Friday, July 15, 2011

Like finding a new Jane Austen book - almost

Emma Watson: The Watsons CompletedEmma Watson: The Watsons Completed by Joan Aiken

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


I woke up happy that I had three Joan Aiken novels to read. But with driving from the Hudson River up to Andes then over to West Kortright Center and back, only read one. Emma Watson: Jane Austen's Unfinished Novel Completed. I am trying to restrain myself in this review but such joy bubbles over. There's many an Austen knock-off I've read, hoping for some of the irony, discipline, reason and delight of the originals. Only one, Jane Fairfax by Aiken, actually completely satisfies, although some few of the other 'sequels' were interesting attempts, some even based on authorial respect, and a few written with some skill.

BUT, aha, there were long passages in Emma Watson that did meet all the criteria Jane Austen established. There's the lilting sense of being in on the joke that permeates her classics. The detail of setting which clarifies the story. When I read Austen, I can see the house, the gardens, the pelisses. I think that's one of her many gifts, she knows what the reader needs, and what it is not necessary to detail. Like Nabokov's exam question on the contents of Anna Karenina's purse, she paints the picture, we are there through the character's eyes, not outside observing the story. (And, I think VN was just cranky that day when he delivered that ill-fated diss -- or else wickedly joking as he tended to do so much. Or perhaps, he felt too many silly readers into Austen for silly reasons (gushing) -- sorry for the Defense). She does not mind.

The thing about Joan Aiken writing more Austen is Aiken's respect for the original text, being true to Austen's characters, her poetic and imaginative skills in writing, also playing with Austen's inside jokes. I'll not give those away, it's too delightful finding them. Aiken extends the strong, independent, self-actualizing woman most satisfactorily.

I couldn't stop reading it, always a good sign, even as I had planned to submit my own novel to the e-publishing system today. Always better to be buoyed by Austin and Aiken for the real courage to go ahead and publish.

Did I mention I loved the book and recommend it for those who can read between the lines?



View all my reviews

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Come to the Mountains and Write!

Garnette Arledge Summer Writing Opportunities


Memoir Writing
Six Tuesdays, June 7 – 28 & July 5 & 12 , 6:30 – 8:30 PM at West Kortright Center


Gather the dreams of your life

Write your memoirs with writing guide Garnette Arledge who provides group support, prompts and feedback. Leave a legacy from your point of view of the 20th century plus as your life unfolded around challenging events of daily life. Telling the story of your life on paper sparks the brain cells and leaves an anchor for your thinking and actions. Course will include information on all methods of publishing; e-books, self-publishing, publishing houses.
For ages 13 to no maximum. $150/$120 WKC Member

Six Thursdays, June 2 - July 7 - Writers in the Mountains (WIM)
6-8 pm at Andes Books, 295 Main Street, Andes, NY - For ages 16 to no max. $75

WRITING ON A FOOTPRINT with GARNETTE ARLEDGE

If Jane Austens' six novels have reaped 145 sequels, prequels and spin-offs, why not try one yourself? Or maybe you have another favorite author ready for your fresh take. I certainly do, since childhood I have rewritten many books in my mind, especially their endiings, to suit my tastes. In this workshop you bring an old favorite in the public domain, and play with your own version. Plot characterization and settings are already in place and believeable. You bring the new twist, different endiing, extra characters and your wild free imagination. Instruction, feed-back and laughter provided by published author Garnette Arledge, journalist, novelist and owner of Andes Books.

