Saturday, March 31, 2007

A Jane Austen Weekend


Every so often my husband and I go on a Jane Austen binge. That's what we've done for the last three weekends. We started by watching Emma, starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Jeremy Northam. Then we watched Sense and Sensibility, with Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet and Hugh Grant, and finished out the weekend with Persuasion, with Amanda Root and Ciaran Hinds. Last weekend, we watched all six episodes of the Jennifer Ehle/Colin Firth version of Pride and Prejudice. And this weekend, we watched Pride and Prejudice starring Keira Knightly and Matthew MacFadyen.

It's a lovely thing to do on a weekend, or even three weekends! And now we hear that there are new TV mini-series versions of Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion all coming out in November, and a new version of Sense and Sensibility is due out soon, also. So the next time we are hit with a Jane Austen craving, it could take months to satisfy it!

Friday, March 30, 2007

Reading Pathways


When I read Iliana's (Bookgirl's Nightstand) post this morning, about keeping notebooks and journals with book excerpts from her reading, it hit home with me. I love notebooks/journals, too! I don't write in them all the time, but over the years those little word treasures add up and reveal a pathway. Books lead to other books...and the quotes we choose to keep remind us of who we were and illuminate who we have become.

Connections...On one page in my notebook, dated 1974, while reading one of Anne Morrow Lindbergh's diaries, and being curious about a reference to a writer she loved, I wrote: "Who is Henry Beston???" Without the benefit of the internet, it took a trip to the library to discover that he was the author of a beautiful little classic, The Outermost House, a lovely read which lead me to a number of other lovely reads...

Guidance...And a tender quote, written down a year after my father passed away, still gives me solace. I found it while reading May Sarton's Encore, A Journal of the Eightieth Year.

He whom we love and lose,
Is no longer where he was before,

He is now wherever we are.

--St. John Chrysostom (4th century)

Like the Jane Austen quote I used to define this blog, "A fondness for reading must be an education itself," my reading notebooks and journals give me insights into the pathway of my education over the years.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Once Upon a Time

I've been fascinated by the many book challenges I see on the different blogs I visit, but have been hesitant to make a commitment to reading a certain number of books within a particular time frame. Who know how long it might take me to finish one book (Out of Africa took six weeks!), let alone multiple titles! But I can't resist this new one! Carl V.'s "Once Upon a Time" challenge (with its beautiful button) has captured my imagination, so I'm embarking on my first book challenge, which looks to be a great adventure. Thanks, Carl!

The Once Upon a Time Challenge will take place beginning Thursday, March 22nd and will end on Midsummer Night's Eve, June 21st. It is a reading challenge to celebrate spring, the time of rebirth and renewal, by experiencing the type of storytelling that connects us with our past.

I have chosen "Quest One: Read at least 5 books from any of the 4 genres." Here are some of the books I found that have been patiently waiting on my shelves:

  • Stardust, by Neil Gaiman (my first Gaiman!)

And if time allows, I'll include a June reading of A Midsummer Night's Dream, to celebrate the end of this challenge.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Book Club Mom

Mom and I have always shared books. Our favorite thing to do when I come into town for a visit is to first head to our favorite restaurant for our traditional bowl of tomato macaroni soup with freshly baked rolls; then we head for the bookstore! Neither of us needs any more books, but you know how that goes.

At 87 years old, you think my Mom would be slowing down a bit, but not much, especially when it comes to books and reading! In 1997, while walking in the mall, she came upon a display about a new senior center just built in the area. Alongside the model of the new structure was a list of volunteers needed. "Book Club Leader" caught her eye, and she has filled that position for the last 10 years.

The new computer classes filled up pretty fast, but the book club membership list was a little slower to fill. It did fill, however, and she has had 14 devoted members (some new ones joined later and occasionally someone leaves) for those many years. This group has read and discussed a very diverse selection of books.

It's a lot of work being a book club leader like Mom. The senior center keeps asking her to fill out a form on the number of hours she puts into this volunteer job, but how do you account for the constant reading of books to find something that would be great for the book group? And then, once she has chosen a book, she must check with the library to make sure they have enough copies. Then she re-reads the book, timing it so she finishes it again just before the book group meets. Some of the books they've chosen are real chunksters! I've seen her copy of a book to be discussed, and it's marked with tons of those little post-it note tabs. I don't think there's a form big enough to show all the effort put into reading, re-reading, thinking about the book, preparing for the discussion, and then actually facilitating the meeting.

