- Read several articles in the new Poets & Writers Magazine last night. Excellent article about Junot Diaz. It took him eleven years to publish a new book after his debut fiction Drown. It was instructive and inspiring to read of how he found his next book topic. I feel I am going through a similar experience. A big topic I love and want to write about (Ohio River), but smaller voice calling to me: "Write me, write me."
- Read Downstream From Trout Fishing in America by Keith Abbott last night. Parts of it very good; missing a lot of heart and soul, though. Maybe I'm just spoiled by Ianthe's beautiful and generous recollection of her father.
Sunday, August 26, 2007
PW and RB
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Dreaming
About Me
- Theresa Williams
- Northwest Ohio, United States
- "I was no better than dust, yet you cannot replace me. . . Take the soft dust in your hand--does it stir: does it sing? Has it lips and a heart? Does it open its eyes to the sun? Does it run, does it dream, does it burn with a secret, or tremble In terror of death? Or ache with tremendous decisions?. . ." --Conrad Aiken
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Fave Painting: Eden
Fave Painting: The Three Ages of Man and Death
From the First Chapter
The Secret of Hurricanes : That article in the Waterville Scout said it was Shake- spearean, all that fatalism that guides the Kennedys' lives. The likelihood of untimely death. Recently, another one died in his prime, John-John in an airplane. Not long before that, Bobby's boy. While playing football at high speeds on snow skis. Those Kennedys take some crazy chances. I prefer my own easy ways. Which isn't to say my life hasn't been Shake-spearean. By the time I was sixteen, my life was like the darkened stage at the end of Hamlet or Macbeth. All littered with corpses and treachery.
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3 comments:
Pay attention to small voices.
Especially the "write me" kind. They grow up to be big ones.
Gretchen
Those voices can be tricky, I think! They can be the voice of inspiration or of distraction.
I read DOWNSTREAM when it was first published in 1989 and don't remember much about it except that it left me feeling forlorn. I hadn't realized the extent of Richard Brautigan's alcoholism.
The author of DOWNSTREAM did a reading at a local bookstore in 1989. W.P. Kinsella, author of SHOELESS JOE, as well as being a Brautigan fan, came down from Canada for the reading. In the discussion after the reading, numerous people expressed how much Richard Brautigan's writing had meant to them.
Ianthe's insightful YOU CAN'T CATCH DEATH is one of my favorite books. She writes so beautifully on what it means to love an alcoholic and survive and thrive, with emphasis on LOVE.
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