“A writer is not so much someone who has something to say as he is someone who has found a process that will bring about new things he would not have thought of if he had not started to say them.”-William Edgar Stafford
Tag Archives: Writers
View from My Studio
This is the view from my writing studio:

Old Apartment House
It’s what I see when I look up from my desk, and has been for nearly two years.
Will I miss it when we move? I’ll know in a couple of months.
[Book Nerd Links] Trollope News, and Four Other Compelling Links
- Downton’s Fellowes adapting Anthony Trollope novel for TV [BBC NEWS]
- What’s So Great About Young Writers? [The New York Times]
- MH Abrams, Norton anthology founder, influential critic, dead at age 102 [The Guardian]
- Authors’ income ‘at breaking point’ [BBC News]
- Stereotype-Busting Women In Historical Fiction [Huff Post Books]
[Alternative Muses] Two for the Road: Ralph Waldo Emerson/Maud Gonne Mashup
“To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.”-Ralph Waldo Emerson (died 27 April 1882)

Maud Gonne (died 27 April 1953)
This is What My Saturday Looks Like…
I even have a yellow dog sleeping at my feet. I’m just missing a gorgeous gown.
My soundtrack for the day:
Happy Earth Day!
“The earth has music for those who listen.”-George Santayana

A Hymn to Spring by Cecil Gordon Lawson, 1871-1872

Spring Symphony by Abraham Manievich, 1912

Spring by Vitold Byalynitsky-Birulya, 1899
So Long, Marie!
Marie Corelli died on 21 April 1924:

Portrait of Marie Corelli by F. Adrian
“No one is contented in this world, I believe. There is always something left to desire, and the last thing longed for always seems the most necessary to happiness.”-Marie Corelli, A Romance of Two Worlds
Quote

Mary Oliver Quote
The Great Villain Blogathon
I’m taking part in this year’s The Great Villain Blogathon. My review of Blanche Fury (1948), starring Valerie Hobson and Stewart Granger, is up on my blog Font and Frock.
Illicit Love is a Killing Thing

Valerie Hobson and Stewart Granger in Blanche Fury (1948)
[Merrily I Read] Book Review: Girl About Town, Chapters Four-Five
CHAPTER IV:
A man and woman are having a conversation; but it is no ordinary conversation, for they are flirting! The opening of Chapter IV finds Our Heroine, Anne Hartley, and her train buddy, Peter Foster (a.k.a. Nice Young Man), engaging in flimsy banter about…nothing particularly interesting. Perhaps this is just the nature of flirting? Only the participants find it amusing or gratifying.
“You don’t look like the type to be ordered about.”
“No?”
“I suppose now you do the ordering?” He chuckled with amusement. “I’d love to see you in school. Tell me, where is the school? Can I come and see you there one day?”
“Indeed you can’t! You’ll probably get me the sack.”
“I shall hang about for you till you come out, then.”
“Laughter played around Anne’s lips. “Not if I know it, young man!” she thought.
Someone needs to tell Peter that joking about stalking is never attractive. Of course, neither is lying about being a school teacher when one is actually a lingerie model; but he doesn’t know that yet. I wonder how long Anne will be able to keep her “secret” from her fellow house-guests? She appears in adverts. Shouldn’t someone recognize her?
After what seems like hours of chit-chat, it is finally time for dinner. Seating arrangements at country house-parties are strange, mysterious things–at least to us mere mortals. However, obvious plot devices are much easier to fathom. Our Heroine is, therefore, seated between Robin and the Nice Young Man. Because, of course she is… Continue reading
