tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-14906044856226195212024-02-21T07:15:10.963-08:00Coffee WriterI'm so stubborn it's not even funny.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comBlogger220125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-90470949577900518162013-03-22T06:15:00.002-07:002013-03-22T06:15:17.103-07:00"I Love You God"I was just thinking how "I love you God" is a perfect rendition of the (capitalistic) culture promoted by Hollywood (i.e. "love" = mimetic desire/imitated desire = ongoing consumerism) mapped onto the more traditional, transcendental idea of "God", of a spirit or power that is necessarily more powerful and knowledgeable than we can ever hope to be.<br />
<br />
The phrase is perfect, no? If one is caught in the tension between secular culture and traditional belief systems, "I love you God" pretty much negates the problem.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-53110750909471775222013-03-07T12:26:00.002-08:002013-03-22T06:19:16.258-07:00Why Not? (since form's never my forte)<!--[if gte mso 9]><xml>
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I saw Him,<br />
Fearless, bloody, eyes glowing from the pain,<br />
I saw Him.<br />
<br />
I had heard Him speak before,<br />
Yet now Time has to split Itself apart -<br />
As I heard Him cry a timeless, wrenching cry -<br />
<br />
In pain, or to The Lord?<br />
The Lord.<br />
Oh, but if He is Your Son.<br />
<br />
Hear Him. He cries. He cries to You!<br />
'Father' (his gold, gold eyes garish with passion)<br />
'Why have you forsaken me?'</div>
<!--EndFragment-->Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-74466224364999408992013-01-08T01:08:00.003-08:002013-01-08T01:08:40.175-08:00Saving GraceThe one thing we need saving from, really, is ourselves.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-61262908998982437792012-10-08T07:10:00.000-07:002012-10-08T07:11:42.871-07:00A Headache of What Constitutes ReligionPerhaps the truth is that we can believe anything, and that as humans we are susceptible only to what is the most easy and sinister of actions, and the most convoluted of thoughts (which would lead to the most easy and sinister of actions).<br />
<br />
And perhaps religion is what saves us from hurting each other and promotes instead the most positive and productive of feelings - anything that falls short, or falls off step, should not qualify as faith/religion at all.<br />
<br />Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-59430265390747687152012-09-12T19:39:00.004-07:002013-03-22T06:20:39.186-07:00Dear WorldNow I have but one choice to make - to leave the subject of Pain for the freedom to foray into the creative Unknown, or not to leave.<br />
<br />
I know my choice. 'Freedom' is a conscientiously chosen word. Released from the gravity of Pain is a kind of liberation, a disillusionment at once overt and subtle, onto a latitude altogether exciting and beautiful. Rather than purposeless suspension, subjects of the heart - subjects of <i>real </i>love, faith, kindness, courage, strength - can provide common ground for exploring universal philosophies. And I say 'universal' with great humility, because I am neither superior nor inferior to the human race, and not very specially apart from it.<br />
<br />
<br />Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-29140689476912469032012-06-07T04:24:00.000-07:002012-06-07T04:24:30.252-07:00Philip LarkinXXVIII<br />
<br />
Is it for now or for always,<br />
The world hangs on a stalk?<br />
Is it a trick or a trysting-place,<br />
The woods we have found to walk?<br />
<br />
Is it a mirage or miracle,<br />
Your lips that lift at mine:<br />
And the suns like a juggler's juggling-balls,<br />
Are they a sham or a sign?<br />
<br />
Shine out, my sudden angel,<br />
Break fear with breast and brow,<br />
I take you now and for always,<br />
For always is always now.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-3649041150204590352012-05-22T23:08:00.002-07:002012-05-22T23:09:40.351-07:00BeautyBeauty, I've come to realise, fades. The only beauty that doesn't is the kind where a pure soul is involved, where there is genuine, honest, kind-hearted, selfless, humble, yet ferocious living - and it is the kind of Good that grows to the imitation of Paradise here on earth.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-14056252152358708942012-03-09T09:57:00.001-08:002012-03-09T10:01:13.164-08:00Moving<div class="MsoNormal" style="mso-layout-grid-align: none; mso-pagination: none; text-autospace: none;"><span lang="EN-US"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">You are always moving. That is the least of what I've learnt so far. You are either going up or down. You are not stagnant. You do not stay in one place.<o:p></o:p></span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="mso-layout-grid-align: none; mso-pagination: none; text-autospace: none;"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal" style="mso-layout-grid-align: none; mso-pagination: none; text-autospace: none;"><span lang="EN-US"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">There isn't much else to say. I am not particularly articulate as of now, though it’s not for want of trying. What happens when the words stop coming? Do you fall into a lapse - spatially, temporally - where there is simply a thin hum of silence? Or worse, a lapse where the silence is incapable of acknowledging itself, a silence so silent it comes with no emotion, no personality, no awareness, a numbed silence that gradually crosses you out, that really only means you don't give a flying fuck anymore?</span></span></div>Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-13398707640694704902011-12-21T01:01:00.000-08:002011-12-21T01:01:59.637-08:00The Trouble with Malaysia'The trouble with Malaysia is that too many people like to tell others what the trouble with Malaysia is.'<br />