Biography

Published and award-winning author Garnette Arledge teaches memoir writing to both groups and individuals. She recently moved to Andes and opened Andes Books on Main Street. She is a sponsor of NaNoWriMo, National Novel Writing Month, (when writers pour out 50,000 word first drafts in 30 days). She is currently editing and preparing three of her novels as e-books.
Arledge specializes in interviewing and writing memoirs for families, elders, businesses, communities and organizations with guidance through the publishing process. Three of her non-fiction books were published recently, including, On Angels Eve: on dying well based on her experience as a Hospice Chaplain. Wise Secrets of Aloha : growing up native Hawaiian and Blessings, Hilda. She is currently working on several clients' memoirs. Recent completed works include; growing up on the lower east side; growing up in a German farming village; letters for young children from a dying father, and her own grandmother's stories of the Great Smokey Mountains. Garnette was host and co-producer of “Get Fresh” TV series and has been a frequent guest on radio. Her blog is Garnette-AndesBooks@Blogspot.com and you can find her also on Facebook or Linked-in.

Personal, private sessions by appointment, contact me on Facebook messages for details.



By summer Garnette will be working on a 'footprint' spinoff novel based
on a favorite author, now forgotten, whose works need not be.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Monday Andes had her Spring

Garnette Arledge
For Andes Gazette

Monday, April 11, Andes had her Spring. Now as I write, two days later, it seems to have gone back into hibernation. By the time you read this, may Spring become a longer resident in the beautiful Andes area.

However, according to the Albany rally I attended on that one glorious day, the renowned beauty of clean water and air, healthy and spectacular mountains refuges and sporadic traffic on back roads are headed back into history.

The last rally I attended was in Washington DC, in days of protests against Vietnam. The last one because I was pregnant with my first child who is now thirty-nine, and the crowd ahead was tear-gassed. But when The Catskill Mountainkeeper posted information about the anti-fracking rally I felt it was safe to show my support on the Capital lawn.

It was a glorious drive up Route 30 along full flowing streams to Route 88. In Schoharie we saw workers planting seeds in the rich farm valley. Albany was sunny, practically shirtsleeve weather as we stood under the fuzzy red clusters of maple trees swanning in the sun. The speakers laid out the dangers of fracking: night and day heavy diesel trucks pushing local traffic off back roads, dirty polluted air and brown carcinogenic water in home taps, dramatically increased medical problems, with high medical bills, loss of business for what the speakers said is ‘no market for natural gas.’ See www.catskillmountainkeeper.com for more information on this issue.

Others can tell you more about the fracking issue: I just have the poet’s view to share.

I was happy to be outside in the sun, once again thankful to be living in a free country where communities and their people care enough out quality of life to gather peacefully from all over to listen to other concerned citizens. And when once again home, I sat on my front porch and rocked in the clean, warm sunshine.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Korean Poetry
April 4, 2011
Garnette Arledge

Cafe Green near Dupont Circle,
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Waiting, hoping, Drew show up

While sitting at the granite bar, a woman of my tribe, who thought she did not know me, mentions to the delicious owner: a new film from Korea she has just seen, recommending it highly to him, a Korean.

He responds that I had extolled Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter the gloriously beautiful Korean Buddhist tough love epic of a decade ago. Something went into me, I just had to see Poetry. Not only am I a devotee of art films, but of course, I revere the bards. So once again, as syncronicitiously as that day in Washington, when son Drew did show up, yesterday driving by an art cinema in rural, but not so rural NY, emblazoned sign POETRY. TONIGHT.

So sure was I that the Rosendale Theater would be packed, I arrived 35 minutes early only to be shocked there were less than a dozen older women, mostly sitting singly, viewers. And true, it was a devastating movie about Alzheimer’s. OR was it?

Not only, in fact it was about dying, my favorite subject. Dying which is Living. Dying well. Dying with honor, self-respect, leaving those behind, stronger, more fully human, contributing to global evolving. When the stranger-doctor pronounces ‘You have Alzheimer’s, dementia’ the character naturally takes a poetry class. Totally logical to me. In fact, registration is full, but she gracefully, shyly, politely barges in anyway. The teacher is Poet. The teacher is her life as it unwinds. Like a good mentor should be, the guide gives slight clues and lives the way. Like the mother spider, the sixty-six year pupil pulls the web of poetry out of herself. ‘Tell the class your most beautiful moment.’ Hers was being seen with eyes of love.

