Showing posts with label Linda Lappin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linda Lappin. Show all posts

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Loving Modigliani - The Afterlife of Jeanne Hébuterne - A novel by Linda Lappin - 2020


 



Website for Paris in July 2021- Hosted by Thyme for Tea





This is part of my participation in Paris in July, now in year ten.




Prior works I have read for Paris 

 in July 2021


1.  Lost in Paris by Elizabeth Hickey



Loving Modigliani - The Afterlife of Jeanne Hébuterne A novel by Linda Lappin - 2020





Website of Linda Lappin



Gateway to Linda Lappin on The Reading Life


My Q and A session with Linda Lappin


My post on The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the Genius Loci

 




I have been an avid reader of Linda Lappin ever since I read her award winning novel, Katherine's Wish, based on the last years of the life of Katherine Mansfield.  I have also read and greatly enjoyed her two other novels, both set in Tuscany, The Etruscan and Signatures in Stone, which is a finalist for the Daphne Du Maurier Award from Romance Writers of America, in the history category.


One great writer often leads you to another, but not always in the ways we might expect.  11  years ago I began reading and posting on all the then published short stories of Katherine Mansfield.   After completing the stories I discovered Linda Lappin had written a highly regarded novel centering on Katherine Mansfield's last year.  I read Katherine's Wish and felt Lappin had a profound understanding and sympathy for Mansfield as a writer and as a person.  I now see how this all ties in with Lappin's wonderful, The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the Genius Loci.  Mansfield (1888 to 1923) left her home country of New Zealand for London  in 1908 never to return.  In the stories of Mansfield you see a constant search for a home, a longing for a place of beauty.  I feel Mansfield was searching for a Sacred Place, for holy texts and holy men.  In her brief stories, such as the wonderful early works contained within In a German Pension, she is able to create a strong and deep sense of place.  The ability to do this is one of the lessons imparted in Lappin's workbook.




  I find a great depth of knowledge combined with a deeply intuitive 

sensibility in Lappin’s work that brings what she writes about to life with cinematic  verisimilitude.  Her prose has great elegance, her people are real, her history is right.  She is a master of atmosphere.  Her novels are  exciting and just flat out a lot of fun to read.  




Amedeo Modigliani (1884 to 1920) is now considered one of The greatest of early 20th century artists.  Lappin takes us deeply into the trubulent struggling Parisian artist.  Modigliani  was Italian but knew Paris was his artistic home.  Like many artists, he hired Young women to pose nude for him.

 






Jean Hébuterne (Born: 6 April 1898, Meaux, France

Died: 26 January 1920, Paris - )met him at age sixteen and quickly moved from model to lover then pupil. Modigliani had a reputation as a womanizer.  Jean’s parents were agast at their relatiionshio. As relationship progresses Germany and France are at war.  Jean’s beloved older brother joined the French army.  Through experiences of Jean, we meet other artists and I felt a close observer almost there in the Montparnasse district of Paris, then Center of the art scene in Paris. Jean to her families horror gets pregnant and has Modigliani’s daughter.

He promised marriage but never kept his word.

 




Jean falls to her death from a window in the apartment she shares with Modigliani at age 21.  Some said his philanderings led her to suicide, others felt it was an accident.  I do not want to give away very much of the marvelously original plot other than to say there are several different interconnected segments coming from her death.


We follow Jean after death as she wanders through Paris.  This was just too exquiste a trip for me to describe.  I loved her cat companion and spirit guide, also dead who helped Jean figure out where she now was.  She spends about 25 years in Paris.  It turns out their are all sorts of rules the dead must follow. She comes to see the impact of German rule on Jews in Paris.


We leave Jean for a while.  We take up with an American graduate student in Paris to Research Modigliani, fifty years have gone by. She ends up meeting fascinating people with connections to him.


Modigiliani’s paintings now bring millions of dollars.  She becomes involved with a search for a missing painting.  




There is also a delightful closing episode taking a still deceased Jean to the South Pacific.


Lappin has produced a masterpiece.  As I read I could not wait to see what marvel she would next offer me, what plot turns would be taken.  Her prose has a very painterly style, her descriptions of interiors of Parisian dwellings would stand up next to Balzac and Proust.  


I give this book my complete endorsement.  To aspiring writers I suggest you first digest Lappin’s The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the 

Genius Loci then read this novel to study how Lappin creates a sense of place.



Don Wallace, author of The French House, elegantly evokes the wonder of this book


Praise for Loving Modigliani What a story Linda Lappin has to tell in the short life and long legend of Amedeo Modigliani, compulsive seducer, dedicated decadent and artist whose vision, like El Greco’s, seemed to warp the very air. But it’s the verve and authority with which Lappin centers her story on the parallel life (and afterlife) of Jeanne Hébuterne, artist and Modigliani’s model and lover, that amplifies the achievement of this scintillating tale, which is also a love story, a ghost story and a treasure hunt through the decades for a lost masterpiece. Through Jeanne’s female gaze, the great tapestry of Paris and its fervid art scene is rendered with twice the depth of field and emotional color. The result is a novel of high originality, page-turning pace and a poetic precision so impeccably deployed that the book unfolds like a living, breathing, 3-D spectacle in the reader’s mind.”