<br />
- Brian Yap, 'The Trouble with Malaysia' in <i>New Malaysian Essays</i> (PJ: Matahari, 2008), ed. by Amir Muhammad, pp. 13-56Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-21628867533808014942011-11-29T11:21:00.000-08:002011-11-29T11:21:51.228-08:00OutgrownWhen do you know you're outgrowing an author?<br />
<br />
When you start correcting them in your head.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-20109776872847160592011-10-12T06:14:00.000-07:002011-10-13T02:04:43.711-07:00Sandra CisnerosQuotes from <i>The House on Mango Street</i> by Sandra Cisneros:<br />
<br />
'In English my name means hope. In Spanish it means too many letters. It means sadness, it means waiting. It is like the number nine. A muddy color. It is the Mexican records my father plays on Sunday mornings when he is shaving, songs like sobbing.'<br />
<br />
(of grandmother) 'And the story goes she never forgave him. She looked out the window her whole life, the way so many women sit their sadness on an elbow ... I have inherited her name, but I don't want to inherit her place by the window.'<br />
<br />
'... a new name, a name more like the real me, the one nobody sees. Esperanza as Lisandra or Maritza or Zeze the X. Yes. Something like Zeze the X will do.'<br />
<br />
(Friend Cathy, French descendent, moving away) 'In the meantime they'll just have to move a little farther north from Mango Street, a little farther away every time people like us keep moving in.'<br />
<br />
(comical, of fat lady) 'Rachel shouts, You got quite a load there too.'<br />
<br />
'Meme has a dog with grey eyes, a sheepdog with two names, one in English and one in Spanish.'<br />
<br />
'What matters, Marin says, is for the boys to see us and for us to see them ... And Marin just looks at them without even blinking and is not afraid.'<br />
<br />
'All brown all around, we are safe. But watch us drive into a neighborhood of another color and our knees go shakity-shake and our car windows get rolled up tight and our eyes look straight.'<br />
<br />
'The Eskimos got thirty different names for snow, I say. I read it in a book.'<br />
<br />
'And then she [Sister Superior] made me stand up on a box of books and point. That one? she said pointing to a row of ugly three-flats, the ones even the raggedy men are ashamed to go into. Yes, I nodded even though I knew that wasn't my house and started to cry.'<br />
<br />
(of Esperanza's aunt) 'You must keep writing. It will keep you free, and I said yes, but at that time I didn't know what she meant.'<br />
<br />
'And then she died, my aunt who listened to my poems. / And then we began to dream the dreams.'<br />
<br />
(after reading to Ruthie, who cannot read, needs to visit eye doctor, used to write children's books) 'She took a long time looking at me before she opened her mouth, and then she said, You have the most beautiful teeth I have ever seen, and went inside.'<br />
<br />
(of Lois, girlfriend of Sire) '... she smells pink like babies do.'<br />
<br />
'Sire. How did you hold her? Was it? Like this? And when you kissed her? Like this?'<br />
<br />
'They are the only ones who understand me. I am the only one who understands them. Four skinny trees with skinny necks and pointy elbows like mine. Four who do not belong here but are here ... Their strength is secret. They send ferocious roots beneath the ground. They grow up and they grow down and grab the earth between their hairy toes and bite the sky with violent teeth and never quit their anger. This is how they keep.'<br />
<br />
(of Mamacita, 'big mama of the man across the street') '... a flutter of hips, fuchsia roses and green perfume.'<br />
<br />
'Home. Home. Home is a house in a photograph, a pink house, pink as hollyhocks with lots of startled light. The man paints the walls of the apartment pink, but it's not the same you know. She still sighs for her pink house, and then I think she cries. I would.'<br />
<br />
'Cuando, cuando, cuando? she asks. / Ay, Caray! We <i>are </i>home. This <i>is </i>home. HEre I am and here I stay. Speak English. Speak English. Christ!'<br />
<br />
'And then to break her heart forever, the baby boy who has begun to talk, starts to sing the Pepsi commercial he heart on T.V. / No speak English, she says to the child who is singing in the language that sounds like tin. No speak English, no speak English, and bubbles into tears. No, no, no as if she can't believe her ears.'<br />
<br />
(of Rafaela, locked indoors by husband because she is 'too' beautiful, leans out the window plenty) 'Rafaela who drinks and drinks coconut and papaya juice on Tuesdays and wishes there were sweeter drinks, not bitter like an empty room, but sweet sweet like the island, like the dance hall down the street where women much older than her throw green eyes easily like dice and open homes with keys. [autonomy?] And always there is someone offering sweeter drinks, someone promising to keep them on a silver string.'<br />
