Bonus Book Review: Dorothy L. Sayers: The Centenary Celebration

Since I do not own a copy of Dorothy L. Sayers: The Centenary Celebration, this entry qualifies as a bonus review.

  • Title: Dorothy L. Sayers: The Centenary Celebration
  • Edited by: Alzina Stone Dale
  • Year Published: 1993 (Walker and Company New York)
  • Year Purchased: N/A
  • Source: This book is on loan from my dear Momma.
  • About: Let me begin my confessing that I have, at most, read one Dorothy L. Sayers book. I cannot be sure, because it was a long time ago and I have nothing to compare it against. Did it feature Lord Peter Wimsey? Likely, as I know it was a mystery novel. I have a near perfect memory when it comes to everything I’ve read as an adult. Thousands upon thousands of books, and I remember them all. Except, it seems, the one in question. Perhaps I am thinking of something else, and have never really held a Sayers book in my hands. I specialize in dead female writers-not as weird as it sounds, rest assured-but remained in near total darkness about one of the quintessential queens of mystery until a couple of weeks ago. Continue reading

The Dead Writers Round-Up: February 17th-21st

  • Jean-Baptiste Molière died on 2/17/1673. “Things are only worth what one makes them worth.” (The School for Wives; Tartuffe; The Misanthrope; Amphitryon)
  • Heinrich Heine died on 2/17/1856. “Wherever they burn books they will also, in the end, burn human beings.” (The North Sea: Cycle I and II; The Town of Lucca; The Salon I)
  • Dorothy Canfield Fisher was born on 2/17/1879. “Those who love deeply never grow old; they may die of old age, but they die young.” (The Bent Twig; Her Son’s Wife; Seasoned Timber)
  • Audre Lord was born on 2/18/1934. “If I didn’t define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people’s fantasies for me and eaten alive.” (The First Cities; Coal; The Cancer Journals)
  • André Breton was born on 2/19/1896. “Words make love with one another.” (Surrealist Manifesto; A Corpse; Nadja; The Automatic Message)
  • Carson McCullers was born on 2/19/1917. “I live with the people I create and it has always made my essential loneliness less keen.” (The Heart is a Lonely Hunter; Reflections in a Golden Eye; The Member of the Wedding)
  • André Gide died on 2/19/1951. “To know how to free oneself is nothing; the arduous thing is to know what to do with one’s freedom.” (The Fruits of the Earth; The Immoralist; Strait is the Gait; Corydon)
  • Knut Hamsun died on 2/19/1952. “I can’t even make up a rhyme about an umbrella, let alone death and life and eternal peace.” (Hunger; Mysteries; Pan; In Wonderland; On Overgrown Paths) Continue reading

Legends of Steragos: Why Our Kids Need Storybook Heroines Who Clobber the Witch, Save the Prince, and Blow Up the Tower

Here’s a fun thing I’m doing this month:

Manuscript, Red Marker at the Ready

Manuscript, red marker at the ready.

This manuscript is spending February in my hot, little hands. When it grows up, it is going to be a book aimed at young readers. Not just any book aimed at young readers, mind you, but an amazing and necessary book aimed at young readers. It’s a feminist action adventure story set in the 1920s. The protagonists are a trio of cliche-defying princesses  who use their intelligence, talent, wits, friendship and sense of fair play to rule a kingdom, save a prince or two, and defend their people from evil. They are amazing role models for girls (and boys) who think that storybook princesses can be so much more than pink damsels-in-distress. How badass is that?

KM Scott is one of the most talented people I have ever met. He is one of my closest friends, and is a regular contributor to A Small Press Life. I’ve been lucky enough to work on a number of projects with him, in various capacities, for nearly a decade. Indeed, he gave me my first real writing and editing job back in 2004. He’s brilliant, and so is his book. I’ll let him explain the idea behind Legends. In his impassioned words:

“Being a fan of comics, cartoons, and superheroes, I loved to share my interests with my students who were eager to talk about Spider-Man, the Avengers, and Batman.  But I was constantly frustrated when it came to finding anything that featured strong female heroes, super-powered or otherwise, to draw my girls into the conversation. Time and again, the girls were more inclined towards talking about their favorite princesses.