From Lindalappin.net


LOVING MODIGLIANI

PARIS 1920 Dying just 48 hours after her  husband, Jeanne Hebuterne—wife and muse of the celebrated painter Amedeo Modigliani and an artist in her own right — haunts their shared studio, watching as her legacy is erased. Decades later, a young art history student travels across Europe to rescue Jeanne's work from obscurity. A ghost story, love story, and a search for a missing masterpiece.

 

Available from these sellers:

Amazon kindle https://www.amazon.com/Loving-Modigliani-Afterlife-Jeanne-Hébuterne-ebook/dp/B08MDCDC9V/

 

Amazon print: https://www.amazon.com/Loving-Modigliani-Afterlife-Jeanne-Hébuterne/dp/1947175300/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=

 

Barnes and Noble https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/loving-modigliani-linda-lappin/1138481578?ean=9781947175471

 

APPLE https://books.apple.com/it/book/loving-modigliani/id1544995840

 

KOBO https://www.kobo.com/ww/en/ebook/loving-modigliani

 

LAFELTRINELLI https://www.lafeltrinelli.it/ebook/loving-modigliani/9781947175471

 


Linda Lappin is the prize-winning author of four novels: The Etruscan (Wynkin deWorde, 2004), Katherine’s Wish (Wordcraft, 2008), Signatures in Stone: A Bomarzo Mystery (Pleasureboat Studio, 2013), and Loving Modigliani: The Afterlife of Jeanne Hébuterne (Serving House Books, 2020). She won the Daphne Du Maurier Award from Romance Writers of America in 2014

.She is also the author of The Soul of Place: Ideas and Exercises for Conjuring the Genius Loci (Travelers Tales, 2015), which won a Nautilus Award in the category of creativity in 2015. A former Fulbright scholar to Italy, she has lived mainly in Rome for over thirty years. Her websiteis www.lindalappin.net.




This is a perfect book for any quarantined reader 


Mel u

The Reading Life 









Sunday, March 22, 2020

Signatures in Stone by Linda Lappin - Winner 2014 Daphne Du MaurierAward





Contact:  JACK ESTES                                                              FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SIGNATURES IN STONE
Bomarzo Mystery by Linda Lappin
Prize-Winning Author Probes the Secrets of Italy’s Famous Monster Park
HISTORICAL MYSTERY WINS 2014 DAPHNE DU MAURIER  AWARD


Lappin has penned an intelligent summer mystery” – Library Journal
SIGNATURES IN STONE, a compelling tale of murder, art, sex and secrets set in Bomarzo, Italy in 1928 won the distinguished Daphne du Maurier Award for excellence in mystery and suspense writing. The award is named for Daphne du Maurier, the author of REBECCA, a suspense novel with romantic and gothic overtones and a precursor to today's romantic suspense. Winners were announced at the Death by Chocolate Party hosted by the Kiss of Death Chapter at the Romance Writers of America's national conference on July 24 in San Antonio, Texas.

"I am thrilled and honored to be the recipient of the 2014  Daphne Du Maurier Award. I am a great fan of her work which influenced my own. Her gift for eerie atmosphere and tenebrous characters has been an inspiration for me." Linda Lappin

In true Daphne du Maurier tradition, author Linda Lappin infuses SIGNATURES IN STONE with romantic and gothic overtones while invoking a strong sense of place and time.
“Deftly mixing fascinating art history and murder with an exotic atmospheric setting (the Bomarzo garden actually exists), dramatic historical period (1928 fascist Italy), and fully-fleshed characters, Lappin (The Etruscan) has written a hallucinatory gothic mystery in which no one is as they appear. Daphne is a most memorable, if a bit unreliable (thanks to her opium habit), narrator. Readers looking for an intelligent summer mystery will find much to savor here.”—WildaWilliams, Library Journal

Tennessee-born novelist Linda Lappin author of the small press classic, The Etruscan, takes on the mystery of Italy’s celebrated Monster Park in her new novel SIGNATURES IN STONE. The sixteenth –century  park, located not far from Rome, created by a Roman nobleman as a memorial to his wife, leads visitors on a journey through hell represented by its eerie sculptures of ogres and mermaids. Art historians are puzzled by its meaning: is it a pagan itinerary of initiation, a surreal illustration of its patron’s weirdest nightmares, an allegory for political events, or a series of emblems concealing an alchemical formula for making gold? And who was the real mastermind behind this complex creation? Was it, perhaps, as some scholars believe, one of the greatest sculptors of the Italian Renaissance?