<br />
'Sally is the girl with eyes like Egypt ... Sally, who taught you to paint your eyes like Cleopatra?'<br />
<br />
'Cheryl, who is not your friend anymore ... not since she called you that name and bit a hole in your arm ...'<br />
<br />
'Sally, do you sometimes wish you didn't have to go home? Do you wish your feet would one day keep walking and take you far away from Mango Street, far away and maybe your feet would stop in front of a house, a nice one with flowers and big windows and steps for you to climb up two by two upstairs ... all you wanted, all you wanted, Sally, was to love and to love and to love and to love, and no one could call that crazy.'<br />
<br />
(of Minerva, who is only a little older but with a husband and two kids) 'Next week she comes over black and blue and asks what can she do? Minerva. I don't know which way she'll go. There is nothing<i> I </i>can do.'<br />
<br />
'I don't tell them I am ashamed - all of us staring out the window like the hungry. I am tired of looking at what we can't have. When we win the lottery ... Mama begins, and then I stop listening.'<br />
<br />
'People who live on hills sleep so close to the stars they forget those of us who live too much on earth ... / One day I'll own my own house, but I won't forget who I am or where I came from. Passing bums will ask, Can I come in? I'll offer them the attic, ask them to stay, because I know how it is to be without a house. / Some days after dinner, guests and I will sit in front of a fire. Floorboards will squeak upstairs. The attic grumble. / Rats? they'll ask. / Bums, I'll say, and I'll be happy.'<br />
<br />
'Nenny says she won't wait her whole life for a husband to come and get her ... She wants things all her own, to pick and choose. Nenny has pretty eyes and it's easy to talk that way if you are pretty.'<br />
<br />
'I have decided not to grow up tame like the others who lay their necks on the threshold waiting for the ball and chain. / In the movies there is always one with red red lips who is beautiful and cruel. She is the one who drives the men crazy and laughs them all away. Her power is her own. She will not give it away. / I have begun my own quiet war. Simple. Sure. I am one who leaves the table like a man, without putting back the chair or picking up the plate.'<br />
<br />
Esperanza's mother: 'Shame is a bad thing, you know. It keeps you down. You want to know why I quit school? Because I didn't have nice clothes. No clothes, but I had brains.'<br />
<br />
'Until one day Sally's father catches her talking to a boy and the next day she doesn't come to school. And the next. Until the way Sally tells it, he just went crazy, he just forgot he was her father between the buckle and the belt. / You're not my daughter, you're not my daughter. And then he broke into his hands.'<br />
<br />
'Somebody started the lie that the monkey garden had been there before anything. We liked to think the garden could hide things for a thousand years. There beneath the roots of soggy flowers were the bones of murdered pirates and dinosaurs, the eye of a unicorn turned to coal. / This is where I wanted to die and where I tried one day but not even the monkey garden would have me. It was the last day I would go there.'<br />
<br />
'... something in me wanted to throw a stick. Something wanted to say no when I watched Sally going into the garden with Tito's buddies all grinning. It was just a kiss, that's all. A kiss for each one. So what, she said.'<br />
<br />
'Only his dirty fingernails against my skin, only his sour smell again. The moon that watched. The tilt-a-whirl. The red clowns laughing their thick-tongue laugh ... He wouldn't let me go. He said I love you, I love you, Spanish girl.'<br />
<br />
'She [Sally, after young marriage] looks at all the things they own: the towels and the toaster, the alarm clock and the drapes. She likes looking at the walls, at how neatly their corners meet, the linoleum roses on the floor, the ceiling smooth as a wedding cake.'<br />
<br />
(of three sisters/aunts, <i>las comadres</i>) 'When you leave you must remember to come back for the others. A circle, understand? You will always be Esperanza. You will always be Mango Street ... / ... for the ones who cannot leave as easily as you.'<br />
<br />
'And the thought of the mayor coming to Mango Street makes me laugh out loud. Who's going to do it [make Mango Street 'better']? Not the mayor.'<br />
<br />
'I like to tell stories. I tell them inside my head ... / I make a story for my life, for each step my brown shoe takes. I say, "And so she trudged up the wooden stairs, her sad brown shoes taking her to the house she never liked." / I like to tell stories. I am going to tell you a story about a girl who didn't want to belong.'<br />
<br />
'... what I remember most is Mango Street, sad red house, the house I belong but do not belong to.'<br />
<br />
'I put it down on paper and then the ghost does not ache so much. I write it down and Mango says goodbye sometimes. She does not hold me with both arms. She sets me free.'<br />
<br />
