- Title: Murder on the Menu Cordon Bleu Stories of Crime and Mystery
- Editor: Peter Haining
- Year Published: 1991 (Carroll & Graf Publishers, Inc.)
- Year Purchased: I have no idea when this book was purchased, but it was given to me in 2010
- Source: A hand-me-down from my mom
- About: Murder on the Menu is a collection of stories about killing people by poisoning their food, or other dark dinnertime deeds. So fun! So lighthearted! So hunger-inducing! I love literary meals. I think it’s fascinating how authors represent the most basic of human needs in their writings. If you’ve never looked at fiction from that angle, you should give it a try. This crime compilation naturally focuses on the macabre, but the principle stands. The selection of authors is unexpectedly varied, offering a wider appeal than similar books.
- Motivation: People are always giving me books they no longer want. They know I will be kind. Or sell them when they aren’t looking.
- Times Read: 1
- Random Excerpt/Page 76: “Captain Michel had but one arm, which he found useful when he lit his pipe. He was an old sea dog whose acquaintance, with that of four other old salts, I made one evening on the open front of a cafe in the Vieille Darse, Toulon, where I was taking an appetiser. And in this way we fell into the habit of foregathering over a glass within a stone’s throw of the rippling wave and the swinging dinghys, about the hour when the sun sinks behind Tamaris.”
- Happiness Scale: 7
Tag Archives: Writers
A Partial Inventory of Gustave Flaubert’s Personal Effects
[19 August 2012] This Week’s Lessons in Reading and Writing
What I’ve (re)learned in the last week.
- The rush that comes with writing fiction is like nothing else in the world. It feels entirely different from writing reviews or essays; not better, just different.
- Liking writers, artists or performers is one thing. Enjoying fictionalized accounts of their lives is another. Some of these books are wonderful; others are boring or just plain bad. I am currently reading one of the former and one of the middle. The disparity in levels of enjoyment is huge.
- Outlining an entire story and writing the opening 3 paragraphs in your head whilst still in bed is the best way to start a day.
- I feel sexiest while tapping away at my keyboard, trying to bang out everything that is in my head before it dissolves into nothingness. Even though I am usually wearing yoga pants, a tee, too much moisturizer and a baker’s dozen of hairpins.
- Taking five books and three magazines (and my Nook) on a road trip lasting 60 hours, start to finish, somehow does not seem excessive.
- The WordPress community is just that: a community of supportive, wonderful, mostly awesome people. Some of them even allow you to write short stories based on their photographs. Thank you, lovelies.
- Even when crazy shit happens (like this), reading a book makes it better.
A Year in Books/Day 193: Elegy for Iris
- Title: Elegy for Iris
- Author: John Bayley
- Year Published: 1999 (St. Martin’s Press)
- Year Purchased: 2001?
- Source: Barnes & Noble clearance rack
- About: I get it, I really do: Iris Murdoch is one of those love them or hate them writers. The Sea, The Sea is one of my favourite novels of the later years of the 20th century, but I understand why her work isn’t for everyone. I don’t care where you stand on the subject of Iris-as-writer, if you aren’t affected to the point of tears whilst reading her husband’s memoir it can mean only one thing. You are dead inside. Continue reading
A Year in Books/Day 192: The Right Word II
- Title: The Right Word II A Concise Thesaurus Based on the New American Heritage Dictionary
- Staff: Houghton Mifflin Company Reference Division
- Year Published: 1983 (Houghton Mifflin Company)
- Year Purchased: 1980s
- Source: My lovely mother
- About: Concise is the key here. The Right Word II is the sparest thesaurus I’ve ever read. Although not meant or marketed as such, I think it is ideal for a bright child’s use: tiny, portable, informative and easy to navigate. I relied on it for countless elementary age writing projects. I was a budding playwright then, before switching to short stories and essays in middle school. During the genre shift, I upgraded to a thicker, wordier thesaurus. I still own both of them, and every other reference book I have ever used. Even though I have not consulted this one in years, there is so much nostalgia attached to it that I cannot throw or give it away. It reminds me of why I wanted to be a writer in the first place, so it will live forever on a shelf in my studio.
- Motivation: I didn’t need this for school, as one might assume given my age. I’ve always loved reference books, and have been collecting them since I was 5.
- Times Read: Unknown
- Random Excerpt/Page vi: “Discriminated Synonymies. The foundation of The Right Word II is a block of synonym paragraphs in which the meaning shared by all the words is supplemented by additional material that discriminates the various shades of meaning for each word.”