I sat in on one of their book discussions once when visiting her and found it to be a delightful experience. They had just read a book by Charles Lindbergh's daughter (a favorite author of mine), and their discussion was lively! There was a wealth of experience, knowledge, and opinion in the group.

Mom calls herself "a selfish volunteer" because she is doing something she absolutely loves to do--read and share books. I just call her "amazing," and consider myself the luckiest daughter in the world to have a mother that has shared her passion for books with me all my life.

Click here to see a list of books read by my Mom's book group.

Monday, March 26, 2007

Monday Morning Blogs

This morning I discovered that I've been "tagged" by Susan at Chicken Spaghetti! Being new to this warm and welcoming blogging world, I wasn't sure what that meant, or what a "meme" is, but she explained it all very clearly, and I'm really pleased that she thought of me. Thanks, Susan!

The tag is to name 5 non-kidlit blogs I enjoy reading. Well, because I'm a teacher, lots of the blogs I read are related to children's literature. But here are some of my wider-interests blogs that make my mornings so enjoyable:

Lowry Updates - I may be cheating a little here because this is Lois Lowry's blog and she writes for young people, but her posts give you a wonderful glimpse into the life of an author of intelligence and compassion (with a great sense of humor!).

In Spring It Is The Dawn - always interesting, thoughtful, and beautiful!

Letters From a Hill Farm - a lovely blog full of books, music, poetry, and good food!

Mary's Library - I am amazed at the huge variety of books Mary and Wilhelm read, and I look forward to seeing what they find next to recommend. (I started reading The Last Kashmiri Rose last night, so thanks to Mary I am no longer adrift!)

Moving To and Living In Argentina - This was the very first blog I ever read. I enjoy this blog because I have a lifelong interest in Argentina since living there for a year as an exchange student (40 years ago!). She is an ex-pat with a French husband and a brand new baby, so her posting has slowed down recently. But her blog is an interesting way to experience the culture of Argentina, and makes me homesick.

Knit the Classics - I know this is an extra one, but it is an interesting combination of two things I love to do--read and knit. I have to check it often to see what knitting project they are doing while reading which classic!

I'm supposed to pass this "meme" along to some fellow bloggers I enjoy and would like to learn more about, so I'll tag Shelf Life, Book Chase, Cathrine, Cessie's Book Journey, and Random Jottings of a Book and Opera Lover.

Happy Monday!

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Adrift


Since finishing Out of Africa on Thursday, I have been adrift. I didn't expect the emotional aftereffects of this book. Yes, I loved it as I read it. Yes, I've many times experienced that mourning period we all know after completing a really good book. But this time the feeling is a little different. This time, instead of wanting the book to continue on, or feeling the need to instantly read all her other books, my feeling is that the book is done, the story complete, and I am satisfied (perhaps "sated" is a better description). Interestingly, now that I am no longer immersed in her words, the full impact of her world and her life is soaking in, slowly being absorbed into a deeper level of my being. I didn't expect that, and it's a very moving experience.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Africa


The lovely photograph above (one of many exquisite photos taken by photographer, Phil Douglis) is of Karen Blixen's desk at her farm in Kenya. Today I finished reading Out of Africa. It took me six weeks to read it because I did exactly what Francine Prose suggested in her book, Reading Like a Writer:

"With so much reading ahead of you, the temptation might be to speed up. But in fact it's essential to slow down and read every word."

And reading every word in a book like Out of Africa is an amazing experience and pleasure.

The book is written as a series of stories. Dinesen's tales are of the people, the animals, the land itself, and the relationships of each with the other to form the sensitively detailed landscape of the Africa she knew and loved. She was my grandmother's age. Some of what she described from that colonial time may be uncomfortable for today's reader, and one must remember "time and place." But her passionate descriptions help us understand the attitudes and happenings of her time. The rest of the book is timeless, eternally young, and so intricately described that we are transported to that place and are able to see and hear and smell the world of her farm in Africa.

My favorite chapter in the book was called "Wings." This was where she revealed, without ever saying so directly, her deep love for Denys Finch-Hatton, which was inexorably intertwined with her passion for Africa. A pilot, he took her flying. And through her eyes and pen, the view of Africa from the sky was breathtaking:

"The sky was blue, but as we flew from the plains in over the stony and bare lower country, all colour seemed to be scorched out of it. The whole landscape below us looked like delicately marked tortoise-shell. Suddenly in the midst of it was the lake. The white bottom, shining through the water, give it, when seen from the air, a striking, an unbelievable azure-colour, so clear that for a moment you shut your eyes at it; the expanse of water lies in the bleak tawny land like a big bright aquamarine. We had been flying high, now we went down, and as we sank our own shade, dark-blue, floated under us upon the light-blue lake. Here live thousands of Flamingoes, although I do not know how they exist in the brackish water,--surely there are no fish here. At our approach they spread out in large circles and fans, like the rays of a setting sun, like an artful Chinese pattern on silk or porcelain, forming itself and changing, as we looked at it."