Lappin takes this mystery in SIGNATURES IN STONE as the background for a compelling tale of murder, sex, and secrets set in Bomarzo in 1928, when four unlikely misfits find themselves entangled in the meanders of the park. Daphne, a mystery writer with a hashish habit; Clive, an American gigolo and art forger; Nigel, an English aristocrat down at the heels; and Finestone, a fly-by-night art historian, are thrown together in a dilapidated villa looked after by two Italian servants who are not what they seem. Each character will find a private hell hidden in the park, and not everyone will make it out alive. Through the deforming mirror of the Bomarzo sculptures, Daphne will face up to the darker sides of herself while solving a murder for which she has been unjustly accused. Unraveling one mystery, she unwittingly solves another: who designed the Monster Park and why. Perfect summer reading for a plane trip or the beach, SIGNATURES IN STONEis an “intense, fast-paced, eloquently elegant mystery novel,” showing how waking life, intuition, and dreams are much more interfused than we normally admit.

WHAT CRITICS AND READERS ARE SAYING ABOUT THIS NOVEL:
I loved this novel! It's a rare balance between eerie and sense-making. Its main character is the spooky Italian landscape ofBomarzo and its Monster Garden of violent statues--which really do exist, the author tells us. But the 5 characters, including the engaging narrator, hashish-addicted Daphne, are as mysterious as the setting. Lappin's people are as dangerously compelling as her Italy. I look forward to a long, creepy series of Daphne mysteries.”  Nina Auerbach, author of Women and Demonsfive-star reviefor Amazon.

Lappin is a modern day Agatha Christie with prose that is like eating dark chocolate or sipping a glass of fine wine — the story continues to entice your senses and simply gets better and better the more you partake. Not one to hurry to the plot, she unveils the scenes piece by piece, character by character and leaves her own signatures for you to find along the way.” Vikki Walton I Love a Mystery

Lappin lures the reader into the loins of Italy, describing it with a lust for its countryside and peculiarities as one might let on about a lover,” Shaina MuganGently Read Literature.
“…Four eccentric traveling companions in an automobile to hell. SIGNATURES IN STONE is as brilliant as it is entertaining.” Thomas E. Kennedy, author of In the Company of Angels and The Copenhagen Quartet.
ABOUT LINDA LAPPIN    www.lindalappin.net

Linda Lappin, novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer is the author of three award-winning novels. Her first, The Etruscan(Wynkin de Worde. 2004), a tantalizing suspense tale set in Italy in the 1920s, placed second at the New York Book Festival and was short listed for the 2011 Next Generation Indie Award. Her second, Katherine's Wish (Wordcraft of Oregon, 2008), based on the life of New Zealand writer, Katherine Mansfield, received the gold medal in historical fiction from the IPPY awards and was a finalist for the ForeWord Book of the Year Award in fiction. Signatures in Stone is her third novel. Upcoming projects include a memoir, Postcards from a Tuscan Interior, sections of which won a Solas Award fromTravelers Tales, and Genius Loci: A Writer’s Guide to Capturing the Soul of Place,a craft of writing book. She is currently at work on a new Daphne Dublanc mystery, Melusine, set in the Italian village of Bolsena, another site of Etruscan legends. She holds an MFA from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop and is a member of the Associated Writing Programs (AWP) and of the European Association for Creative Writing Programs (EACWP)

Title: Signatures in Stone 

Author: Linda Lappin 
Published by Pleasure Boat Studio  www.pleasureboatstudio.com

ISBN-10: 1929355904 ISBN-13: 978-1929355907 

Trade Paperback Original • $18 
250 Pages



The Reading Life extends congratulations to Linda Lappin for winning the 2014 Daphne Du Maurier Award.  It has been almost a year since I first posted on her award winning mystery novel Signatures in Stone.  I want to make sure that as many of my readers as possible know about her wonderful novel so I am sharing again  my, edited for style, observations on Signatures in Stone.

I first became acquainted with the wonderful writings of Linda Lappin when I first read her highly rated novel based on the final years of Katherine Mansfield, Katherine's Wish.  I thought she captured with amazing perspicuity the persona of Mansfield and her complex personal relationships.  I vowed to follow her career and next read her very atmospheric, some felt it was apt to describe it as Gothic, The Etruscan,  a mystery set in Italy between the world wars.  I loved it for the prose and the perfectly realized central character.  

I think Signatures in Stone is Lappin's best work to date, and that is saying a lot.  Set in the 1920s the central character, Daphne comes from Paris to overcome writers block and to clear her head from too much hash.  She arrives in Bomazo, Italy with her agent Nigel, allegedly an English aristocrat, who has been promising her an advance on the book she is supposed to be working for a while.  They  have booked part of an old run down villa.  Of course it comes with some mysterious servants. Nigel brought along his friend Clive, a sexual opportunist who ends up having an affair with Daphne, considerably older than he.  Also staying at the villa is an art expert, Dr. Firestone.  Dr. Firestone is there to direct the restoration of a garden called, "The Sacred Wood".  The heart of the story begins as we see Daphne become more and more fixated on the mysterious and sinister statues.   Italy was once seen in English literture, in the tradition of works by D. H. Lawrence and E. M. Forster among others, as an exotic almost exotic  tropical place where you could do things you might not be comfortable doing back at home.

Nobody is quite what they seem to be.  Everybody is out for everybody else, body, soul, and purse.  
Daphne loves hash and Signatures in Stone lets us see how creativity sometimes feels like a hashish dream.  

There is a murder with plenty of suspects. I was very taken up into the investigation of the crime.  

Signatures in Stone is a fascinating book, deeply evoking the mysteries in the history of the garden of stones and beyond this Tuscan history.  

I look forward to reading lots more wonderful books by Linda Lappin.







Saturday, March 14, 2020

The Soul of Place A Creative Writing Workbook Ideas and Exercises forConjuring the Genius Loci by Linda Lappin (2015)





Author and Writing Teacher Linda Lappin won a gold medal in the prestigious Nautilus Awards, taking the top prize in the category CREATIVE PROCESS for her multigenre creative writing book  The Soul of Place - A Creative Writing Workbook: Ideas and Exercises for Conjuring the Genius Loci. Now in its eighteenth year, the Nautilus Book Awards program honors, rewards, and promotes world-changing books that inspire and connect our lives as individuals, communities, and global citizens. Awards are given in 24 categories in children and adult titles supporting green values, spiritual growth, conscious living, and high-level wellness. Previous winners include Julia Cameron, Betty Edwards, Catherine Ann Jones, Andrew Weil, and His Holiness the Dalai Lama

I'm very glad to see this very prestigious award being given to Linda Lappin.  




My Q and A Session with Linda Lappin


An excellent Q and A session with Linda Lappin, conducted by Shauna Gilligan, Author of Happiness Comes from Nowhere


My Post on The Etruscan by Linda Lappin


My Post on Signatures in Stone by Linda Lappin


My Post on Katherine's Wish by Linda Lapain. A wonderful work on the final days of Katherine Mansfield


One great writer often leads you to another, but not always in the ways we might expect.  Five years ago I began reading and posting on all the then published short stories of Katherine Mansfield.   After completing the stories I discovered Linda Lappin had written a highly regarded novel centering on Katherine Mansfield's last year.  I read Katherine's Wish and felt Lappin had a profound understanding and sympathy for Mansfield as a writer and as a person.  I now see how this all ties in with Lappin's wonderful, The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the Genius Loci.  Mansfield (1888 to 1923) left her home country of New Zealand for London  in 1908 never to return.  In the stories of Mansfield you see a constant search for a home, a longing for a place of beauty.  I feel Mansfield was searching for a Sacred Place, for holy texts and holy men.  In her brief stories, such as the wonderful early works contained within In a German Pension, she is able to create a strong and deep sense of place.  The ability to do this is one of the lessons imparted in Lappin's workbook. 

Lappin's book partially focuses on creating a sense of place in your writing.  In order to do this we must first be able to deeply experience a locale.  Lappin refrences writers who can show us how this is done and provides very interesting exercises.  Her extensive discussion of "deep mapping" was fascinating and open my mind to many new ideas.


The work opens with a section on landscapes. Lappin talks about how we need to remove our complacency to really describe what we see.  Good writing requires, among other things, an ability to see the beauty, wonder and horror in what we always have taken for granted.  

From this Lappin deepens the teachings with a chapter, taking  a lead from Mircea Eliade, on Sacred Spaces.  I think Lappin is trying to tell us that we do not just have to limit our selves to the standard sacred spaces of our culture.  Writers can and have created their own sacred spaces.  Beyond this there is a very valuable spiritual lesson in this chapter about how we can create our own scared landscape.  I will try to illustrate what this means.  Not long ago I read E. F. Forester's marvelous short story, "The Celestial Omnibus".  The story concerns an omnibus that picks people up, you can return, for a trip to literary heaven.  I was sitting on the verandah of a family home way out in rural northern Philppines.  The peace and the tranquility of this place made me imagine that I was waiting for the celestial omnibus to stop for me.  I was on the verandah alone and my wife came out and asked me who I was talking with.  I did not know I was conversing but I can accept somehow this place, combined with the impact of six years of blogging and intensive reading has given me the power to create my own sacred space.  Perhaps I was in touch with deeper reaches of my consciousness, as Linda will later in the book guide us.

The next chapter is devoted to food writing.  The book will be a great help to food writers, travel writers, not just fiction authors.  Food writing done well is not easy at all.  Lappin gives us a good list of first rate food writers and provides very useful exercises.

Chapter Five, "Submerged Territories Writing and the Unconscious" will take most into unfamiliar ground and suggest exercises that will take  "rational minded" readers out of their comfort zone.  I think part of the structure of the book and from it the picture of a workshop of Lappin's, is to first show you how to become strongly  anchored in place, virtual or sacred, then as the book or workshop closes show you how you can use the Genius Loci you have created or discovered (the lines blur) to let your mind roam free.  The exercises and thoughts on matters such as automatic writing are designed to provide you with a structure to look for deeper springs for your writing.  

