I recently watched the movie Sylvia, the story of the turmoil life that was Sylvia Plath’s. Having recently read The Bell Jar for book club I found myself fascinated with the woman behind the words.
The movie is mainly about Plath’s life at the point that Ted Hughes (eventual husband) comes into her life. The start of their time together is much like a fairy tale of fun romance from meeting each other, to Ted tossing small rocks at her window at night. It appears to be the start of something beautiful. However, soon Sylvia finds herself struggling to write the poems she is known for and becomes more and more consumed with her husbands doings.
I really enjoyed seeing this side of the Sylvia Plath story. No, enjoyed doesn’t sound right…. I really appreciated being able to see this side of the story. Having read The Bell Jar and knowing the little bit that I knew about Sylvia and her life, this really pieced things together between the strange passion of the book, and the flame that burned inside Sylvia herself.
When I went on-line I was fascinated to see how many books are out centered around either Sylvia’s writing, or her life as well as her husband Ted’s.
On February 11th, 1963, Sylvia Plath committed suicide. She was found dead in her kitchen having inhaled gas from her oven.
A year later Ted Hughes oversaw the publication of her last manuscript of poems. The collection, ‘Ariel’ became one of the most celebrated and widely read books of poetry of the 20th century,and made Sylvia an icon for generations of readers.
In 1998, Ted Hughes broke a thirty year silence about Sylvia with the publication of ‘Birthday Letters’, a series of poems telling the story of their relationship. He died of cancer a few weeks later.
Overall I would say this is a wonderful companion to The Bell Jar.
Good morning. Lovely (yet still dark) day here in Central Minnesota. I am sipping at my ever ready cup of COFFEE and doing what I enjoy in the mornings, reading my Shelf Awareness that magically appears in my email each morning and as reliable as a faithful dog. Love it. Love it.
Oh yeah… I love it.
This mornings edition had a couple interesting topics and then I was reading an interview with Erin Blakemore and she was saying that the book that changed her life was Jayne Eyre. She goes on to say that she has gasps of recognition as she rediscovers it for the thousandth time.
Jayne Eyre?
Thousandth time?
I couldn’t get through it once. It is like the kryptonite book for me…. I want to read it…. oh yes, I want to say that I have read Jane Eyre but I picked it up and I got lost in the what…. language? In the time?
I feel like I am a minority on this one… because I am constantly reading things like:
“Jayne Eyre changed my life – this is the best book I have ever read!”
“Through the years I always go back to Jayne Eyre my favorite book of all time!”
“A divine work of art that I will always carry within me!”
Why can't this woman and I just get along?
Wha? Why do I picture that if I was in Jayne Eyre times that her and my fictional self would have been like Laura Ingalls and Nelly Olson? And I am really not sure which of us would play what role as – like I have humbly admitted here…. I have not read the book.
So as I leave for work this morning, and to the cabin later today (there’s a big YAY!!!), I leave you with this question…. errrr…. questions.
1. Is it just me who struggles with Jayne Eyre?
2. What book is it for you that everyone raves about and you wish you could join the forces raising your glass to the author and to the book itself…. and yet you just can not get into it?
Anyway…. that’s where my head is at this morning.
Good morning Jayne…. coffee this morning? 😀
"Sheila, I take my coffee black because I do not have time to harvest sugar or make the creamer."
And so begins the sing-song rhythmic read of The Lorax. Do you remember this book? The pictures of the colorful and fluffy Truffula Trees. That is until The Old Once-ler came round, and decided he need to chop the trees down (intentional rhyme) 😛
Then the Lorax showed up to speak for the trees, he said do not cut them I am asking you please!
(Ok… now I can’t stop so I am just going to go with it)
The Lorax tried to stop the factory that was built, but progress was already moving full tilt!
With no more trees the Bar Ba Loots had nothing to eat, but really its just business so sadly they retreat.
As the story goes the end came at last, with no trees and no animals all was in the past…
Yet one seed did remain and plant it we must, for the future is ours and to us it must trust.
I checked this out from the library for banned book week. This book just brings back the memories of all sorts of Seuss moments, and while this is not one of the big names I remember (Cat In The Hat, One Fish, Two Fish, Hop On Pop…) it is one that does hold a message.
I just loved reading it again!
Why was The Lorax a banned book?
The Lorax was banned because it was felt to cast a negative look on the forestry industry.
