B. Morrison's Blog, page 73
October 7, 2012
Ethan Frome, by Edith Wharton
Memory certainly works in mysterious ways. I was reading Abide with Me, by Elizabeth Strout, author of one of my favorite books, Alice Kitteridge. Abide with Me follows Tyler Caskey, the minister of the small, New England town of West Arnett in the winter of 1959. Burdened with grief, he lives with his young daughter, Katherine, in a farmhouse a little ways outside of town while his younger daughter, Jeanne, lives with his mother in the nearby town of Shirley Falls. Katherine has barely spoke...
September 30, 2012
Belshazzar's Daughter, by Barbara Nadel
I recently started a novel with a lovely and intriguing cover, an interesting title, and glowing blurbs. Before I’d read even twenty pages, though, we were on our third time period and third set of characters. Maybe my attention span has gotten shorter, but that just required too much up-front work from me, and I discarded the book without going further.
I think this is one reason why I like mysteries: they stay closer to the classical unities than most novels. There is one main action: solv...
September 23, 2012
Townie, by Andre Dubus III
Townie, by Andre Dubus III
This memoir recounts Dubus’s life growing up poor in the 1970s in Haverill, an impoverished mill town on the Merrimack River, an environment I’m very familiar with from my years in Worcester. Dubus’s father, a writer and professor at Bradford College across the river, left the family when Andre was 11. Burdened with the responsibility he’s undertaken to protect his two sisters and younger brother while their embattled mother works to support the family, Andre strugg...
September 16, 2012
In Other Rooms, Other Wonders, by Daniyal Mueenuddin [2]
This collection of short stories set in Pakistan’s cities and rural villages make up Mueenuddin’s first book, a fact that perhaps influenced my reaction. I thought the book very good for a first effort, though perhaps not good enough to be a finalist for both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, both of which distinctions are trumpeted on the cover. It’s not the first time my opinion has differed from that of prize judges and surely won’t be the last.
The characters in these eight...
In Other Rooms, Other Wonders, by Daniyal Mueenuddin
This collection of short stories set in Pakistan’s cities and rural villages make up Mueenuddin’s first book, a fact that perhaps influenced my reaction. I thought the book very good for a first effort, though perhaps not good enough to be a finalist for both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, both of which distinctions are trumpeted on the cover. It’s not the first time my opinion has differed from that of prize judges and surely won’t be the last.
The characters in these eight...
September 9, 2012
Italian Journeys, by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Some ten or twenty years after the Society of the Dilettanti, whom I read about in the London Review of Books, began pushing the English cultural scene to look beyond the usual Grand Tour through Italy to the wonders of Greece. Members traveled to Greece and produced drawings and books about Greek sculpture and architecture which influenced English taste for architecture and interior decoration that can still be seen in London’s National Gallery, the British Museum and the interior of the Spe...
September 2, 2012
The Light Years, by Elizabeth Jane Howard
Ordered by my doctor to take a day off and do nothing—best medical advice I’ve ever received!—I plunged into this book, the first of a series of four books about the Cazalet family. Like Upstairs, Downstairs, and apparently also televised by NPR though I missed it, the Cazalet Chronicle follows the members of a large family and their servants in and around the Home Place where William and Kitty collect their grown sons and their families during the summer holidays.
Patriarch William, known a...
August 26, 2012
Writing Contests [1]
I’m going to take a break from books this week to talk about writing competitions. I mentioned recently that I judged a novel contest, which was more taxing than the poetry and essay contests I’ve judged because I had to include feedback for the authors.
Submitting work to contests makes up an essential part of a writer’s marketing strategy. An author’s bio should include at least a couple of awards, especially if the author has not yet published very much. Not quite as uncertain as playing...
Writing Contests
I’m going to take a break from books this week to talk about writing competitions. I mentioned recently that I judged a novel contest, which was more taxing than the poetry and essay contests I’ve judged because I had to include feedback for the authors.
Submitting work to contests makes up an essential part of a writer’s marketing strategy. An author’s bio should include at least a couple of awards, especially if the author has not yet published very much. Not quite as uncertain as playing...
August 19, 2012
Whispers Under Ground, by Ben Aaronovitch [3]
Lanita recommended this mystery set in London, so it seemed an appropriate read while London’s Olympic triumph was on my mind. Part of the fun is that the chapters are named for the location where the chapter’s action takes place: Tufnell Park, Ladbroke Grove, Russell Square, etc. The book as a whole takes the reader on a grand tour of London, avoiding for the most part the obvious tourist sites but including, as one might guess from the title, the underground and even the sewers.
Peter is a...