The book returns us home with a practical down to earth discussion about designing a writing space that works for you.

There is much more in The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the Genius Loci than mentioned.  Almost every page contains thought provoking observations and there are a lot of super interesting reading suggestions.

The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the Genius Loci also will make those who take it seriously better readers.  Deep reading requires we open our consciousness without fear and that we observe deeply.  Lappin's prose is exquisite and is a pleasure to experience it in a different format than her three great novels.

The book is no doubt a work of great value to writers but as a reader I found it gave me a greater understanding of the creative process, increased my sense of reading as a creative act and as a side benefits had numerous excellent exercises and suggestions for further reading.  The author has read widely and deeply, traveled and stayed in place with equal intensity and her own beautiful prose testifies to the value of her teachings.

I strongly endorse this book and if life were to ever make it possible I would happily enroll in one of Lappin's workshops.


  Author Bio




Linda Lappin is an American poet, novelist, and travel writer. She has published three novels, The Etruscan, Katherine’s Wish, and Signatures in Stone: A Bomarzo Mystery, which won the 2014 Daphne Du Maurier Award for Mystery and Suspense Writing. She holds an MFA from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop.

More information, including detailed participant testimonials on her workshops cam be found on her webpage Lindalappin.net.

In an appendix she talks about how the literary culture of Greece is impacted by the very large number of sacred spaces.  I found what she says in accord with my experiences talking in Q and A sessions to 80 or so Irish writers about how the conversion of the island into a sacred space has impacted Irish writing.   

In a strange way i don't walk to really talk about yet, Linda helped me understand what the purpose of my blog has evolved to become, how it has impacted my consciousness.

Mel u


















Sunday, February 7, 2016

Katherine's Wish by Linda Lappin. 2008 A second reading of a wonderful evocation of the last years of Katherine Mansfield








Katherine Mansfield is one of the greatest short story writers of all time.  I was recently deeply impacted by learning the last book Iréne Nemirovsky read before being put on the train to Auschwitz was the Journal of Katherine Mansfield.  I first read Mansfield by a happy accident, her "Miss Brill" was the work of the day on a short story webpage I sometimes look at.  I knew nothing about Mansfield then but I knew I wanted to read more of her work.  I went ion to post on all of the short stories in her four collections. I read Linda Lappin's marvelous novelistic treatment of tne last year's of Mansfield's life and the definitive biography Katherine Mansfield The Story Teller by Kathleen Jones.  I was very proud when the editor of tne bulletin of The Katherine Mansfield Society asked me to contribute an article expanding some tweets on word counts in the stories of Mansfield.  One thing that jumped out was how often the word "home" appeared in her stories, way more than in my comparison works.  

Prompted by the publication of the Kindle edition I decided to reread after a five and a half year hiatus Katherine's Wish, Linda Lappin's novel on tne last year's of the life of Mansfield.  In the interim I have  read two additional novels by Lappin and her workbook on creative writing.
I also had the honor of doing a Q and A session with her.  

I wondered how would I react to a second reading of Katherine's Wish.  I ended up planning to read it again next year I liked it so much.  Lappin has been reading Mansfield for decades and has clearly a great empathy for her and understanding of her pain, loneliness and of the well springs of her creativity.  Mansfield came from a very wealthy New Zealand family, her  father was chairman of The Bank of New Zealand.  She moved to London ostensibly to study the cello.  This soon fell by the wayside and, supported by a small allowance from her father, Mansfield began to pursue the dream of a literary career.  In the novel Lappin shows how Mansfield searching for the love she never got from her emotionally withdrawn mother and aloof father found numerous sexual partners, men and women.  Her mother even sent her to a spa to be "cured" of lesbian interests through a course of treatment that included being sprayed with cold water by high pressure hoses.  The two primary persons in her life, brought totally to life by Lappin are Mansfield's husband John Middleton Murray and Ida Baker, a friend from childhood.  Ida was totally in love with Mansfield, they had a sexual relationship in high school,so it is hinted.  When we encounter Mansfield Ida  was, Mansfield called her Jones,,was pretty much enthralled by Mansfield, working as an unpaid servant and devoting her self to finding a way for Mansfield, who struggled to live on her allowance from her parsimonious father, remittances from her husband for her work as a book reviewer and small earning from the publications of her stories.

        Mansfield and her husband

As Katherine's Wish begins Mansfield is in Italy, deeply impacted by the World War One death of her beloved brother Leslie.  She noticed and tries to hide from Ida, a spot of blood on her handkerchief, a sign of consumption.  We see in the novel that Murray is not the kind of husband a writer needs.  We learn she sometimes wishes her husband treated her the way Leonard Wolfe treated Virginia.  I saw how Mansfield wavered between deep anger toward Murray, who had other relationships, including with friends of her and blaming the other women.  Mansfield had an attraction for guru like men which extended beyond her husband.  The devastation and massive death tolls of tne war created in many a spiritual vacuum that traditional religion could not cure.  Mansfield also knew that she might not have much time left.  One of the few happiest moments in the novels was when Mansfield learned her collection of stories, Bliss was to be published. 