In 1989, the Laytonville, CA Unified School District tried to do just that. They challenged the book based on someone’s belief that it criminalizes the foresting industry.
Good Morning. I am off from work today, Chance and I are going to Staples to speak to a group about Kinship Partners. Chance has been in our families life for 8 years now and we are going to talk about what we have done the past 8 years and how Kinship has really brought to each of us a better, fuller life.
A conversation I really enjoy having with people is discussing what our names would have been if we born the opposite sex. If I would have been a boy my name would have been Rory. Apparently, my parents had told me, there was a great western actor Rory Calhoun who I would have been named after.
Hoo boy… maybe that’s why I really don’t like country music…..
Rory Calhoun (oh yeah... he is that hot...LOL)
Oh… and just to clarify…. Rory is the one on the right. 😉
So just for fun… do you know what your name would have been?
Once upon a time in New York City, there were two sisters. Their father was a spinner of tales, always armed with a freshly brewed mug of English Breakfast Tea.
Their mother was a seamstress who loved to be out and about, and together, they would take the sisters to afternoon tea wherever it was served. The sisters learned at a very early age that tea was more than a beverage – it was an even to be shared and protected. Tea was a sacred experience, whether at a hotel or at a home; it was a time to connect, share your thoughts and drams, and escape for a spell.
And that is how Alice’s Tea Cup came to be…
Ahhh….. Alice’s Tea Cup is memories of May…. I was here with several wonderful book bloggers and the amazing Adriana Trigiani during BEA. At that time this book was not out yet, but we were each promised to have the book sent to us once they had it ready. You can imagine my SSQQUUUEEEE level when it arrived at my home recently. What a treasure!
Filled with gorgeous pictures and recipes of cookies, muffins, scones, frosting and more… I literally drooled over the pages and remember the mouth-watering treats that we were served that day. Authors Haley and Lauren show us how to celebrate with tea and festival foods, not only the delicious treats but also soups and salads that I can not wait to serve in my own home.
My only regret with this book…. the pictures were not scratch and sniff. 😉
This is a lovely gift book that I am beyond thrilled to own not only this treasured book… but the memories it holds for me inside the pages.
Alice's Tea Cup in May 2010 with Adriana Trigiani
Book Journey has updated the 2010 reading map to include Alice’s Tea Cup
Thank you thank you thank you to Harper Collins
and of course to Adriana Trigiana who was the reason I experienced the amazing Alice’s Tea Cup!
–noun a feeling of utter weariness and discontent resulting from satiety or lack of interest; boredom: The endless lecture produced an unbearable ennui.
I do not have ennui. I actually just heard it used in an audio I was listening to. They referred to it as teenage ennui, and I don’t know… I just liked the sound of it.
And of course… it reminded me of this:
No worries. I think I have the opposite of this. I have Off-wee. Which would be defined as:
–noun a feeling of total ENERGY and contentment resulting from interest; excitement: The things happening in my life have produced an abundance of off-wee.
😛
(I can almost feel the dork meter rising within me…..)
Eliza Benedict has a good life. She has a loving adoring husband. She is a mom of two children, Isobel (Iso) who is every bit the thirteen year old girl she should be, and eight year old Albie. Life is good and as it should be…
Right?
But Eliza has long-held on to a deep dark secret in her past and it is about to arrive on her door step in letter format. The letter is from Walter Bowman, a man on death row for the rape and murder of one girl, and who is also the man who had kidnapped Eliza for six weeks and raped her at the age of 15.
What could he possibly want and why is he pushing his way into Eliza’s wonderful life now after all this time?
“Dear Elizabeth,
I’m sure this is a shock, although that’s not my intention, to shock you. Up until a few weeks ago, I never thought I would have any communication with you at all and accepted that as fair. That’s how it’s been for more than twenty years now. But it’s hard to ignore signs when they are right there in front of your face, and there was your photo in Washingtonian magazine, not the usual thing I read, but you’d be surprised by my choice of reading material these days. Of course, you are older, a woman now. You’ve been a woman for a while, obviously. Still, I’d know you anywhere.”
So…. what if your past did come back to get you?
I listened to this book on audio and really enjoyed the narrator, Linda Emond (who also narrates in Lippman’s The What The Dead Know and Life Sentences).
