Thursday, September 06, 2007

HELLO READERS!

Been reading so much that I haven't had time to update blog. Have had bad asthma attacks this summer due to high temperatures (some days over 100) so I've definitely had time to read. Maybe too much.

Is it possible to become addicted to silence? I think I might be. I've stopped listening to music while I read. I become completely absorbed in what I'm reading and can ignore most outside sounds. But I still pay attention to the dog (foster dog is gone, with new one on the way) and the cats.

And I'm finding it easier to write. I think I've managed to find, despite reading suspense novel after suspense novel, some inner peace that allows me to let go and enjoy creating. Now let me be clear about something. This work is mainly crap, a sort of exploration of writing what comes to my head. I'm trying the "write-a-50,000 word-novel-in-a-month" method (actually, I'm stretching the time period to 33 days, which means 1500 words a day), so there isn't much time to plan.

The book about National Novel Writing Month (an international phenomenon that takes placed every November) is called
No Plot, No Problem. http://www.nanowrimo.org/

I definitely have no plot; hopefully, this won't stop me dead in my tracks. I'll post my words count soon.


Book the day is
No Plot? No Problem! : A Low-Stress, High Velocity Guide to Writing a Novel in 30 Days by Chris Baty. Exceptionally helpful for my project.

Monday, February 26, 2007

"Interview with the Vampire", "Skylight Confessions"

I am re-reading Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice. It is genuinely frightening and creepy--how interesting that now, in the last novels of the Vampire Chronicles Lestat seems tame. I am hoping to read the entire series along with my regular reading.

Other recent reads include: Skylight Confessions by Alice Hoffman, which was a wonderful addition to her body of work. She handles grief, drug addiction, and distant parents with a lighter touch than in her previous novels. At first her characters' traits seem air-brushed on, but as the story progresses, they become richer and fuller. The last chapter will leave you breathless with anticipation, and I found the open ending appropriate and not at all frustrating.

Of course, since my last entry, I've read some more titles--I'll get to those later!

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

"The Italian Secretary" & "Beneath a Marble Sky"

I'm still working on Proust in Love and Farewell, My Queen. And I'm finishing the short hommage to Doyle and Sherlock Holmes, The Italian Secretary, by the ingenious Caleb Carr. He has the style down pat. And for week's end, I'll be reading about the building of the Taj Mahal in Beneath a Marble Sky. The book club here at the library will by discussing the book on Monday with the author, John Shors, by phone. Promises to be fun!

Monday, January 29, 2007

"The Terror", "Proust in Love", and "The Road to Middle-Earth"

Books I'm reading or have recently read will now show up in the librarything sidebar.

The Terror
was a 700+ page terror, but a boon for fans of suspense, adventure, historical fiction, and fantasy. It reminded me of a Preston/Child novel. Loved it. I read it in a day and a half, partly because I was sick and partly because the "weather outside was frightful."

Proust in Love is an interesting combination of biography and literary criticism. How could Proust's amorous adventures not affect his incredible book, which is considered the apogee of novelistic studies of love in its multiple forms? William Carter makes his point delicately, with intimate details from Proust's correspondence and from biographies written by those who took their shine from his luster.

The Road to Middle-Earth is more pure literary criticism, but of definite interest to fans of Tolkien's work. Shippey makes the argument that Middle-Earth began as an exploration of Old English words for which there was no definition. Tolkien knew that the author of Beowulf would not have used certain words without their having a meaning, if not being literal things, at the time of composition. Leaves much to ponder about the history of our language and the depth of Tolkien's thinking.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Me as a Simpson character--Assignment 7



Please see weeworld avatar. It's me walking the dogs in work clothes. Yes, I have a hat that looks like that. My father bought one for Jodi and me in Sweden. They're awesome!