- Happiness Scale: 10 (as a child)
[15th August Inspiration Board] Visually Inclined
My writer’s brain requires a lot of different stimuli to keep on churning fast enough to function. A slowed down thought process is detrimental to my creativity. If you jumped out on the obvious limb and guessed that I probably have a hard time meditating, you were correct. Although I relish being alone, I do not handle quiet well. I need noise: a slightly too-loud television, a wide-faced Labrador crunching on a bone, a cat scratching on a door frame, low but audible music (The Clash or Patti Smith) pulsing from my laptop, discordantly lovely street noise breaking in through a few open windows, dogs racing and barking down the halls. Sirens. Car alarms. Screaming, skittering children. The sound of my bare feet beating against a table leg. A bus breaking to a stop. I could write with a baby squawking in my face. Noise. It’s beautiful. Continue reading
Quote
“It seems to me it cannot be wrong to read good poetry an entire morning if you happen to be particularly receptive in that respect, because when you are poetically receptive you see so much of life behind the words.”-Wanda Gág
Voices from the Grave #32: Edward Gorey Interview
Edward Gorey* talking about his influences.
*I’m a huge Edward Gorey fangirl.
A Reading List a Mile Long: Daedalus Books Midsummer 2012 Edition, Part II
Here’s the companion piece to Part I, delivered as promised.
- Travelling Heroes In the Epic Age of Homer by Robin Lane Fox
- America Dreaming How Youth Changed America in the 60’s by Laban Carrick Hill
- Fanny and Adelaide The Lives of the Remarkable Kemble Sisters by Ann Blainey
- The Booklover’s Guide to the Midwest A Literary Tour by Greg Holden
- Script and Scribble The Rise and Fall of Handwriting by Kitty Burns Florey
- Flannery: A Life of Flannery O’Connor by Brad Gooch
- Rimbaud: The Double Life of a Rebel by Edmund White
- The Tremendous World I Have Inside My Head-Franz Kafka: A Biographical Essay by Louis Begley
- The Talented Miss Highsmith: The Secret Life and Serious Art of Patricia Highsmith by Joan Schenkar
- Woman of Letters Irene Nemirovsky and Suite Francaise by Irene Nemirovsky
- My Paper Chase True Stories of Vanished Times by Harold Evans
- Paris to the Past Traveling Through French History by Train by Ina Caro
- Vedic Ecology: Practical Wisdom for Surviving the 21st Century by Ranchor Prime
- The Life of David by Robert Pinsky
- Saint Augustine, Tarsicius J. van Bavel, ed.
- All Hopped Up and Ready to Go Music from the Streets of New York 1927-77 by Tony Fletcher
- The Red Prince The Secret Lives of a Habsburg Archduke by Timothy Snyder
- Renaissance Florence on 5 Florins a Day by Charles FitzRoy
I’ve learned a few things from typing out this list.
- It should have been split into 3 parts.
- I am obviously intrigued by anyone with a secret life.
- Literary biographies are even more of a personal thing than I thought.
Plus, a bonus revelation:
- If I read all of these books (and everything else on my ever-fattening To-Read List) I would not only never write another word, I would spend 20 hours a day reading in bed. For the rest of my life.
The Dead Writers Round-Up: 9th-12th August
- Hermann Hesse died on 8/9/1962. “Everything becomes a little different as soon as it is spoken out loud.”
- Louise Bogan was born on 8/11/1897. “Your work is carved out of agony as a statue is carved out of marble.”
- Edith Wharton died on 8/11/1937. “Life is always a tightrope or a feather bed. Give me the tightrope.”
- William Blake died on 8/12/1827. “A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees.”
- Mary Roberts Rinehart was born on 8/12/1876. “The writing career is not a romantic one. The writer’s life may be colorful, but his work itself is rather drab.”
- Radclyffe Hall was born on 8/12/1880. “The world hid its head in the sands of convention, so that by seeing nothing it might avoid Truth.”-The Well of Loneliness
- Helen Hunt Jackson died on 8/12/1885. “Bee to the blossom, moth to the flame; Each to his passion; what’s in a name?
- Thomas Mann died on 8/12/1955. “A writer is somebody for whom writing is more difficult than it is for other people.”
[All images are in the Public Domain and are courtesy of Wikimedia Commons]