The movie version of Out of Africa (a must!) is about Karen Blixen and is her story. The book is about Africa. Dinesen does not reveal or discuss the particulars of her life, except when necessary to deepen our understanding of the Africa of her heart. Then, only enough is revealed to open the window--but what a view is to be seen through that aperture! A quote from Eudora Welty on the back of the green Vintage edition of the book says it best:

"True to her credo of the storyteller's story, her tales are...glimpses out of, rather than into, an extraordinary mind."

So, for a complete immersion into the passionately articulate world of Karen Blixen/Isak Dinesen, read the book, watch the movie, and listen to the lovely soundtrack. But I suggest that you read the book slowly, word by word.


Thank you to Phil Douglis for letting me use his photograph of Blixen's desk, which tells a story in itself. Click on the following links to see more photographs from Blixen's farm, and to visit Phil Douglis's "cyberbook of travel photography."

Expressive Travel Photography: Communicating With Pictures. An instructional cyberbook by Phil Douglis

More photos of Blixen's farm...

Monday, March 19, 2007

A Whisper of Spring


A Whisper Of Spring

The wind is bringing a song today,
A hopeful song -- a new rounde-lay.
It whispers Spring is about to be
Ushered in with a melody
From larks and robins in greening trees --
Now bare and grey in the chilling breeze.
Yes, Spring is coming, soon all may know
That bluebells live through the ice and snow.

An early spring photo from my morning walk and a poem written by my grandmother, Maude Osmond Cook...

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Multitasking

If only I could walk and read at the same time, like the young man that lives down the street. My husband and I pass him often, and it doesn't matter where he is, he always has a book open and is reading while he walks! What a skill! What a devotion! I can walk on the treadmill or to the park and listen to a book, but I can't seem to walk and read at the same time. Imagine how many more books I could read if I could do that...


Today I stopped by the bookstore and picked up a copy of William Gibson's Pattern Recognition, which is the audiobook I'm currently listening to in the car. I had to get a print copy because, although audiobooks allow me to multitask ("reading" while driving), I need to see his words on the written page. Oh, I'll finish listening to the book, but I'm enjoying the way he puts words together so much, I need to see them. Many books are just perfect for the listening experience, such as each book in the Harry Potter series. I loved them when I read them, and again when I listened to them. But with a William Gibson book, listening isn't enough. You need the freedom to re-read his words, passages, descriptions, sentences as many times as you want so you can fully enjoy the creativity and inventiveness of his writing.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Forsythia Blooms


Forsythia blooms
And little winds of springtime
Ring the golden bells

Our son, Dan, was a winter baby. When he was seven weeks old, he caught a cold, which quickly turned into severe bronchiolitis, and we had to hospitalize him as he fought for every breath. We almost lost him, but the doctors tried a new miracle drug on him (a new one to help preemies with their immature lung problems) and it worked! He recovered quickly, and we brought him home. It was early spring, and the huge forsythia bush in front of our apartment was in bloom. I have loved forsythia ever since.

One of the books we bought that spring to add to our growing collection of beloved children's books, was a beautiful little book of Haiku poems called Come Along!, by Rebecca Caudill and illustrated by Ellen Raskin. The book was a combination of Rebecca Caudill's exquisitely succinct poetry (the haiku under the photograph above is from the book), and Ellen Raskin's lovely illustrations. It is one of our family's treasures, of course, and now belongs to our little grandson.

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Tying Up Loose Ends

There's a great sense of satisfaction in tying up loose ends. That's what I've been doing this morning as the jet stream blows in another heavy rainstorm straight from Hawaii. (It's called the "pineapple express," and the moisture-laden storms line up in the Pacific and head straight for the Northwest, letting loose tons of warm moisture to make this area green and gorgeous, but it is also why much of the area is on a flood watch until Tuesday.) As long as you're not on watch for flooding, it's great weather for knitting and reading.

So this morning, I reset all the clocks in the house, and was reminded by Mom to reset the clock in the car.

Then I finished another Grammy knitting project...a little cable sweater for precious grandson, Kai. That required weaving in all those loose yarn ends.