      Ida Baker and to her right Katherine Mansfield


We see Mansfield, emotionally and physically dependent on Ida, who she treated at times in a near abusuve fashion, struggle to have secure housing and food.  She is asked to leave a hotel in Italy because her coughing disturbs the other guests.  Her parents come to visit but her father offers her no financial help.  He very much disliked her husband and wished Katherine had never left New Zealand.  The attitude in Italy is very anti-English so at the suggestion of her parents Mansfield and Ida make a perilous journey to a health pension ran by relatives in France.  Throughout Katherine is emotionally buffeted by D. H. Lawrence with whom her and her husband had a complex relationship. 

As time goes on and the disease impacts Katherine more, she begins to undergo a very expensive, probably useless and certainly painful course of treatment.  

There is just so much to savior in Kathernine Wish, the prose is as exquisite as that of Rosamond  Lehmann at her most elegant, there is lot to be work and  life of Mansfield in this book but there is much more.  Mansfield was an artist of supreme quality who struggled with the wonder and pain of her genius.  



Linda Lappin, award-winning poet, novelist, essayist, travel writer, literary translator was born in Kingsport, Tennessee. She received her B.A. from Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Fla. and her MFA from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop where she studied poetry with Donald Justice, fiction with Ian McEwan, and translation with Daniel Weissbort and worked as a translation assistant to Paul Engle and Hualing Nieh at the International Writing Program.

A former Fulbright fellow to Italy, she currently divides her time between the US and Italy, where she has taught English in Italian universities for over twenty years. Her essays , reviews, and short fiction appear regularly in US periodicals. Her short fiction has been broadcast by the BBC World Service Radio.



Her first novel,  
The Etruscan 
originally published by Wynkin DeWorde in Galway, Ireland, was runner up in the fiction category for the 2010  New York Book Festival and short listed for the 2011 Next Generation Indie Award in fiction.
Her second novel, Katherine's Wish ( published by  Wordcraft of Oregon , 2008) based on the life of New Zealand writer, Katherine Mansfield received the gold medal in historical fiction from the  IPPY awards, and was a finalist for the ForeWord Book of the Year in fiction. Her third novel, a mystery,  Signatures in Stone set in the sculpture garden of Bomarzo the Monster Park published by Pleasure Boat Studio won the 2014 Daphne Du Maurier Award from Romance Writers of America for mystery and and suspense writing
Active as literary translator, she has translated Carmelo Samona' and Federigo
Tozzi. She has received two NEA grants in translation and the Renato 
Poggioli Award in Translation from PEN.

Through the  Centro Pokkoli , she has organized writing workshops in Italy for  the Kenyon Review, the Converse College Continuing Education Program, and other institutions 

She has worked as a radio speaker and interpreter for RAI 1 and is currently associate international editor for  Del Sol Journal . Her forthcoming books include Genius Loci: A Writer's Guide to Capturing the Soul of Place and Postcards from a Tuscan Interior 
She is a member of the AWP, the EACWP, the Authors Guild, and the Katherine Mansfield Society

More information can be found on her webpage Lindalappin.net

I strongly endorse Katherine's Wish to all lovers of the novel.  It is must reading for those interested in Mansfield and early twentieth century literary history.

Mel u
















Friday, June 27, 2014

Linda Lappin A Q and A with the Author of Katherine's Wish, TheEtruscan, and Signatures in Stone



Today I am very honored and proud to be able publish a Q and A session with Linda Lappin, 
author of Katherine's WishThe Etruscan, Signatures in Stone and


The Soul of Place A Creative Writing Workbook Idea


and Exercises for Conjuring  the Genius Loci 




I have been an avid reader of Linda Lappin ever since I read her award winning novel, Katherine's Wish, based on the last years of the life of Katherine Mansfield.  I have also read and greatly enjoyed her two novels, both set in Tuscany, The Etruscan and Signatures in Stone, which is a finalist for the Daphne Du Maurier Award from Romance Writers of America, in the history category.  I find a great depth of knowledge combined with a deeply intuitive sensibility in her work that brings what she writes about to life with complete verisimilitude.  Her prose has great elegance, her people are real, her history is right.  She is a master of atmosphere.  Her novels are also exciting and just flat out a lot of fun to read.  Not long ago I read a long article explaining how the internet is killing the literary novel, obviously the author has never read the work of Linda Lappin in whose artistic hands the form very much lives on.







