I took a speed-reading course where you run your finger down the middle of the page and was able to read War and Peace in twenty minutes. It’s about Russia.-- Woody Allen, letter to New York Times, Sept.3rd, 1995 –
Have a great Wednesday!
I just finished reading Saramago’s new novel, Seeing, last night.
Right at the top of my list of Things I Want To Do But Keep Successfully Putting Off And Choosing To Do Nothing Instead….. right at the top of this list is, “Writing an appreciative letter to Emma Donoghue.”
My apologies to everyone who has become as addicted to my Splash du Jour feature as I myself am!
I know, I know.
Well, I have tried to stay away from having to do this, but I now have to institute that squiggly-word feature with the comments on my bookpuddle blog.
Well, today is the day I have decided to crack the covers of the latest Jose Saramago book, Seeing.
“I went to the country with some children to get pussywillows the other day. They asked me how the pussywillows became woolly? I did not know, but made up some quaint lies which pleased them. Psychologists frown on such conduct, I know, but I can’t help it. Sometimes, however, I wish that my only ability did not lie in the direction of concocting untruths of one sort or another. I wish that I were a great woodcarver, or a wonderfully minute jeweller, or a bookbinder – somebody who can make something satisfying with his hands. In an earlier age I suppose I would have been a professional story-teller, sitting in the market place, spinning yarns and asking for alms – rightly despised by all the craftsmen who had tangible wares to sell… But one must not quarrel with one’s fate, and as it has pleased Providence to make me a sort of accredited prevaricator I must be content.”
Have you ever finished a book and then immediately felt as though you were supposed to tell the entire rest of the world to read it?
...nightly!
Hi Friends!
In On Becoming A Novelist, John Gardner says that when we read…
“The older I get, the more I feel almost beautiful...”
“Some people spend their entire lives reading but never get beyond reading the words on the page, they don't understand that the words are merely stepping stones placed across a fast-flowing river, and the reason they're there is so that we can reach the farther shore, it's the other side that matters.”
Well, I know there are a lot of Saramago fans out there tonight.
The great thing about books is that you don't have to be monogamous. You can have flings and serious affairs and deep and lasting relationships with as many books as you want to. You can love indiscriminately and not be charged with adultery or polygamy (though some might accuse you of bad taste). You can even be an adult who enjoys children's books and not have to worry about them being "jail bait." Nor do you have to explain why polyamory isn't due to an inability to commit.
Well, Mother’s Day is pretty much over…. it is now late Mother’s NIGHT!
Well… let’s see.
Again, this image is not from my own book [my digital camera is fritzed] but again, the resemblance is uncanny. I guess that when these authors, like Atwood and Saramago, have signed perhaps a few hundred thousand books or so… the signature is going to get fairly consistent, huh?
“Endings, in general, are always a bit hard because any ending in life is artificial. Life doesn’t end. People’s lives end. But other lives keep going from that and the dance goes on. So whenever you come to a point in the book where you have to say ‘the end,’ it is always like snipping off a piece of ribbon. It is always a bit arbitrary.”
The novel is significant… not because it presents someone else’s fate to us, perhaps didactically, but because this stranger’s fate by virtue of the flame which consumes it yields us the warmth which we never draw from our own fate. What draws the reader to the novel is the hope of warming his shivering life with the death he reads about.
In Ann-Marie MacDonald’s The Way The Crow Flies, the central character, the intellectually precocious eight-year old Madeleine McCarthy has just spent the evening in front of the TV with her family….
Remember JAWS?
At Chapters today, a book caught my eye.
I will seldom write a blog about music. [However, I am positively dying to write about the fact that I just purchased primo-tickets to an upcoming Roger Waters concert!]
Buy it.
I am sitting at Starbucks.
My poems - I don't even like the sound of that, in a way. Not that anyone else wrote them. But we know that only people who are really close to us care about our personal experience.
Tonight I am realizing something, as I sit here with my freshly brushed-out birthday cat! [He is luxurious!]
For a novelist to create character, I think, takes a sharp objective eye but also an intuitive intelligence, a receptiveness, a wilingness to make oneself blank in order to percieve things as they actually are. The trick of creating character is to try to see all people, even unsympathetic ones, without projecting one's own personality and values on them.
The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it's indifference. The opposite of faith is not heresy, it's indifference. And the opposite of life is not death, it's indifference.
Today is my boy’s birthday!
Once upon a time in the dead of winter in the Dakota territory, Theodore Roosevelt took off in a makeshift boat down the Little Missouri River in pursuit of a couple of thieves who had stolen his prized rowboat. After several days on the river, he caught up and got the draw on them with his trusty Winchester, at which point they surrendered. Then Roosevelt set off in a borrowed wagon to haul the thieves cross-country to justice. They headed across the snow-covered wastes of the Badlands to the railhead at Dickinson, and Roosevelt walked the whole way, the entire 40 miles. It was an astonishing feat, what might be called a defining moment in Roosevelt's eventful life. But what makes it especially memorable is that during that time, he managed to read all of Anna Karenina. I often think of that when I hear people say that they haven't time to read.