This weekend I've also been helping my daughter finish moving out of their old place into their very nice, new place. And all the while I was helping her, I was thinking of our bookshelves and bookshelves full of books at home and wondering how many heavy boxes it would take to move US at this point? Which reminds me of what the checker at the grocery store said to me recently when she read my favorite sweatshirt that says, "There's no such thing as too many books." Her quip: "Oh yes there is!...when you're moving!"

Also, yesterday I met with my substitute and helped him fill out report cards for this term...a big Leave of Absence loose end that I had agreed to be part of when he took over my 6th grade classroom for me.

But I'm not quite ready to tie up my reading loose end yet, although I am almost finished reading Out of Africa...

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Bookstore Birthday


Before I started teaching, I worked in a bookstore. As a passionate reader, it was the fulfillment of a lifelong dream. It was a delightful little independent bookshop in Salt Lake City, called The King's English. It was opened in 1977 by Betsy Burton, an even more passionate reader whose lifelong dream was to have her own bookstore. With all that passion, it was simply an idea that couldn't fail, and although it's been 30 years of struggling against the big chain bookstores, and all kinds of independent bookshop woes, The King's English has endured and is still an important and lovely part of SLC.

So this year, TKE turns 30, and I want to wish her a very HAPPY BIRTHDAY! I have many lovely memories of being a customer there for five years before getting hired on for the Thursday night and Sunday afternoon shifts. Stopping by the bookstore on my way home from a previous part-time job was pure pleasure. I wandered happily through the little rooms, all the nooks and crannies, exploring the eclectic selection of books, and always finding a treasure of some kind. Betsy loved mysteries, so the mystery room was absolutely delicious. That's where I discovered the books of Josephine Tey, Ngaio Marsh, Dashiell Hammett. A cat lived in the store--a good mouser--and was, of course, named Agatha. (After I started working there, Agatha and I became great friends. When she brought me a mouse one snowy Sunday afternoon, I knew I was loved.)

I worked there for four years, and quit only when I was hired as a teacher in a local school district and no longer had the time nor energy to work at the bookstore. However, before leaving the store, I put together a photo essay to preserve the memories of that experience. I offer those photos here, as a birthday present to a very special place, The King's English.

Click on the photos below to see as individual photos or as a slideshow.


www.flickr.com





Monday, March 05, 2007

Everybody Reads


My daughter-in-law mentioned recently that she was interested in reading the book designated as the 2007 choice for "Everybody Reads" in Portland. I looked it up online (Multnomah County Library) and decided it sounded so good I'd add it to the pile of books on my nightstand. Then I decided to check out the 'everybody reads' choices closer to home, and added the Seattle book choice to the pile, too. Neighbor, Vancouver, B.C., hasn't designated their 2007 book yet, but last year's book was written by an author my sister-in-law just recommended to me...so that will go on the nightstand pile, too. All of a sudden, I have a whole new set of books waiting for me to finish Out of Africa, which I am reading slowly, story by story, letting it simmer.

I didn't realize that there is a national 'everybody reads' program, also! The National Endowment for the Arts has a program called "The Big Read," to encourage literary reading. There are seven books chosen for 2007 (January through June), and communities throughout the country have signed up to participate. They can choose which of the seven books to designate as their community's read. They are all really good books. Some I have already read, but some of them will go on that nightstand, too. All of this reminds me of why I bought my favorite sweatshirt, which always gets a nice comment when I wear it out in public. It has on it an Edward Gorey drawing with the familiar phrase: There's No Such Thing As Too Many Books!




THE PORTLAND "EVERYBODY READS" CHOICE, 2007.












THE "ONE BOOK, ONE VANCOUVER" CHOICE, 2006.













A "BIG READ" FROM THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS, 2007.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Terabithia

Last week I reread Bridge to Terabithia so that it would be fresh in mind when I went to see the new movie. Sometimes it's dangerous to read a book just before seeing the movie version. It's easier when there's some distance between the two experiences, so that they can each be enjoyed as a different, separate, telling of the story. After seeing the movie, I came away feeling a little sad--not just because of the sadness in the story, but because I felt a little disappointed in both the book and the movie. Now, in all honesty, I liked them both! But the book left me wanting a little more, and the movie filled in a little too much. So there you are. I can't be satisfied.

It took me awhile to realize what was missing for me. The missing piece is the book discussion that I would have with my kids at school. We'd read the book together, and have a great discussion. Then we would see the movie, and have another great discussion. The most insightful and heartfelt book talks happen in a 6th grade classroom when the kids are really sparked by the story, whether it be in book form or movie form. I think my kids would like the book and have lots to say about it, and I think they'd like the modernized movie version. I miss those discussions.