Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Parenthesis John's avatarRed Pickle Dish

A portrait of Margaret Mitchell stares me down every time I hop off the elevator to the floor housing my current workplace at the Atlanta library system. It’s one of those it-doesn’t-matter-where-you-are-in-the-room gazes, (what portraits are not?), and it can be creepy as she wildly projects the dominion of her vision over her typewriter, her premiere editions of Gone With the Wind, and her Pulitzer, all displayed in glass casings that reflect the obnoxious glare of the florescent rectangles of light overhead. It is a shrine to a woman and writer I’ve known so little about, and frankly, until now had the least bit of interest in. The ‘sensation’ of GWTW, both the novel and the film, though unrivaled in popular American culture, just never seemed palatable to me, a kid who attended most of grade school only miles from ‘The Road to Tara’, a kid still, who…

View original post 757 more words

Read Full Post »

Happy Birthday to my favorite Brontë.

Charlotte’s books (particularly Jane Eyre and Villette) continue to be a source of inspiration and I cannot think of anything more pleasurable (other than reading Jane Austen) than sipping iced-coffee on a summer day while reading one of Charlotte’s books.  Villette is often overshadowed by Jane Eyre, and although lengthy, I believe it is well worth taking the time to read.
I believe in some blending of hope and sunshine sweetening the worst lots. I believe that this life is not all; neither the beginning nor the end. I believe while I tremble; I trust while I weep. ― Charlotte Brontë, Villette

Read Full Post »

“But he who dares not grasp the thorn
Should never crave the rose.”
― Anne Brontë

rosephoto

Read Full Post »

The best tribute to author, Gabriel García Márquez, at this year’s Academy Awards (other than being mentioned in the In Memoriam segment) was the big win for Alejandro González Iñárritu’s film, Birdmanimages-4

García Márquez’s beautiful, mythical, and mystical stories and González Iñárritu’s disturbing and dark film both fall into the genre of magical realism.

From Wikipedia: Magical realism, magic realism, or marvelous realism is literature, painting, and film that, while encompassing a range of subtly different concepts, share in common magical or unreal elements that play a natural part in an otherwise realistic or mundane environment. Magical realism is the most commonly used of the three terms and refers to literature in particular. 

It’s an acquired taste and I’ve been happily immersed in the genre for several months reading books by both García Márquez and Haruki Murakami. I don’t know why I’m attracted to these stories of dysfunctional families, ghosts, and talking cats…but I am. Perhaps it’s because I’ve always believed in the miraculous and love how it’s conveyed through art.

I’ve only started querying my own novel, The Model Home, a story about love triumphing over greed and materialism. It falls into this lovely genre of magical realism and after last night’s win, I’m encouraged.

Birdman is dark. It plays with our emotions and shows human nature at its very worst. But that’s where the lessons are.  In the worst of times. I’m happy it won this year. It’s a great tribute to the author of the greatest Latin American novel ever written, One Hundred Years of Solitudeand the entire genre of magical realism.

 

.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »