Ross Breithaupt

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Ross Breithaupt

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October 2012

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Ross Breithaupt I am working on the bones of a story: I know my protagonist (Leila... Rory's niece in fact) and the setting (pre-pandemic Toronto) and I know that Lei…moreI am working on the bones of a story: I know my protagonist (Leila... Rory's niece in fact) and the setting (pre-pandemic Toronto) and I know that Leila is obsessed with the underground utilities that gird the city. It's still coming into focus. I don't yet know what Leila's quest is exactly, nor how to raise the stakes.(less)
Average rating: 4.4 · 30 ratings · 9 reviews · 1 distinct work
Midland

4.40 avg rating — 30 ratings
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Having looped through revisions of the first few chapters of my (as yet untitled) new story, things seem to be flowing now. In the excerpt below, Leila, our protagonist, is in the car with her mother, Penny. Leila is about to embark on her walk through Toronto, along the path of a buried creek. Penny has mapped out pitstops along the route and charged various friends and family members with the ta

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Published on March 09, 2023 14:23
The Book of Merlyn
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Dark Star Safari:...
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read in March 2026
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Letters to Camondo
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The Book of Merlyn by T.H. White
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The Passion by Jeanette Winterson
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Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit by Jeanette Winterson
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Surfacing by Margaret Atwood
Surfacing
by Margaret Atwood (Goodreads Author)
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Dark Star Safari by Paul Theroux
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Letters to Camondo by Edmund de Waal
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The Bee Sting by Paul Murray
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Letters to Camondo by Edmund de Waal
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Book of Lives by Margaret Atwood
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Fascinating throughout. So funny, as I knew it would be, and such great details on all her work.
More of Ross's books…
Michael Chabon
“Every work of art is one half of a secret handshake, a challenge that seeks the password, a heliograph flashed from a tower window, an act of hopeless optimism in the service of bottomless longing. Every great record or novel or comic book convenes the first meeting of a fan club whose membership stands forever at one but which maintains chapters in every city -- in every cranium -- in the world. Art, like fandom, asserts the possibility of fellowship in a world built entirely from the materials of solitude. The novelist, the cartoonist, the songwriter, knows the gesture is doomed from the beginning but makes it anyway, flashes his or her bit of mirror, not on the chance that the signal will be seen or understood but as if such a chance existed.”
Michael Chabon, Manhood for Amateurs

Michael Chabon
“Childhood is a branch of cartography.”
Michael Chabon, Manhood for Amateurs

Kate Atkinson
“She should have done science, not spent all her time with her head in novels. Novels gave you a completely false idea about life, they told lies and they implied there were endings when in reality there were no endings, everything just went on and on and on.”
Kate Atkinson, Case Histories

Salman Rushdie
“I am the sum total of everything that went before me, of all I have been seen done, of everything done-to-me. I am everyone everything whose being-in-the-world affected was affected by mine. I am anything that happens after I'm gone which would not have happened if I had not come.”
Salman Rushdie, Midnight’s Children

Margaret Atwood
“The only way you can write the truth is to assume that what you set down will never be read. Not by any other person, and not even by yourself at some later date. Otherwise you begin excusing yourself. You must see the writing as emerging like a long scroll of ink from the index finger of your right hand; you must see your left hand erasing it.”
Margaret Atwood, The Blind Assassin

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