The audio/book flashes back and forth to Eliza’s younger life at fifteen (then she was Elizabeth) and back to her current life and age of Thirty-eight. The story line is fantastic…. what do you do if you are the reason a man is on death row? What do you do if many years later he is reaching out in the last hours of his life saying he is wanting to apologize for the wrong he has done? And is that truly all he wants?
This was the type of read you didn’t want to stop, but instead I wanted to rush through to the ending to find out what was going to happen. What decisions would Eliza make for herself? For her family? What does Walter really hope to get out of contacting Eliza and is he truly a changed man?
Fast paced, well written. I definitely plan to read more from this author.
Morning! The best laid plans right? In my head I was going to be up and at work by 6 am this morning. I was going to have many things ready as I start training my replacement this week (yes, I am morphing my position at work – a good thing, no worries). However, instead I slept like a log and didn’t open my eyes until moments ago.
Yes I have heard of alarm clocks.
Annoying things…. I don’t recommend them. 😛
Anyway I can not even tell you all the balls I have in the air right now because, well I just do not have the time – BUT before I fly out the door I had to have coffee and coffee means I write this post…. because this is my sanity moments of the day.
And I need this.
Like a vitamin.
The weekend was fantastic, I had so much fun at the Book Festival and I do plan on fitting that in again next year. It’s hard to imagine what this was going to be like as the only “festival” related to books I have been to prior to this weekend was BEA, and well – you just can not compare the two. Now that I have seen it, I know how I can do it better next year. For one, I would be sure to sit in on several of the panels so I can hear what these bookish people have to say.
As I fly out the door there are a few pics I did not use in my weekend posts and I wanted to add them because they are just fun.
It’s Monday! What Are You Reading, is where we gather to share what we have read this past week and what we plan to read this week. It is a great way to network with other bloggers, see some wonderful blogs, and put new titles on your reading list.
I love being a part of this and I hope you do too! As part of this weekly meme I love to encourage you all to go and visit the others participating in this meme. I offer a weekly contest for those who visit 10 or more of the Monday Meme participants and leave a comment. You receive one entry for every 10 comments, just come back here and tell me how many in the comment area.
Congratulations! Please choose an item out of the PRIZE BOX and email me your choice with your mailing address as well! journeythroughbooks@gmail.com
I knew a week like this was bound to happen. Between my busy schedule and battling this cold and fever I accomplished very little in the reading department. Very little.
Ok… I guess looking at that it does look like I was active. It didn’t feel like it, but two reviews, a movie review and a bookish topic isn’t bad with being gone all weekend. 😀
I have a lot of reviews to write yet. This week I am keeping it light so I can catch up on some of last weeks reading goals. Coming off of the festival I am going with a book that was given to me for review, and one that was a blogger recommendation.
This book was given to me for review from author Carl Brookins at the Twin Cities Book Festival. Carl currently has 9 books out and I am interested to see what this author, who is a member of the Minnesota Crime Wave, has to say.
I was reading My Friend Amy’s Faith in Fiction post this past weekend and she mentioned this book that I had never heard of. When I mentioned that in a comment on her post she replied saying it was one of her favorite books. On my way home today I stopped at Barnes and Noble in St. Cloud and they had a copy which is now… my copy. 🙂
I am ready for a little down time with a cup (or two) of tea and seeing what you are reading! This is one of my favorite things to do each week. Add your What Are You Reading post to the Linky where it says CLICK HERE and we all can visit the posts!
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This past weekend I was on a panel at the Twin Cities Book Festival. Our topic was The Changing World of Publishing: Getting Books To Readers.
Our problem is not too few good books, but too many. How does a reader decide what to read next despite the growing stack of options on their night table? How does a new author break into a dedicated reader’s “To Be Read” queue when traditional media outlets are disappearing fast? What role will new technologies like social media play now that authors are largely responsible for promoting their books themselves?”
Here is who was on the panel with me:
Tim W. Brown has worked behind the scenes at the Printer’s Row Book Festival in Chicago and at the Independent Press Center in New York City. He has also published three novels and his poetry and nonfiction have appeared in hundred of publications.
Andrew Ervin is the author of Extraordinary Renditions, just out from Coffee House Press. He is also a noted reviewer of books for The Believer, New York Times Book Review, Rain Taxi Review of Books, and other fabulous periodicals.
Jeff Kamin moderates the “Books & Bars” reading series in Minneapolis, which won a City Pages Best of in 2009. He’s also a freelance writer, publicist, and event coordinator at the blog “Mustache Robots,” but only after being El Jefe to his two young boys.