Then one day, it hit me:  I could write my own story about super-heroic princesses.  These ladies wouldn’t just sit around in some tower waiting to be rescued by a handsome prince from an evil witch – they’d clobber the witch, rescue the prince, and then blow up the tower.  But violence wouldn’t be the only means of dealing with their enemies;  these would be three smart, talented young women whose love of adventure and zest for life were matched only by their devotion to the freedom and safety of their subjects.”

As his editor, I can tell you: boom, mission accomplished! I know that he has done all that he set out to do, and more: he has written the book I wish existed when I was a girl.

KM is self-publishing his book, with my editing assistance and  other behind-the-scenes help. Like many wonderfully talented people, he is utilizing crowd funding for his main backing. Unlike many others, his goal is incredibly reasonable and well explained: he needs a mere $600.00 to see his book to print.

Since 2009, my aim with A Small Press Life has been consistent: to use and promote my work and, more importantly, that of other independent creatives. KM is one of the worthiest artists I know.

I hope you do not find my plea on his behalf rude. Although it exists, my direct stake in this venture is minimal. It is all about my incredible friend and a profound work that needs to be read by as many young people as possible. It is my wish that you will at least check out his Kickstarter page to see what I am talking about. Once you do, I know you will fall in love with the project as readily and passionately as I did when I read the initial synopsis.

Crowd sourcing is not just for the lazy or untalented, and is often used by the renegade visionaries that make art and culture so appealing and forward-thinking. KM is one of those artists, and his work is important-for us, and all of the wee ones in our lives. Every dollar donated is a dollar that is going directly to the production and, for anything over the $600.00 goal, marketing of the book. Thank you for listening, and for being such valued readers and supporters of A Small Press Life.

LEGENDS OF STERAGOS KICKSTARTER

A Year in Books/Days 228-229: Frontier Madam/Amedeo Modigliani

FRONTIER MADAM THE LIFE OF DELL BURKE, LADY OF LUSK

  • Title: Frontier Madam The Life of Dell Burke, Lady of Lusk
  • Author: June Willson Read
  • Year Published: 2008 (A Two Dot Book)
  • Year Purchased: 2012
  • Source: Half Price Books
  • About: I really wanted to like this book. It has elements that make it ideally suited to my weird tastes. The narrative focuses on an interesting period and place little discussed elsewhere, and the heroine is something else: strong, fearless, unconventional, and largely forgotten. All things that make my heart flutter with anticipation. If the whole was as good as any of the components were in life, it would be a great read. Instead, it is unsatisfactory. Not bad or shoddy, but oddly flat, simplistic and bloodless. Dell Burke was a girl from a solid working class background, with a loving family but few prospects. A tale as old as time, of course. She turned a pragmatic foray into prostitution into a decades-long career as a powerful, wealthy, fair, civic-minded madam in Wyoming. The contents of her life could probably fill several books. Unfortunately, the lady was something of an enigma. The material for an interesting, complex biography just isn’t there. What we are given is a civic history of Lusk, Wyoming filled with third and fourth hand anecdotes about its most notorious resident. Many of the brief stories are entertaining, but they add little to the flow and structure of the book. The passages of imagined dialogue, which are mercifully few, are stilted and unbelievable: a great idea poorly executed. The conjecture used to fill in the gaps between anecdotes and facts is boring and without colour. I wish I had bigger things, nicer things, to say about this book, but the story is paper-thin. The biographer tries hard. Hailing from the same part of Wyoming as her subject, she is genuinely connected to the legend of Dell Burke. It’s obvious that she is excited to share this remarkable woman with the rest of the world. Perhaps that is the problem: whilst the shell of the legend is intact, the substance of the real woman is long gone. There’s nothing left but a disjointed jumble of local in-jokes worn threadbare and a vague memory woven into the collective subconscious of the town’s residents. It’s no wonder that this book reads like a padded-out pamphlet for an annual town festival in Lusk. Continue reading