'One day I will pack my bags of books and paper. One day I will say goodbye to Mango. I am too strong for her to keep me here forever. One day I will go away. / Friends and neighbors will say, What happened to that Esperanza? Where did she go with all those books and paper? Why did she march so far away? / They will not know I have gone away to come back. For the ones I left behind. For the ones who cannot out.'Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-77737590254733059342011-09-15T05:01:00.000-07:002011-09-15T05:01:17.393-07:00Piano CraveI'm sure I've posted about this before, but there it is. I'm watching someone play 'That's Why You Go Away' by MLTR on the piano and I'm just like - I WANT.<br />
<br />
I suppose I'll try to go brush up some guitar skills and make do with pathetic guitar strumming (only pathetic because it's me, bahaha).<br />
<br />
All righty.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-11083721059713419922011-09-04T20:30:00.000-07:002011-09-04T20:30:23.158-07:00Nicole KraussQuotes from <i>Great House</i> by Nicole Krauss:<br />
<br />
'What I thought was a simpler, purer prose, more searing for being stripped of all distracting ornament, was actually a dull and lumbering mass, void of tension or energy, standing in opposition to nothing, toppling nothing, shouting nothing.'<br />
<br />
'In her work the writer is free of laws. But in her life, Your Honor, she is not free.'<br />
<br />
'I began to suspect that instead of exposing the hidden depths of things, as all along I'd supposed I was doing, perhaps the opposite was true, that I'd been hiding behind the things I wrote, using them to obscure a secret lack ...'<br />
<br />
'... a fraud who hid a poverty of spirit behind a mountain of words.'<br />
<br />
'... to learn from the painful lessons of self-scrutiny, and correct a little, to find the way out of the maddening circular game where we are forever eating our own tails.'<br />
<br />
'And what of it, Your Honor? What of my life? You see, I thought - One has to make a sacrifice. I chose the freedom of long unscheduled afternoons in which nothing happens but the slightest shift in mood as captured in a semicolon.'<br />
<br />
'Such is life, my boy: if you think you're original in anything, think again.'<br />
<br />
'What is it like, I once demanded of you, to be a man of such high principles that no one else can live up to them? But you only turned your back on me, just as you turned your back on everyone who betrayed you with their shortcomings.'<br />
<br />
'... Lotte was content to live in a perennial state of misunderstanding. It's so rare, when you think about it, a trait one can imagine belonging to the psychology of a race more advanced than ours.'<br />
<br />
'If I wanted her, I stood at the bottom of the steps and called up.'<br />
<br />
'... the relief of at last being surrounded on all sides by your own kind - the relief and the horror.'<br />
<br />
'I thought of stopping to ask her what was wrong, maybe even taking her out for a drink ... but in the end it was too out of character for the person I have been all my life, whether I've liked it or not, and I kept walking.'<br />
<br />
'Suddenly I wanted to cry. Out of frustration and exhaustion and despair of ever really coming close to the center, the always-moving center of the woman I loved.'<br />
<br />
'Then came a period when she became scared, aware of how much she was losing by the day, perhaps even the hour, like a person slowly bleeding to death, hemorrhaging toward oblivion.'<br />
<br />
'... what they did, they did without compromise, free of the complications imposed on the rest of us by indecision, wavering, regret.'<br />
<br />
'... but also for the magnitude of life, for the extremes of all it has been given to us to feel.'<br />
<br />
'... written in handwriting that will die with his generation (shaky, mangled by its forced leaps from language to language, dignified in its illegibility) ...'<br />
<br />
'... and our eyes locked in one of those looks that sometimes happen between strangers, when both wordlessly agree that reality contains sinkholes whose depths neither can ever hope to fathom.'Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-28740318121839313702011-09-04T16:30:00.001-07:002011-09-04T16:33:45.947-07:00Ah, the Paralyses of Art!<div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">I am aware that it is not a competition. It is not a race to see who is better. The worst thing anyone could do – worst because it is shallow and most definitely silly – would be to disregard something because it is good. </span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">Nicole Krauss, I have found, is a genius. Philip Roth, yes, is another genius. And before them, J K Rowling. And Jodi Picoult, at the right times. Natsuo Kirino too, for Grotesque. </span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">So how do you compete with all that? I ask myself. How do you put yourself in the game when, after reading some extraordinarily profound, poignant and flawless piece of craft, you come away feeling like there is too much you don’t know to even begin writing? And what right, really, do you have to write when there are writers the likes of them? </span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">The answer is, really, not an answer at all. Perhaps it is more a turning away, but I prefer to think of it as an awed sort of acquiescence – the answer is that you don’t compete with them at all. </span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">Instead, the only thing you can do is to learn from them, pick out how they’ve honed their voices into finely tuned instruments, individual as the shape of one’s shoes or cushioned chair, fashioning a brand that rises out of the page to yell ‘This is Nicole Krauss!’ You read and re-read their work, jot down quotes that – at the moment of reading – have you nodding along in breathlessness.</span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">What right do you have, you ask then, to write? Well, that’s easy. There is no right, ever, that has to be earned in the name of art. </span></div>Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-81735658370633036252011-08-23T06:47:00.000-07:002011-09-04T20:31:57.300-07:00The Essential Human FlawQuotes from rom <i>The Human Stain</i> by Philip Roth:<br />
<div><br />
</div><div>'... that blizzard of details that constitute the confusion of a human biography - a tiny symbol to remind me why our understanding of people must always be at best slightly wrong.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'... thereby ensuring that I would do anything I could think of not to bore you, including dropping out of contact, if necessary, so as to avoid the risk of becoming boring.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'Surprises. Thirty-four years of savage surprises have given her wisdom. But it's a very narrow, antisocial wisdom. It's savage, too. It's the wisdom of somebody who expects nothing. That's her wisdom, and that's her dignity, but it's negative wisdom ...'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'... that scrappy, I've-seen-it-all laugh - you know, the coarse, easy laugh of the woman with a past ...'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'I couldn't meet the costs of its clamoring anymore, could no longer marshal the wit, the strength, the patience, the illusion, the irony, the ardor, the egoism, the resilience - or the toughness, or the shrewdness, or the falseness, the dissembling, the dual being, the erotic professionalism - to deal with its array of misleading and contradictory meanings.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'... and you feel yourself drawn by the force of the courtship and so act as you don't normally do and a lot more openly than you may even want to.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'The secret to living in the rush of the world with a minimum of pain is to get as many people as possible to string along with your delusions; the trick to living alone up here, away from all agitating entanglements, allurements, and expectations, apart especially one's own intensity, is to organize the silence ...'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'Lisa was always morally in over her head, but without either the callousness to disappoint the need of another or the strength to disillusion herself about her strength.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'Learn, he told himself, before you die, to live beyond the jurisdiction of their enraging, loathsome, stupid blame.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'"Did you kill anyone when you were in Vietnam?" Was there anyone he didn't kill when he was in Vietnam?'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'You're battling now in a world where nobody's ruthlessness bothers to cloak itself in humanitarian rhetoric.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'Overnight the raw I was part of a we with all of the we's overbearing solidity ...'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'That is, he walked away understanding nothing, knowing he could understand nothing, though with the illusion that he would have metaphysically understood something of enormous importance about this stubborn determination of his to become his own man if ... if only such things were understandable.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'... because she had the wisdom that is solid, thinking-for-yourself common sense.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'Why would things happen as they do and history read as it does if inherent to existence was something called normalcy?'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'... all you have to do is give a pretty good and consistent line about yourself and nobody ever inquires, because no one's that interested.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'This was it, the solution, the secret to his secret, flavored with just a drop of the ridiculous - the redeeming, reassuring ridiculous, life's little contribution to every human decision.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'Did not see at all what it had to do with me. Everything there was just so concentrated that any sort of pride I ever had was diminished.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'Yes, she's a contender, this one. Her transcendence into independence, her transformation into a Village girl, the way she handles her folks - she seems to have grown up the way you're supposed to be able to.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'There was always something about our family, and I don't mean color - there was something about us that impeded you. You think like a prisoner. You do, Coleman Brutus. You're white as snow and you think like a slave.'</div><div><br />
