The author of over fifty books, including Newbery Award winner A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L'Engle is internationally acclaimed for her literary skills and her ability to translate intangible things of the spirit-- both human and divine--into tangible concepts through story. In Madeleine L'Engle Reflections on a Writing Life, you'll find hundreds of this celebrated author's most insightful, illuminating, and transforming statements about writing, creativity, and truth.
INCLUDES NEVER-BEFORE-PUBLISHED MATERIAL FROM L'ENGLE'S WORKSHOPS AND SPEECHES.
Madeleine L'Engle was an American writer of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and young adult fiction, including A Wrinkle in Time and its sequels: A Wind in the Door, A Swiftly Tilting Planet, Many Waters, and An Acceptable Time. Her works reflect both her Christian faith and her strong interest in modern science.
I wouldn't call myself an avid fan of Madeleine L'Engle's writing, simply because I haven't actually read that much of it. But I have labeled A Wrinkle in Time as one of my all-time favorite books. And when there is a book--or a song, or a painting--that I thoroughly enjoy, I'm always interested in the creator behind the art, and the source behind that creativity. What in an artists' life has caused her to create such art?
For Madeleine L'Engle, writing was a calling for her. It was her way of being a light in the darkness, of sharing the truths she found in Christianity through the medium of story, just as Jesus shared truth by telling parables. There is a power in story that the world often thinks is foolish, but L'Engle understood it very well. In one passage, she writes, "We do not draw people to Christ by loudly discrediting what they believe, by telling them how wrong they are and how right we are, but by showing them a light that is so lovely that they want with all their hearts to know the source of it." Perhaps as a Christian myself, L'Engle's reason for writing means that much more to me. I rejoice when fellow believers have the courage to credit their talents to Christ, the giver of all good gifts. ”Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. He chose to give us birth through the word of truth, that we might be a kind of firstfruits of all he created" (James 1:17-18).
Reading Madeleine L'Engle Herself: Reflections on a Writing Life has edified me as a Christian, and it has encouraged me in two ways: First, to read more of her books to find out if I like her other writings as much as A Wrinkle in Time; and second, to try my own hand at writing stories. Because this small, unassuming book has inspired me in these ways, I think it deserves five stars.
I was lucky enough to win a giveaway copy of this and loved it. It's an anthology of quotes on writing from L'Engle's other works. I'd definitely recommend getting a copy with the Lindsay Lackey reader's guide in the back. The quotes may be very familiar to anyone who's well-read in L'Engle's writing, so I'd only have it as a guide. I'd also recommend reading her other book, Walking on Water, before going onto this one.
Wow. I don’t think I’ve ever used that many sticky notes in one book. Sooo many things I want to remember/come back to. 100% my favorite book on writing (sort of) I’ve read so far.
Book R: #6 Pages:377 (Non-fiction) From the author of A Wrinkle in Time, this compilation of approximately 300 carefully selected readings brings together the best statements of author Madeleine L'Engle on writing and creativity. An insightful and illuminating volume, Madeleine L'Engle Herself pages are extremely true and eye opening. On the page "Struggling towards meaning" it says: "To be alive is to be vulnerable. To be born is to start the journey towards death." This page talks about finding meaning because it can't just be no more than "our brief candle." I larded that there's no changing death , "art with affirms the value and the holiness of life, the artist must die." But life isn't meaningless. There are many more pages like this but yet extremely different, this book is insightful and illuminating overall a great book
I had the privilege of meeting L'Engle at a conference 20 years ago now. Reading this book was in many ways like being back at the small retreat with her. I could hear her voice and feel her presence. I am a fan of L'Engle's work in the span of 2 years I read about 30 of her books, spanning the breadth and depth of her writing. And with the reprint of this and I believe 3 other title of her non-fiction works on the same day, I am very excited to see her works coming back into print and being available in numerous formats.
I devoured this book over three days. But that is a bit deceptive. Even though it is listed as nearly 400 pages because of the format some thoughts and reflections take up less than a quarter of a page. The introduction is written by Sarah Arthur, who just published A Light So Lovely: The Spiritual Legacy of Madeleine L'Engle.