Author Bio

Linda Lappin, poet, novelist, and translator, was born in Tennessee in 1953. She received an MFA from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop in 1978. During her years at Iowa, she specialized in poetry with Florida poet Donald Justice. Her first volume of poetry, Wintering with the Abominable Snowman, was published by the avant-garde press, 'kayak,' of Santa Cruz, California in 1976. She received a Fulbright grant in 1978 to participate in a two-year Fulbright seminar in literary translation held in Rome at the Centro Studi Americani, under the directorship of Frank MacShane of Columbia University and William Weaver, the noted translator from Italian. The project pursued by Lappin in those years, a translation from the Italian of Carmelo Samon...'s novel, Brothers, won two prizes in literary translation in the United States: The Renato Poggioli Award in Translation from Italian given by the New York PEN club and a National Endowment for the Arts grant in translation in 1987. She was awarded a second translation grant from the NEA in 1996 for her work on Tuscan writer Federigo Tozzi. From 1987 to the year 2000, she published essays, poems, reviews, and short stories in many US and European publications, including several essays on women writers and artists of the 1920s, including "Missing Person in Montparnasse," in the Literary Review, dedicated to the life of Jeanne H‚buterne, "Jane Heap and her Circle" in Prairie Schooner, dealing with the lives of Jane Heap and Margaret Anderson, founders of the Little Review and "Dada Queen in the Bad Boys' Club, Baroness Elsa Von Freitag Loringhoven" in Southwest Review. Major themes in Lappin's work include women's biographies and autobiographies, expatriate writers in the 1920s, and displacement.  She is the author of Katherine's Wish, The Etruscan, and Signatures in Stone.




Questions on Katherine Mansfield





1.  What first drew you to the work of Katherine Mansfield and what brings you back after many years reading her work?

2. What three stories would you recommend to a Mansfield neophyte?  Do you have a favorite Mansfield poem?  What are the deepest hungers, longings you see in Mansfield.  

3.  Ida Baker, long standing companion and self appointed slave servant of Mansfield and by all reports in love with her, do you think they ever had anything approximating sex?  Who was the worst parent, her father or her mother?  John Middleton Murry-parasite or the kind of husband she needed?  

4.  How into the occult was Mansfield-  she had a fascination for guru like men- getting Freudian, how much of this is issues from domineering cold super accomplished father and weak mother?



Answers to Mansfield Questions:

My interest in Mansfield goes way back to high school when I first read her collection Bliss.  I have always been very interested in the writers of her period,  TS Eliot, Virginia Woolf, Yeats, DH Lawrence, and lesser known writers like Mary Butts and Vernon Lee, both of whom have influenced me, but something  special clicked in my mid twenties when I discovered her journals and letters thanks to a wonderful Penguin edition, edited by CK Stead. I was drawn to her personality as much as to her writing. At that time in my life, I had just moved to Italy, was eking out a living, often ill, and striving to become a writer, and the letters and journals in which she recorded her struggles  touched a deep chord.  When she writes in her last letters of wanting to become “a child of the sun,” – I think that is the deepest human hunger – once the basic needs of life are fulfilled, one desires ardently to feel that one is a particle of the cosmos, and to feel that the divine creative energy manifested by the sun pulses in our veins, and that somewhere under that sun, we can find a place where we may be nourished and nourish others.  

The characters of Ida, Katherine and Murry make up an archetypal triangle in which they each idealize their love object  from whom they do not receive a satisfactory response. Not receiving the nourishment they crave, they devour each other, in a way. Their letters, diaries, memoirs and the accounts of others (on all of which I drew when creating them as characters) testify pretty much to the complexities and even the peculiarities of their personalities. I didn’t invent anything in shaping them as characters – the interactions, moods, and events I transcribe are patterned on facts which I gleaned by sifting through their own autobiographies, memoirs, etc. Some of the dialogue, even, is inspired by their letters, or snippets of dialogue reported in factual sources.  Sometimes I made a variation on this, but always starting from fact. As Vincent O Sullivan, co/editor of the last OUP volume of her collected letters, said to me “You stuck to what we knew,” which was part of my plan. Another Mansfield scholar praised the book as “creative scholarship.”  There was an interesting reader response to this, especially from those readers unfamiliar with the KM story, or with Ida or Murry.  Some readers of Katherine’s Wish felt that they were totally unbelievable as people, and one reader found the characters and “Plot” so preposterous, she eliminated the book from her kindle. That was a blow of rejection, I admit. My portrait of Murry was also criticized as being too stereotyped and not sympathetic enough, while others found it decently sympathetic.  Ida remains the most likable to the general reader, even though those who knew her said she could be a terribly controlling and possessive person, and I probably downplay those aspects of her character, to sharpen the contrast with Katherine.

(And to answer another question you asked, yes I think they had a physical relationship as young women, which Ida never outgrew.)   

Another reader heavily criticized my portrayal of Koteliansky, claiming that I had him sighing and starry-eyed, when in the scene in question he was stern, ironic, and irritated with her and yet concerned for her health – and in any case the scene being from her point of view, his intimate thoughts at the time weren’t available to the reader.  A Dh Lawrence critic told me he wasn’t sure my view of DHL sounded like DHL, but some of the comments, mannerisms I use come from Lawrence’s own very chatty letters.  So I guess what I am saying is that when you write about such well-known historical figures, you are bound to conflict with your readers’ inner imaginings of them, created through many objective but mostly subjective data picked up along the way, and people will react to that.  More than one amazon and etc. reader has commented that from my portrayal, Katherine seems to be a horrible person.  Even though Katherine could be both cruel and capricious, jealous and demanding, I don’t see that as a negative overall judgment on her person at all, and I also think that there were secret liens of various kinds that knotted the three together that no biographer, reader, or novelist, can understand.  Moreover,  Katherine repeatedly redeemed herself by coolly observing the negativity she expressed, trying to understand where it came from, and often associated it with her illness.  She saw in herself the same tendency to black moods, for example, as Lawrence, another TB victim, sometimes expressed.  