And what an examination of true love. She raises her grandson, her daughter, a drunken cop, the mother of a raped girl, five fathers and their sons, and in the end, with great dignity, having written her one poem from her soul, what? Up to us. Just like our own lives. Up to us.

Highly recommended for its beauty and truth how to be writing poetry with your life.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Great Advice plus Ellis Island, read this and write your own

ZINSSER ON FRIDAY
The 300-Word Challenge
By William Zinsser

I once got a call from a woman who said she was the editor of a magazine called Endless Vacations. Endless vacations! The very name gave me a thrill: a vacation that never stopped. I could be seamlessly whisked from a safari in Kenya to a Club Med on the Riviera to a temple dance in Bali. When I calmed down I realized that what was endless was the number of vacations being recommended by the magazine, not the vacation itself. But I was hooked.


The editor explained that a regular feature of her magazine was a 300-word essay, on the back page, about an iconic American site. She had seen a review of my book American Places, a journey to 16 such sites, and she asked if I would write some 300-word icon pieces for her. I said that after two years of traveling and writing I was through with the icon business, but that she could buy any of my chapters and I would condense them into 300-word excerpts. I believe that anything can be cut to 300 words.

The editor agreed, and for a while we kept that gig going. After that she again asked if I would try writing a 300-word piece from scratch. By then I thought it might be an interesting exercise. I only insisted that the site be close to home; I didn’t want to fly to San Francisco to write 300 words about the Golden Gate Bridge. The site I chose was Ellis Island, a mere subway and ferry ride away.

My only preparation was arrange an interview with Ellis Island’s superintendent; places are only places until they are given meaning by the people who look after them. I just spent a day walking around the site, taking as many notes as I would for a 5,000-word article. Nonfiction writers should always gather far more material than they will use, never knowing which morsel will later exactly serve their needs.

Here’s Ellis Island in 300 words:

Of the two highly symbolic pieces of land in New York harbor, the more obvious icon is the Statue of Liberty; the lady embodies every immigrant’s dream of America. But I’ll take Ellis Island—that’s an icon with its feet in reality. Almost half the people now living in America can trace their ancestry to the 12 million men and women and children who entered the country there. mainly between 1892 and 1924. “It’s their Plymouth Rock,” says M. Ann Belkov, superintendent of the National Park Service’s Immigration Museum, which occupies the distinctive red brick building, now handsomely restored, where the immigrants were processed. “Tourists who come here are walking in their families’ footsteps,” Belkov told me. “Three of my four grandparents first stepped on land in the U.S.A. in this building.”

Unlike most museums, which preserve the dead past, Ellis Island feels almost alive, or at least within reach of living memory. People we all know made history–American history and their own history–in the vast Registry Room, where as many as 5,000 newcomers a day were examined by officials and doctors and were served meals that contained strange and wonderful foods. Many had never seen a banana. “The white bread was like cake already,” says one old man who came from Russia, his voice typical of the many oral recollections that animate the building, along with exhibits displaying the much-loved possessions that the immigrants brought from their own culture: clothes and linens and embroidery, ornaments and religious objects and musical instruments.

Strong faces stare out of innumerable photographs: men and women from every cranny of the world. The captions quote them eloquently on the poverty and persecution that impelled them to leave (“always there was the police”) and on the unbelievable freedoms that awaited them here. One of them says, “It was as if God’s great promise had been fulfilled.”

Is there anything more about Ellis Island that an ordinary reader needs to know? The first paragraph is packed with necessary facts about the site: its setting and historical importance. It also contains an ideal summarizing metaphor (“It was their Plymouth Rock”) and a tremendous fact about American possibility: in two generations the granddaughter of three of those immigrants had become superintendent of the place where they “first stepped on land in the U.S.A.” The second paragraph fills the long-empty buildings with people–old-world men and women marveling at white bread and bananas—and with the belongings they couldn’t bear to leave behind. The final paragraph tells what kind of people they were–what they looked and sounded like. It also explains why they left the oppression at home to seek a new life in America.