</div><div>'... she seemed to Coleman to step up to the very edge of the big change: the point of turning, as the elderly do, into a tiny, misshapen being.'</div><div><br />
'This wonderful language they all have - that they appear to believe - about their 'lack of self-worth,' all the while what they actually believe is that they're entitled to everything.'<br />
<br />
'Their shamelessness they call lovingness, and the ruthlessness is camouflaged as lost 'self-esteem'. Hitler lacked self-esteem too.'<br />
<br />
'Letting him listen. Sharpening the writer's sense of reality. Feeding that great opportunistic maw, a novelist's mind. Whatever catastrophe turns up, he transforms it into writing. Catastrophe is cannon fodder for him.'<br />
<br />
<br />
</div>Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-19320432295802229382011-08-22T04:05:00.000-07:002011-08-22T04:05:48.882-07:00YeatsUsed to love this half of Yeats's poem, can't remember when I read it (A-Levels?). Anyway, here's the first half of <i>The Second Coming</i> -<br />
<br />
' Turning and turning in the widening gyre<br />
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;<br />
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;<br />
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,<br />
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere<br />
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;<br />
The best lack all conviction, while the worst<br />
Are full of passionate intensity. '<br />
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: #333333; font-family: verdana, Arial, Tahoma, sans-serif; font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 12px;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: black; font-family: Times;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;"><br />
</span></span></span></span>Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-7880030407785401942011-08-22T04:02:00.001-07:002011-08-22T04:02:08.964-07:00Chinua AchebeHere's what he said before - 'Art is, and always was, at the service of man.'Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-49266967263968989852011-08-20T02:49:00.000-07:002011-08-20T02:50:09.728-07:00Ten Rules for Writing (Fiction)<div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">Came across this article on the online Guardian and thought I'd make my own list. So, my ten rules for writing fiction: </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">1. Write. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">2. Read. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">3. Write again. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">4. Read what you've written.</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">5. Take five months off and come back. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">6. Read what you've written again.</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">7. Take another five months. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">8. Bunk off writing and move to Manchester.</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">9. Write about Manchester. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">10. Send updated script (with detailed description of industrial Manchester) to an agent. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">(11). Await rejection. </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">--> I can be so bored at times.</div>Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-57315698659440196042011-08-18T07:03:00.001-07:002011-08-18T07:04:06.168-07:00More Krakauer<div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">More quotes from <i>Into the Wild </i>by Jon Krakauer - </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'Everything had changed suddenly - the tone, the moral climate; you didn't know what to think, whom to listen to. As if all your life you had been led by the hand like a small child and suddenly you were on your own, you had to learn to walk by yourself. There was no one around, neither family nor people whose judgment you respected. At such a time you felt the need of committing yourself to something absolute - life or truth or beauty - of being ruled by it in place of the man-made rules that had been discarded.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'McCandless took life's inequities to heart.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'For children are innocent and love justice, while most of us are wicked and naturally prefer mercy.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'He could be generous and caring to a fault, but he had a darker side as well, characterized by monomania, impatience, and unwavering self-absorption.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'... he had been smitten by the vastness of the land, by the ghostly hue of the glaciers, by the pellucid subarctic sky.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'I faced in myself a passionate and tenacious longing - to put away thought forever, and all the trouble it brings, all but the nearest desire, direct and searching. To take the trail and not look back. Whether on foot, on showshoes or by sled, into the summer hills and their late freezing shadows - a high blaze, a runner track in the snow would show where I had gone. Let the rest of mankind find me if it could.