Category: What I’m Reading


A county route shield for a Morris County, New...

A county route shield for a Morris County, New Jersey road (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Spider Web” is a thriller about a drug epidemic set in Morris County, NJ, told from the perspective of a police detective and a fashion model.  So far, I’ve read only four chapters, but it is a gripping novel. I like those kinds of thrillers that I put down only when more urgent matters get in the way. You know, the kind that keep you up nights, reading.

I’ve read a previous novel by R.O. Palmer, called “Picasso Prince.” Also a thriller, it takes place on a cruise ship carrying an art collection worth millions of dollars. There is an unexpectetd plot twist near the end. Highly recommended!

 

Book Giveaway

English: Strawberry fields. The rows of straw ...

I want to pass on to one of my blog readers my copy of the book I just finished, free for you to keep forever, featured in my previous post A Wilder Life by Wendy McClure. Here’s how:

1. Go to my website, www.ecwordsmith.com

2. Click on the “Send Me a Message” button found on any page (except “About Me” – I have to fix that!)

3. Type “Book Giveaway” in the subject line.

4. I will draw one respondent’s name Friday morning, who I will announce here in my blog. The winner will need to provide me with a mailing address to send the book to.

5. Promise! I will not save your names, email addresses or mailing address. This is just so I can pass this book on to someone who wants to read it. That’s what friends do, right?

Author Laura Ingalls Wilder used her experienc...

Like millions of girls who grew up reading the Laura Ingalls Wilder books, I felt an affinity with Laura and the pioneer lifestyle. So when I saw The Wilder Life in a book store on my recent vacation, I bought it immediately.

I’ve since learned from reading it that there are actually several others books in publication exploring various means of “getting close” to Laura. Most by visiting the sites mentioned in the series, some by recreating recipes, to name a few.

What I didn’t know is that there is only one original building remaining from the emtire series of books – Almanzo Wilder’s childhood farm house in Upstate NY.

Ms. McClure also writes of the disparity between the books and the TV series, the latter being good entertainment, but with few historical facts. I knew that already and had come to terms with the TV show when it originally aired. I tended to keep them separate in my mind, but enjoyed both because I have always been interested in the pioneers of the western expansion, aka the Overland Trail.

The overall gist of The Wilder Life is – like returning to your own childhood home, expecting everything to be as you remembered – you can’t conjure up the Ingalls family to make them seem more real. If you’re looking for Laura in the flesh, or at least 3-D, it’s not going to happen.

What is in the way? Too much time has passed, all of their various abodes have disintegrated, land has changed hands, commercialism has infected the historical sites. One can enter a reproduction, but not original sites, although there are museums displaying the Ingalls’ artifacts.

The truth is, Laura and her family lived a godawful life for the most part. Rose, Laura’s daughter, apparently grew up to be bitter and resentful, prone to depression and other disorders. Certainly not the nice little-girl story.

I found the be book is very engrossing. It  allowed me to vicariously explore what I would find, and the truths I would discover, if I were to conduct a similar search.

Recommended reading if you loved the Little House books and are ready to see the story through adult eyes.

 My friend and neighbor Joyce loaned The Journal Keeper to me for something to read by the lake last week. She couldn’t have known how it would resonate with me on many levels:

It is a non-fiction book about journal-writing. Not necessarily a how-to book, although it is that. Ms. Theroux plucked out a few consecutive years from her journal as an example of the “nuts and bolts” of journal-keeping.

I am an avid journal-keeper. In ten years, I have filled 44 journals. Doing so allows me to celebrate the highs of life even when no one else gives a rat’s behind, and therapeutically eases me through the worst parts.

Besides these obvious facets, Ms. Theroux writes about caring for her elderly mother, although her difficulties were not dementia, which my parent has. Still, many similarities.

She longed for a place to write, to think. She built a writer’s cottage (ahhh….!).

She wrote sage observations, including:

Why do we live in square structures, while everything in nature lives roundly?

Throw a birthday party for yourself where everyone brings something that inspires them

At her age, her entire life revolves around maintenence.I want to add, live a simple life that is easy to maintain. Everything you own needs to be maintained.

Keeping a journal is a way of subduing your thoughts and fears, like pinning butterflies[not that I would do that] so you can examine them more closely.

When the desire is strong enough, talent shows up like a day laborer, to help you achieve your goal.

If I am doing my part to use my talents and lead a meaningful life the universe will play ball with me, and if it doesn’t it’s not my fault.

Mark Twain had disastrous business sense. He chased after wealth, which wrecked him and his family. Had he simply stayed at home and written, he would have been solvent throughout his life.

Only people with time on their hands see clearly.

What I need is some poetry to let me rub the moments between my fingers and release the scent.

Now my life no longer revolves around things I cannot control.

I am fed by the companionable quiet of the early morning. Work, it says. Draw closer. The way is prepared for you.

 

Diary

Cover of "Writing Begins with the Breath:...

Cover via Amazon

I am in the middle of Writing Begins with the Breath. Now, I have a pretty large collection of how – to business and craft books on writing and its various manifestations (research, copyediting, copywriting, reporting, to name a few). I think I’m pretty set on bookish resources.

However full one’s library is, there’s always room for one more. I am very glad I decided on this book.

Laraine Herring is brilliant and insightful in her advice to writers. It is not a book on financial success from your writing career. Quite the opposite; writers write because we must. There is no other way of being. Writing is an art form. Where it takes you in life is largely a result of your relationship with it. Hard work is necessary, but secondary.