The language is highly compressed. Facts are crammed into one sentence that I would normally spread over three or four sentences, adding rhythm and grace and some agreeable details. But nothing fundamental has been lost; the grammar and the syntax are intact.

My students tell me that this 300-word piece is unusually helpful. They seem to be taken by surprise by its economy–that so much work can be accomplished just by tightening some screws. But the English language is endlessly supple. It will do anything you ask it to do, if you treat it well. Try it and see.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Night of the Mothers, Garnette's novel, Advances

Dear Garnette, Thank you for your participation in the 2011 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award Contest. The entries moving to the second round of the contest have been selected. (THAT MEANS MOI !!!)

My entry is one of the 1000 General Fiction category entries or one of the 1000 Young Adult Fiction category entries that will be moving on to the second round:

On March 22, we will announce the 250 General Fiction and 250 Young Adult Fiction entries that will be continuing on to the Quarter-Finals. We appreciate your participation in the 2011 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award Contest.

Thank you,

CreateSpace ABNA Team

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Virginia Woolf Birth Date Today

After the January frenzy of prepping for the contest, it's so good to be back to writing again. I've returned to The Light Heart. This book is based on the journal I kept, in three notebooks, on my 1993 trip to India for four months. I've been meaning to write it ever since, and now, house bound due to the deep weather, snow and black ice (And remembering how absolutely hot I was in South India), I've found solace in writing about those magical times.

Sometimes when I write, I go into the zone where the words flow like a funnel through me. I don't know what this state is. Is it intuition? Well, I celebrate and treasure intuition. I consciously honor it yet have no idea what actually is happening. I've been told I'm a mind-reader, yet I have no idea if I am. I know it made my mother mad when I would pop out with things. But she was so deliberately tactful, unlike me always creating uproar with sudden statements, I just chalked it up to the fact we were from different planets.

Where does the the writing come from? I sit at the laptop having no idea of plot or direction, and one by one or phrase by phrase something comes out. Is this stream of consciousness, is it Virginia Woolf, no just kidding. I don't like the term channeling, it seems so dishonoring to me. Dishonoring of our own inner wisdom. But ideas do come, sequentially, often amazing me. Are you ever so moved by what your fingers tap out, that you stop, awed? How did that beauty, that arrangement of words happen.

I try not to think when I write. I know that might sound like I'm an airhead. And I may be. But the first day I worked in a newsroom, it was the Pittsburgh Press, of the Scripps Howard chain, I was sitting at my desk, looking at my notes, hands not moving on the manual typewriter, when an old pro walks by: "Don't Think, Write."

Taking this prime directive to heart, that's what I've been doing ever since.

Happy and peaceful birth date, Virginia.

Monday, January 24, 2011

It's 12:47 a.m. and all is well

I did it. Entered the Amazon Writer's Breakthough Contest at 12:01, January 24 with Night of the Mothers.

It was a lot of work: the edited and proofread 70,000 document of the novel; an author's biography, a pitch on why they should pick my book, a 300 word description of the novel, 5000 words excerpt, and some horn tooting. Now there are four stages, or hoops, to go through but all I have to do is wait for notifications.

It's been fun working on a deadline again. I was missing the NaNoWriMo frenzy until this contest started.

However, not to worry, tomorrow I go back to working on that November novel, The Light Heart, again. It's always encouraging to have another one in the pipeline as you send one out into the world.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Nobel Prize-winning poet and playwright Derek Walcot was quoted on The Writer's Almanac this morning: "For every poet it is always morning in the world. History a forgotten, insomniac night; History and elemental awe are always our early beginning, because the fate of poetry is to fall in love with the world, in spite of History."

Tonight at 12:01, I will enter my first-ever novel contest.