Steph Opitz is the membership director of the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses in New York, and the former publicist at Red Hen Press in Los Angeles.
Moderated by Kevin Smokler, co-founder and CEO of BookTour.com and editor of the anthology Bookmark Now: Writing inUnreaderly Times.
Me, Tim Brown, Jeff Kamin
Thanks Reagan for taking the pics!
Our first questions was:
What do you see as the biggest change to reading and books of the last 5 years?
Several of the panelists agreed that the ways to read books have really been huge over the past five years. It was also mentioned that the reader’s attention span to get into a book has changed as there are so many options for someone to do now in their free time. You can order up a movie on your TV, play a video game, work or play on your laptop…
I responded with the amazing growth of the book blogger/reviewers. While a few years back there may have been a few hundred book blogs – now there were thousands. I feel, as many of you do too, that the book blogging community carries a strong voice and put many books out there for others to learn about and want to read. I mentioned that most of my book selections come from a review I read on a book blog.
Our second questions was, what is the biggest challenge to what you do each day as a books professional/avid hobbyist?
The panelists spoke of how hard it is trying to get books into the readers hands. How does a reader choose a book, with the costs of books when they first come out. Panelist Tim Brown mentioned that when his first book came out years ago about 200 people would show up for a book signing and he would sell maybe 50 books. Now, with his latest book out in print, a book signing draws maybe 20 people, and he may sell 3 or 4 books. While Tim jokingly mentions, he believes he is not getting worse as a writer.
When the question was directed my way, moderator Kevin Smokler asked how I as an avid reader keeps up, he said obviously I can not be purchasing every book I want to review or I would be broke and penniless on the streets. He is right. 🙂 I spoke on the challenges I see are choosing what to read. I explained that receive 5 – 8 book review requests a day. While I want to read some of the big name books, I also am always hopeful I will find that treasured book in a smaller names publishing company and author. The weeding through the reviews is tricky because obviously I can, nor do I want to, read every book that comes up as a review request.
Our final question was, what needs to change for the book business to be all it can be?
This one I felt was best answered by panelist Jeff Kamin, from Books and Bars (which if you have not checked out this website – I urge you to do so!). Jeff said that maybe publishers should release the paper back versions of books at the same time as the hard cover. He brought up the points of how a select few are going to pay the average $24 asking price for a new hard cover. Book Clubs and other book enthusiasts are going to wait for the paperback version before purchasing.
Tim Brown mentioned that reviewers needed to reach out beyond the popular authors and anticipated books. He mentioned how when a big named book comes out that every where you look that book is being talked about in the newspapers by reviewers and critics and the market online and off is saturated in the same information.
I in turn brought that while Tim mentions that the reviews need to broaden their horizons, that authors need to do so as well. I said no longer can a person publish a book and hope for the best. Building a community around your book and yourself is huge. Having a blog, a website, Facebook in some cases, as well as Twitter. I like to relate to the authors. I enjoy talking with them and I am more apt to read a book from an author I have talked with on Twitter on had the opportunity to look at a website or a blog. Authors as well have to be pro active.
I mentioned that even on my way into the panel I spoke with an author whose book I reviewed earlier this year. He was saying how once the book is out, the publisher can not continue to carry you. The author needs to make things happen, being involved in book events, being seen on-line.
At this point the discussion was opened up to the room, which was packed (including my bloggy friends that I was hanging out with). Questions were asked about book trailers – yay or nay? One lady asked about how do you find good books to read when you don’t want to go with an online book email or trust what the papers or the book stores are saying. You can bet that she and I talked after the panel.
One lady, asked me how I choose from the requests I receive and I mentioned that in my review policy I ask that when people are offering me a book for review that they give as much information as possible about the book as well as a picture if possible and links to websites, etc, about the book or author. I explained that most requests do not do this. They give a brief, “would you review my book” with a title and a little paragraph about it. I said at that point I take the title into Amazon and drop it in there so I can have a look at the book. I said honestly, I am a bit of a cover snob and believe that a cover will tell me a bit about the book. (After the panel was over a few people approached me to say they were cover snobs too).
Over all, this was an amazing experience. It was interesting to hear the concerns of the future of publishing from these different voices. As a “beginning writer/author” it really reminded me that the getting your book out there and published is really only the beginning.