This book is a collection of thoughts, reflections, and personal history. A number of them stuck me, and made me thing of author friends. I shared this one with a friend:
"Cooking Up Stories
When I start working on a book (and I'm usually thinking about several books over several years before I actually start to write one), I'm somewhat like a French peasant cook. There is a big black stove, several pots on the back of it. And the cook goes by and drops a carrot in one pot and a piece of potato in another and an onion and a piece of meat in another. At dinnertime, you look and see which pot smells best and pull it forward. The same thing is true with writing. There are several pots on my back burners. An idea for a scene goes into one pot, a character into another, and a description of the tree in the fog in another. And when it comes time to write, I bring forward the pot which has the most in it-or more likely, this being a less literal world, the pot shoves itself out at me. Now the dropping in of the ideas is sometimes quite conscious. I know I'm putting a carrot in this pot. But sometimes something has been added when I don't even realize it. And I look into the pot and say, "Oh that's there, just what I need." But I don't know when it got put in. When it comes time to write, I look at everything in the pot. I sort, I organize, I arrange, I discover, I think about character and storyline. And most of this part of the work is done by the me of which I am aware. It is a conscious act."
Another one that really grabbed my attention was:
"The Theological Under Level of Story
C. S. Lewis used to write a book of fiction and a book of theology simultaneously, both dealing with the same theological problem. But if we saw in the fiction theology rather than story, then he would have failed. Obviously, the seven Narnia books are deep Christian parables; but if this message reached all of the young readers in a conscious rather than an unconscious way, first of all they would reach only people who were already Christians. And they wouldn't have that under level, that stratum which makes people go to them and read them again and again and again".
The Chapters In The Book Are: Forward Introduction 1. Section I: Serving The Gift Artists And Their Art 2. Section II: Co-Creators With God Inspiration And The Creative Process 3. Section III: My Books Wrote Me Elements Of A Writer's Life 4. Section IV: Faith Foundations Writing From Truth 5. Section V: An Accepted Wonder The Wisdom Of Children 6. Section VI: Finger Exercises A Writer's Technique And Style 7. Section VII: The Empty Page Getting Started 8. Section VIII: A Life Of Their Own Creating Characters 9. Section IX: Paints Of The Writer's Palette Words And Symbols 10. Section X: This I Know Telling Our Story Appendix I: Sources For This Book Appendix Ii: Index Of Selections And Sources Appendix Iii: A Chronology Of Madeleine L'Engle's Life And Books Appendix Iv: Books By Madeleine L'Engle Reading Guide
But there are 300 separate entries in this collection. One of the other reflections in this volume is:
"Storytellers Search For Truth
People have always told stories as they searched for truth. As our ancient ancestors sat around the campfire in front of their caves, they told the stories of their day in order to try to understand what their day had meant, what the truth of the mammoth hunt was, or the roar of the cave lion, or the falling in love of two young people Bards and troubadours throughout the centuries have sung stories in order to give meaning to the events of human life. We read novels, go to the movies, watch television, in order to find out more about the human endeavor. As a child I read avidly and in stories I found truths which were not available in history or geography or social studies."
And one final one to share:
"Good Art Heals
Stories should be healing. If they're not, there's something wrong. A story which leaves you frightened, fragmented, depressed, cannot be a Christian story. If I'm in need of healing, if I can go to the museum and look at the paintings, I will be healed. Music is very healing to me. Once I was full of righteous indignation over something and my adolescent said, "Oh, Mother, sit down and play Bach for a while," knowing that if I did and gave that time to the beautiful structure of Bach, I would at least calm down. Art heals us, puts us all together, but only if we're willing to open ourselves to it and collaborate with it".
I want to speak about this one. A few years before I discover L'Engle's writings I was a huge fan of Frank E. Peretti. I loved This Present Darkness and Piercing the Darkness. But when I finished his book The Oath I literally felt slimed. I felt like I had read a Christian Stephen King, and never read another book by him.
This book is full of wit and wisdom. It is advice from a Christian artist to Christian artists. Anyone who would like to have their faith reflected in their art would take something away from this book. And for fans of her writings it gives us a deeper insight into the woman, her faith and her process.
An excellent read, for readers and for writers.
Read the review on my blog Book Reviews and More and reviews of other books by and about Madeleine L'Engle.
I fell in love with L'Engle when I read A Wrinkle in Time. I was in fourth grade. It cemented my interest in fantasy and science fiction and ignited my hunger for adventure. I identified so strongly with Meg: with her uncertainty, her stubbornness, and her struggles with self-esteem...essentially her faults! Also, here was a science fiction book with heroine. Tired of reading about what felt like the same skinny young boy in every story about magic, L'Engle's Meg let me know that I could have adventures too.
