it, she boiled it up in a pot, spread the leaves on toast with butter and salt, and served it to her friends, who nibbled it gamely and declared it interesting but not quite to their taste. Elsewhere, however, it raced ahead, in tandem with sugar.”
- Happiness Scale: 10
[Literary News]-The Save Undershaw Preservation Trust
As part of a new series on creative spaces, I’ll be writing more on the subject of writers’ homes over the coming months. Until then, check out this site for information on the plan currently afoot (hehe) to save Arthur Conan Doyle’s beloved home, Undershaw.