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'Such bereavement, witnessed at close range, makes even the most eloquent apologia for high-risk activities ring fatuous and hollow.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'By fixing my sights on one summit after another, I managed to keep my bearings through some thick postadolescent fog. Climbing mattered. The danger bathed the world in a halogen glow that caused everything - the sweep of the rock, the orange and yellow lichens, the texture of the clouds, to stand out in brilliant relief. Life thrummed at a higher pitch. The world was made real.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'I was twenty-three, a year younger than Chris McCandless when he walked into the Alaska bush. My reasoning, if one can call it that, was inflamed by the scattershot passions of youth and a literary diet overly rich in the works of Nietzsche, Kerouac, and John Menlove Edwards ...'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'I had convinced myself for many months that I didn't really mind the absence of intimacy in my life, the lack of real human connection, but the pleasure I'd felt in this woman's company - the ring of her laughter, the innocent touch of a hand on my arm - exposed my self-deceit and left me hollow and aching.'</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;">'It is easy, when you are young, to believe that what you desire is no less than what you deserve, to assume that if you want something badly enough, it is your God-given right to have it. When I decided to go to Alaska that April, like Chris McCandless, I was a raw youth who mistook passion for insight and acted according to an obscure, gap-ridden logic. I thought climbing the Devils Thumb would fix all that was wrong with my life. In the end, of course, it changed almost nothing. But I came to appreciate that mountains make poor receptacles for dreams.' </div><div style="margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
</div>Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-74052232644789414802011-08-16T05:34:00.000-07:002011-08-16T05:34:57.845-07:00Of Chris McCandlessQuotes from <i>Into the Wild</i> by Jon Krakauer -<br />
<br />
'At long last he was unencumbered, emancipated from the stifling world of his parents and peers, a world of abstraction and security and material excess, a world in which he felt grievously cut off from the raw throb of existence.'<br />
<br />
'The mind is beset by light and space, the kinesthetic novelty of aridity, high temperature, and wind. The desert sky is encircling, majestic, terrible.'<br />
<br />
'... relieved that he had again evaded the impending threat of human intimacy, of friendship, and all the messy emotional baggage that comes with it.'<br />
<br />
'Over the past 15 years, I've run into several McCandless types out in the country. Same story: idealistic, energetic young guys who overestimated themselves, underestimated the country, and ended up in trouble. McCandless was hardly unique; there's quite a few of these guys hanging around the state, so much alike that they're almost a collective cliche.'<br />
<br />
'In my wanderings this year I have taken more chances and had more wild adventures than ever before. And what magnificent country I have seen - wild, tremendous wasteland stretches, lost mesas, blue mountains rearing upward from the vermilion sands of the desert, canyons five feet wide at the bottom and hundreds of feet deep, cloudbursts roaring down unnamed canyons, and hundreds of houses of the cliff dwellers, abandoned a thousand years ago.'<br />
<br />
'For two days I couldn't tell whether I was dead or alive. I writhed and twisted in the heat, with swarms of ants and flies crawling over me, while the poison oozed and crusted on my face and arms and back.'Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-87338515818538486682011-08-16T05:05:00.000-07:002011-08-16T05:17:15.735-07:00Quoting RothQuotes from Philip Roth's <i>The Ghost Writer</i> -<br />
<br />
'I turn sentences around. That's my life. I write a sentence and then I turn it around. Then I look at it and turn it around again. Then I have lunch. Then I come back in and write another sentence. Then I have tea and turn the new sentence around ... And I ask myself, Why is there no way but this for me to fill my hours?'<br />
<br />
'The life he described sounded like paradise to me; that he could think to do nothing better with his time than turn sentences around seemed to me like a blessing bestowed not only upon him but upon world literature.'<br />
<br />
'But what else was there? If he played the violin or the piano, then he might have had some serious activity other than reading to occupy him when he was not writing. The problem with just listening to music was that if he sat alone with a record in the afternoon, he soon found himself turning the sentences around in his head ... '<br />
<br />
'... but mostly it was the drama of that face, combined with the softness and intelligence in her large pale eyes ... '<br />
<br />
' "If your life consists of reading and writing and looking at the snow, you'll wind up like me. Fantasy for thirty years." Lonoff made "Fantasy" sound like breakfast cereal. '<br />