So as an adult picking up Herself, I was excited to learn more about one of my favorite author's philosophies. I was not disappointed, and enjoyed the diary-like entries from her interviews, lectures, and personal writing. I especially appreciated her thoughts on religion and spirituality having recently entered a time of discernment regarding my own faith after growing up Presbyterian. Her musings on how entangled religion, art, and the soul are were interesting to absorb even when I didn't fully agree with them. I sometimes wished I had her clarity as she spoke of ethereal callings and divine knowledge; writing often feels clumsy to me. But L'Engle also shared moments of personal and spiritual struggle which helped me visualize that behind a finished book are many tear-stained, crumpled pages of doubt.
One of my only criticisms of the collection were the amount of near-repeated entries. As a teacher as well as a writer, it's clear that L'Engle would have shared her wisdom with multiple classes, phrased perhaps differently depending on the year and the nature of her students. However, often I'd read an entry - about writing, children, faith, etc. - and feel like I had read it before! Sometimes I'd have to check and make sure I wasn't sleep-reading the same entry or had lost my place and returned to a previous page. Each time it was simply a case of two entries sounding very much like the same advice or thought spoken differently to a different audience. I wish the book had been curated more to keep the most poignant versions of each entry instead of simply repeating them. It happened often enough that I put down the book a few times and picked up something else due to a feeling of stagnation.
Nevertheless, I finished Herself with a tranquil feeling. I never got the opportunity to meet L'Engle or attend one of her lectures, but I feel like this book offered me the closest experience to learning from her in person.
A beautiful compilation of the philosophies, ideas, techniques and experiences of the author of one of the most famous and imaginative children’s books ever written (Madeleine L’Engle wrote A Wrinkle In Time). L’Engle also gives advice to budding writers (intimate, like a mentor) and you can feel and see her discipline and commitment to the writing life and to readers. There is deep love but also a deep spiritual purpose. So much wisdom, strength and inspiration to glean from here! It reminds me of Anne Lamott’s book on writing, Bird by Bird!
I had no idea that Madeleine L’Engle has so many wonderful non fiction books published about the creative life in addition to her fiction!
Below I’ve included one of her passages.
“Story makes us more alive, more human, more courageous, more loving. Why does anybody tell a story? It does indeed have something to do with faith, faith that the universe has meaning, that our little human lives are not irrelevant, that what we chose or say or do matters, matters cosmically. It is we humans who either help bring about, or hinder the coming of the kingdom. We look at the world around us, and it is a complex world, full of incomprehensible greed (why are we continuing to cut down our great forests that supply out planet with so much of its oxygen?), irrationality, brutality, war, terrorism— but also self-sacrifice, honor, dignity— and in all of this we look for, and usually find, pattern, structure, meaning. Our truest response to the irrationality of the world is to paint or sing or write, for only in such response do we find truth.”
Madeleine L'Engle Herself Reflections on a Writing Life by Madeleine L'Engle
Crown Publishing
Convergent Books Christian Pub Date 18 Sep 2018
I am reviewing a copy of Madeline L Engle Herself through Crown Publishing and Netgalley:
This book includes 500 of Madeline L Engle’s most insightful, illuminating and transforming statements about writing, creativity and truth.
In Madeline L Engle herself she points out that to be alive is to be vulnerable. We are also reminded me that we need to use the gifts the good Lord had given us.
The author goes on to point out his wounds are his wounds too. We are reminded too our choices help to form our stories! We are encouraged to believe with Childlike wonder. We are reminded too that we are the children of the light, yet we have been walking around in darkness.
L Engle goes on to point out that solitude can help build a storyteller. We are encouraged to write it down when I have a profound personal experience. We are reminded to that our stories change us.
I give Madeline L Engle Herself five out of five stars!
This is not the type of book that I like to read all in one sitting or even in just two or three sittings. I enjoyed reading just a few pages at a time and then coming back the next day and doing the same. There is a bit of repetitive content in some of the quotes, but that's because they were chosen from a variety of sources - including some of Madeleine L'Engle's books and also writing workshops and speeches that she gave over the years. After reading this, I feel like I understand just a little bit of how it must have felt to attend one of Madeleine L'Engle's writing workshops. That would have been an amazing experience.
While I was reading, I marked quotes that I wanted to return to with slips of paper. When I finished, I had ten slips of paper poking out from the top of the book, some marking the quotes on both pages. I've added the quotes to Madeleine L'Engle's quotes here on Goodreads, and I'll list a couple of my favorites here:
"Juvenile or adult, War and Peace or Treasure Island, Pride and Prejudice or Beauty and the Beast, a great work of the imagination is one of the highest forms of communication of truth that mankind has reached. But a great piece of literature does not try to coerce you to believe it or to agree with it. A great piece of literature simply is."
