I just posted an excerpt--the first three chapters--of my second novel, "Random & Entirely Coincidental," on my other blog. Check it out here. While I don't apologize for the mature subject matter of my work, "Random & Entirely Coincidental" takes it to a whole new level.
I've had an agent for the past five years--and I was working on "Random" when Scribe Agency took me on as a client--so I guess it's been a little over three years since I dotted the final i and crossed the final t. "Random" was an intentional departure from my first novel. While "The Anguish of Angus Bluefeet" approached some mature subject matter, I felt like I had held back on some of the most powerful scenes...particularly those as they relate to a man's penchant for sexual obsession.
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Saturday, February 26, 2011
The Anguish of Angus Bluefeet
I just posted an excerpt--the first three chapters--of my first novel, "The Anguish of Angus Bluefeet," to my other blog. Check it out here. I submitted it to my agent a little over five years ago, and we still haven't sold it. There are probably some things that I would change (now that I think about it) but I don't want to spend the time that it would require. I've already finished the second novel...and am working on the third...so going back to the first one doesn't make sense. It took over five years to write "The Anguish of Angus Bluefeet," and it was a great learning experience. It would be really nice to see it on the shelves of my favorite bookstore!
Friday, February 25, 2011
Stick Figures
Just posted a story on my other blog. Check it out here. I wrote Stick Figures nine or ten years ago. Although I had dated a few women with children, I didn't have any children of my own. Very interesting to read a story I wrote about a young girl--who in certain ways reminds me of my own daughter--long before Bella was born.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
A Canine Appetite for Reading
The New York Times reports that a "trove of books that were among the last ones that Thomas Jefferson, the nation’s most bibliophilic president, collected and read in the decade before he died" has been discovered.
Jefferson's taste in books--in his own words, he had a canine appetite for reading--should give scholars further evidence of where he got his ideas and what influenced him. As the article so eloquently states, "the physical collection is not as critical as what it represents intellectually."
I suppose that collecting the video games and dvds of the next generation may provide evidence of where they got their ideas and what influenced them, but sadly...a "canine appetite for gaming," doesn't have as sweet of a ring to it.
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Reading the Infallible Word
While I try to link to books I've actually read--rather than read about--this book review on Salon.com is worth commenting on even though I have yet to read "The Rise and Fall of the Bible" by Timothy Beal. The book, written by a Christian, is an argument against reading the Bible as the "infallible" Word of God, but encourages us instead to read it as a "work of art--that is, as a text permitting multiple interpretations and as a spur to further thought and self-examination rather than as the last word on all of life's enigmas."
Saturday, February 19, 2011
You Can't Handle the Truth: Fact vs. Fiction and the Fuzziness of Truth in Literature
In one of my weekly strolls through the New York Times, I stumbled across several articles that grabbed my attention.
A class-action lawsuit has been filed against President Jimmy Carter and Simon & Schuster--who published Carter's "Palestine: Peace, Not Apartheid" in 2006--alleging that the book was "falsely marketed as an accurate account of peace negotiations in the Middle East." David Schoen--the attorney who filed the suit--remarked that "You cannot market it as the absolute truth on something when it's not."
Kathryn Stockett--the author of the best-selling novel, "The Help," is being sued by Ablene Cooper--a 60-year-old woman--who alleges that "one of the book's principal characters, Aibileen Clark, is an unauthorized appropriation of her name and image, which she finds emotionally distressing."
A class-action lawsuit has been filed against President Jimmy Carter and Simon & Schuster--who published Carter's "Palestine: Peace, Not Apartheid" in 2006--alleging that the book was "falsely marketed as an accurate account of peace negotiations in the Middle East." David Schoen--the attorney who filed the suit--remarked that "You cannot market it as the absolute truth on something when it's not."
Kathryn Stockett--the author of the best-selling novel, "The Help," is being sued by Ablene Cooper--a 60-year-old woman--who alleges that "one of the book's principal characters, Aibileen Clark, is an unauthorized appropriation of her name and image, which she finds emotionally distressing."
Friday, February 18, 2011
Finding God
I just posted my one-act play, Finding God, on my other blog and a few things came to mind. I was enrolled in a playwriting workshop at the University of Montana - Western when I wrote this play over the course of that class. We had a reading in the campus coffee shop--The Cup--and later staged it in the One Act Play Festival on campus. Besides my embarrassing attempt at portraying the play's protagonist, it went rather well. On re-reading it before posting it to my blog--despite having written it over twelve years ago--I still enjoyed it.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
You Say You Want a Revolution?
While I'm just as sad as the next book lover that Borders has filed bankruptcy--and as a result, is closing many of its stores--I am not surprised. The publishing industry has been on the decline for some time now...and had plenty of time to stop it. I imagine I'm not the only one who has grown weary of walking into a bookstore (Barnes & Noble, Borders etc.) and seeing the same titles and authors shoved in my face--with the best shelf space reserved for the houses with the deepest pockets--telling me what's hot and what's not...and rarely giving me the time to find out for myself. Frankly, I enjoy a trip to Half Price Books just as much because I never know what gem I'm going to find (even though I'm a little annoyed that they won't give me jack for the books I sell) but who knows how long even they'll stay in business.
Saturday, February 12, 2011
From Your Valentine (for Christie, with love)
Spent a good part of the afternoon writing Christie a Valentine. Nothing better than posting it on your public blog before you even let her see it. ;)
Thursday, February 10, 2011
The Learning Curve
My students are reading "The Learning Curve" by David Sedaris. An essay from his hilarious book Me Talk Pretty One Day, "The Learning Curve" follows his misadventures as a teacher of a writing workshop. "Like branding steers or embalming the dead, teaching was a profession I had never seriously considered. I was clearly unqualified, yet I accepted the job without hesitation, as it would allow me to wear a tie and go by the name of Mr. Sedaris. My father went by the same name, and though he lived a thousand miles away, I liked to imagine someone getting the two of us confused." Love it!
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Manners of Dying
I just finished a remarkable short story by Yann Martel--author of Life of Pi--called Manners of Dying. A story broken up into nine sections, Manners of Dying is an epistolary tale featuring letters from the Warden of Cantos Correctional Institution to the mother of a recently executed prisoner. Each section is a different version of the events of the last day of her son. One word: remarkable.
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Poetry of Protest
According to The Daily Beast, "protesters throughout the Middle East are using famous poetry as subversive chants against the government." Check it out.
Friday, February 4, 2011
Dropping Bella
I assigned my college English composition class their first essay, and I thought it only fair that I write my own. I've been wanting to write this essay for some time. And the title has been in my head for several years. Check it out here.
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