This book is quite unique in its perspective, and I have read a lot of books about writing.

Some key points covered in Part One:

Open up your body to receive and process creative energy

Be prepared to enter difficult areas within yourself that must be faced in order for your writing to be authentic

Have fun with your writing, but remember to be tough to shape it up as well

Write to discover what’s inside you, excavate the things that haunt you. This will reflect in your characters, make them real.

When we fight something within, we give it strength. When we embrace it, it no longer has power over us. Knowing this will free you for expression.

Believe you are making positive contributions to the world.

Hold writing close to your heart. When you feed it, it feeds you.

Think about your writing practice as a relationship. Personify it and make it a character in your life.

Be open to inspiration with humility. We can’t always pre-plan art and force a predetermined outcome.

Your writing contributes to the voice of humanity.

Shouting and judging create distance; speaking with someone, with empathy, creates a connection.

Personify your writing; make it a character in your life. Have a relationship with it.

There is not enough space here to go into more detail covered in the book. It has changed my perspective and relationship with my writing, for the better.

Greetings all! I’m not sure why, but your comments over the past couple of weeks have not been posting on my blog :( for some reason. I think I’ve corrected the glitch, and you should now see comments from the past couple of weeks.

I hope I’ve permanently fixed it. I will be responding to all of your posts in the next few

1959 Series Logo

1959 Series Logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

days.

Meanwhile, I am now reading a book by Michelle Belanger, Haunting Experiences.

Besides hard science, I happen to be interested in paranormal matters. Research of little-known realities have always fascinated me. You want something investigated? I’m your woman. Conspiracy theories, UFO’s, any mysteries draw me in and demand to see the light of day.

I am a skeptic at heart, and I enjoy proving urban legends wrong…because once one has proven something wrong, all that can be left is fact.

And I love exploring pretty much everything in the world. Now you know why I love books!

Before you que up the Twilight Zone theme, let me defend myself by saying, there surely must be more to the universe than we can comprehend. We have only five senses. How much of the electromagnetic spectrum are we unaware of, exactly, because it is out of the range of our senses to detect?

If you like to ponder such things as I do, I recommend Haunting Experiences. It is not a collection of ghost stories. It is a collection of paranormal first-hand experiences of the author, a known “sensitive.” She also considers herself a skeptic, and uses each experience as a springboard to discussing the paranormal, and our interpretations/reactions to them.

I highly recommend this book if you are at all curious about what is out there that we might not understand very well.

What I’m Reading

Sybille of Cleves by Lucas Cranach the Elder, ...

Sybille of Cleves by Lucas Cranach the Elder, 1526. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Princess of ClevesMadame de LaFayette

A French novel written in 1678,  is what we would now regard as an historical novel.  The novel was written 120 years after it takes place. It is a psychological examination of a husband and wife, Monsieur and Madame of Cleves, her lover, and the Princess of Cleves. Madame is torn between admitting certain insights about her daughter’s sexuality, since she wisely determines that doing so would implicate herself with knowlege of love and affairs gained only through personal experience. 

So she keeps her observations about her daughter the Princess of Cleves to herself while watching her crash and burn. 

Other characters are the king and queen of France and his mistress, the dauphin and queen dauphin, Mary of Scots. This novel is an insider’s view of the personal politics, gossip, and power plays between members of the French court. I find it melodramatic and quite like a soap opera. I am not quite halfway through, and find reading about the personal life of Queen Elizabeth I interesting as a result of an “insider’s” point of view. Her parents, as you will recall, were King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn.

More updates to follow…

Log canoe

Log canoe (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Lately –  as you probably know – I’ve been reading novels written hundreds of years ago.  Obviously, the English language has changed quite a bit since then. Bear in mind, I am reading translations, so it’s up to the translator to choose which words to use, how to structure sentences, etc.

So I’m able to slog through archaic (to my 21st century ears) usage to absorb the novels’ stories. The most obvious difference to me?  There is far more narrative in these older novels.

Contemporary novels are punchier, with attention-grabbing openings, and shorter sentences, paragraphs, and chapters (generally).  And a lot more dialogue.

Comparing the classics to contemporary novels is like laboriously paddling a carved-out log canoe (not that I’ve done that) versus whizzing over water in a sleek sailboat.

Is new always better? Is it wrong to read the classics asking and the point is…? Jane Smiley‘s 100 Novels list made the cut based on structure and composition, strong characters, societal statements.

After all, without those log dugout canoes, where would those sleek sailboats be today?

What I’m Reading - A curious blend of eccentric characters thrown together in a London flat across the street from Highgate Cemetary. An agoraphobic crossword-setting husband’s life ends in shambles after his wife finally leaves him, the owner of one of the other flats dies, leaving it to her twin twenty-year-old American nieces with a stipulation – they must live there for one year, and their mother – her estranged sister - and father are not to step foot inside; the lover she left behind is a tour guide for Highgate Cemetary. He, for reasons he can’t even figure out, hides from the twins when they ring his doorbell, preferring instead to stalk them all over London.

I can’t wait to find out what these crazy characters will do next with each other.

As part of a “100 Novels” project – which I will talk more about soon – I’m also reading The Tales of the Heptameron . It reads like the King James Bible – understandable with beautiful words, but not a page-turner!

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