"The extraordinary thing is as artists, as human beings, we do learn from pain. I once was having a very casual lunch with a couple of people, one of whom was an Episcopal bishop. In the conversation, I happened to say that all of my best work had come out of pain. He said, “Let’s hope something terrible happens to you soon.” I didn’t appreciate it. But that is how it is. We grow through our growing pains, through the things that hurt us, through people failing us, through friends betraying us."
"When I think of the children’s books I love best, I realize that they’re written on a great many different levels. Now the first level is story. A good children’s book must hold the reader’s interest. It must be first and foremost a good story that will make the reader keep wanting to go on turning the pages. But underneath that good story is buried treasure. No one person will find all of the treasure, but each will discover special joys."
For all the thoughts I read on this book about some things that repeat themselves and is somewhat too religious for some, I was personally encouraged to dream, to think, to write. Don't read it in one big chunk, but slowly, almost like a devotional. It is insights from a writer who impacted the world with her writing. Who believes so much in what she believes and thinks about the process and the way of life for a writer, she can't help emphasize, or repeat, what she has to say. We don't have to agree with everything. I actually am going to stick it on my shelf.
It started out a little slow, but once I stopped trying to read it like a book and just read a passages at a time it flowed beautifully. Sometimes in the morning, sometimes late at night, and on the occasional rainy afternoon, they worked best as guided reflections.
It is repetitive, it's a collection of quotes/thoughts from throughout her life so there are things that are said again and again (another reason it worked better as something for me to read occasionally).
This book is a collection of Madeleine L'Engle's own writing about her life, her work, her faith, and what it means to live the life of a writer. As a big-time L'Engle fan, I have read most of the books from which these excerpts come, but seeing them collected here together gives them more impact. So much wisdom and insight for writers -- especially those who are driven to glorify God in their work. Great inspiration for Christian artists.
Maybe all of Madeleine L'Engle's nonfiction will be on my list of favorite books for the year, but we'll see. But this collection of her quotes really shows ultimately just how much of a gift she was to the world, and how much she continues to be. You get the sense from her quotes that she truly knows what it means to be and to live as a writer, and you can see just how convinced she was of her beliefs. A true literary legend
This collection of quotes and excerpts from Madeleine L'Engle's books and workshops provides such wonderful insight into the mind of one of the 20th century's greatest writers. It is invaluable for writers seeking to deepen their craft and put their gifts and skill to work in the best possible way. It's also a gift for L'Engle's fans to have so many of her thoughts condensed into a single volume.
This is an easy to read, powerful collection of words from the entire career of Madeleine L”Engle. She shares thoughts on her faith, on writing and even life itself. The writing in this book is very conversational in nature and it feels as if you are attending an interesting personal lecture. If you want to explore the Christian faith from a writers perspective then this is a must read.
A collection of her quotes on a variety of writing-related topics. I personally did not enjoy this - there were some gems, but not a lot compared to the volume of the collection. Many were repetitive, and too many were religion-focused for my taste.
This is a collection of quotes from Madeleine's writings as well as lectures and classes she gave over the years. It is divided into ten sections and talk about writing, reading, and story. It was an encouraging and inspiring read.
I liked certain passages out of this and wrote them down because I think L'Engle has a talent for spinning a sentence. However, a lot of passages seemed repetitive and too religious/outdated for my tastes.
could've done with tighter editing, felt repetitive. good quotes buried within but they're really buried, and most of the ones i liked were references to other authors, oops. still, nice ambience to soak in.
This will be a treasured book on my shelf alongside the rest of my L’Engle collection. As a writer and Christian, this book full of pearls of wisdom inspires me to embrace the risk and beauty of creation.
A collection of short thoughts on writing by Madeline L'Engle pulled from her many books and writing workshops. It's good, but it's better in context. Presented like this, it starts to feel repetitive.
I loved reading Madeleine’s little thoughts that had been gathered for this book. She was such an honest, vulnerable person and her works reflect that.
This is a compilation of quotations from L'Engle's writings, speeches, and classes, and is the next best thing to a book she could write about her thoughts on writing--her own and others'. Although the author's titles for the entries downplay the Christian content of some of L'Engle's statements, the book is for every writer and admirer of L'Engle's works. The timeline and bibliography are helpful. L'Engle would not teach people how to write, believing that it cannot be taught in classes such as are sometimes offered to aspiring writers, but she has given plenty of good advice on writing and thinking and believing, and most of it seems to be collected in this small but potent book. And it made me want to reread L'Engle's wonderful books, which is high praise for the compiler.