<br />
'... carried away by the idea that if I were a perfidious brute, I at least would be a truthful perfidious brute ...'<br />
<br />
'Ordinary human pleasures have nothing to do with it. Ordinary human pleasures be damned. The young man wants to be an artist.'<br />
<br />
'I beg of you - I'd rather live and die alone, I'd rather endure that than another moment of your bravery! I cannot take any more moral fiber in the face of life's disappointments!'<br />
<br />
'It's no picnic up there in the egosphere.'<br />
<br />
'I loved him! Yes, nothing less than love for this man with no illusions: love for the bluntness, the scrupulosity, the severity, the estrangement; love for the relentless winnowing out of the babyish, preening, insatiable self; love for the artistic mulishness and the suspicion of nearly everything else; and love for the buried charm ...'<br />
<br />
'... the writer whose absorption with "the grand human discord" made his every paragraph a little novel in itself, every page packed as tight as Dickens or Dostoevsky with the latest news of manias, temptations, passions, and dreams, with mankind aflame with feeling ...'<br />
<br />
'We work in the dark - we do what we can - we give what we have. Our doubt is our passion and our passion is our task. The rest is the madness of art.'<br />
<br />
'Oh, what sitting ducks I had for parents! A son of theirs would have had to be a half-wit or a sadist <i>not </i>to make them proud.'<br />
<br />
'What set of aesthetic values makes your think that the cheap is more valid than the noble and the slimy is more truthful than the sublime?'<br />
<br />
'Maybe if I were locked up again in a room somewhere and fed on rotten potatoes and clothed in rags and terrified out of my wits, maybe then I could write a decent story for Mr. Lonoff!'<br />
<br />
' ... the time will come when we are people again, and not just Jews.'<br />
<br />
' ... a ceremony lasting about ten minutes - and that was all it took to make them the enemy. It did not even take that much. It took nothing - that was the horror.'<br />
<br />
'Let her see how noble and heroic you are by the twenty-seventh draft.'<br />
<br />
'There is his religion of art, my young successor: rejecting life! <i>Not</i> living is what he makes his beautiful fiction <i>out </i>of! And you will now be the person he is not living with!'<br />
<br />
'But what <i>do</i> I know, other than what I can imagine?'Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-13804129544297133352011-08-02T03:09:00.000-07:002011-08-02T03:09:59.189-07:00First SentenceSomething that made me laugh:<br />
<br />
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Times, 'Times New Roman', serif;">'I always forgive</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: x-small; line-height: 19px;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Times, 'Times New Roman', serif;"> <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;">my authors their first sentence. First sentences subsume 94.73% of the time an author spends on a book"”give or take. They are the most over-wrought, over-thought, contorted pieces of writing there is.'</span></span></span><br />
<br />
- Susan J. Morris, www.blog.shelfari.com -Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-69738711683960672902011-08-02T02:44:00.001-07:002011-08-02T06:39:45.472-07:00The ForestI think I must go to a forest soon and trek among the trees. Not a garden, not a beach, not a poor river that chokes through the city. I must trek through a proper piece of nature with real trees and uncarved barks and roots the size of a man, and sweeps of light filtered green by the overhead leaves.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-39141295278913815162011-07-23T12:19:00.000-07:002011-07-23T12:22:13.038-07:00Voldemort<div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">Today I caught sight of Voldemort. </span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">I love the look on your face right now. It’s true, I did see him. On a bus, his pallid face looking straight at me, wand raised. It is advertisements like this that remind me that Harry Potter is a story – a very clever one, yes, but still a story. </span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">I used to imagine that Rowling was committing a breach of magical law, that she was telling this story to us Muggles and would therefore have Fudge (or another equally incompetent Minister for Magic) on her heels for upending a long-held secrecy. I suppose this cannot really be real, but just in case she's in Azkaban between interviews – </span></div><div class="MsoNormal"><br />
</div><div class="MsoNormal"><span lang="EN-US">Thanks, Joanne.</span></div>Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1490604485622619521.post-12380451782069575972011-07-16T14:36:00.000-07:002011-07-16T14:42:04.767-07:00You Who Are You Who AreWhen you see yourself, are you ever surprised with what's there?<br />
<br />
Also, think about how you'd cut up this made-up phrase: <i>You who are you who are. </i><br />
You who are / you who are<br />
You / who are you / who are<br />
You who / are you who / are<br />
<br />
I love it when a phrase has personality. Whoopadoodadoo.Shuhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05465457483247587273noreply@blogger.com