As far as “being into the occult”  --  

Mansfield did believe that there was a connection between her ill health and her feelings of spiritual depletion, and forawhile hoped that she might be able to heal herself physically by making radical changes in the way she lived in order to nourish her inner life, but then became aware that it was too late for that. Gurdjieff has been much maligned by critics who haven’t bothered to understand him or his ideas. But perhaps they shouldn’t be blamed too harshlyGurdjieff did not make it easy for the world at large to understand him, and constructed around himself a sort of castle of thorns todiscourage those moved only by a superficial interest.  He is often considered to be a sort of isolated episode in the history of the New Age, when in actual fact, his ideas and teachings have continued flow through the twentieth centuryup til now like a powerful underground river connecting far flung places, communities, and people and have entered in and fused with other developments in many fields, from performing arts and physical therapy to psychology. A good source to discover Gurdjieff from a more contemporary viewpoint  is perhaps through the writings of Jeanne de Salzmann, his oldest pupil, who died in 1990 and was largely responsible for carrying his work forward after his death. As for Mansfield’s relationship to Gurdjieff and his movement,  I highly recommend James Moore’s  study  Gurdjieff and Mansfield, for anyone who would like to know more about either of them. Interestingly, some of Mansfield’s ideas regarding self and identity which she discusses in her diary anticipate some of Gurdjieff’s own ideas, and clearly show why she would be so attracted to his teachings, since they echo something she herself felt deeply.  I discuss some of this my two essays on Mansfield, The Ghosts of Fontainebleau  and Mansfield and Lawrence A Parallel Quest, which won the first Mansfield Society essay contest.  So to answer your question:  certainly Mansfield felt attracted to older, fatherly men … many women do. With regards to Gurdjieff,  it went deeper than that.

For a first introduction, I would suggest the stories in Bliss,  and then the individual stories of  The Daughters of the Late Colonel,   The Man without a Temperament,  The Escape. And also her journals and letters. But for me those three stories recreate moments, impressions, inklings of her own life in fiction.  It is herself and Murry she ironizes in the latter two stories, while the former is a celebration of Ida.



5.  Tell us a bit about the novels you have translated from Italian please.   What Italian work (s) would you most like to translate.
Answer

I translated two novels by contemporary novelist, CarmeloSamona, for which I won an award from PEN and a National Endowment for the Arts grant in translation, but only one of those was published, Brothers, by Carcanet Press in England.  It is a very enigmatic story of two brothers, one healthy, one ill, who live together in a half-empty apartment in Rome.  It is an interesting contemporary take on the doppelganger theme, written in a rich literary style.   I have also translated stories by Federigo Tozzi,  aSienese writer from the early twentieth century, who had an abrasive and grotesque style with a touch of the absurd.  Writers I admire in Italian are Italo Calvino, of course, and NataliaGinzburg, but also Francesca Duranti. I have published a short piece or two of prose by Amelia Rosselli, a fascinating writer, but very difficult, if not impossible to translate. 

University of Iowa Writers Work Shop


6. Iowa.  As you may know, while a graduate student at the writers workshop, I worked for the International Writing Program, which was a separate program from the Writers Workshop, created by Paul Engle, who had previously directed the Workshop, in order to bring foreign writers to the USA and give them stipends and the opportunity to write.  It was a fabulous program and an expensive one to run, and many grants and funds were needed.  I do know that some of that funding came from the State Department.  Writers applied to the program through their embassies, if I recall rightly, through official channels, and looking back, there seemto have been a greater concentration of writers from Eastern Europe, South America, and Asia, than from, say Western Europe, or countries such as Australia or Japan. I have read some of the articles about the Workshop and the CIA, most notably Eric Bennet’s article in the Chroniclehttp://chronicle.com/article/How-Iowa-Flattened-Literature/144531/  and some others.

It is certainly true that the CIA and the US federal government through various foundations funded cultural activities abroad of various kinds in order to acquaint the rest of the world with American culture, and that these had an ideological purpose. I also think there is no doubt that Engle wanted the writers to return home with a positive view of American culture and that this would be a plus on our side in the tensions of the Cold War. But it is going a bit far to think that theInternational Writing Program was created as a laboratory for indoctrinating foreign intellectuals and writers, in some CIA experiment.  Engle was a big man a literary Iowan with big ideas, who wanted to put Iowa City on the map of literaryculture And most certainly, the University of Iowa owes him quite a lot for the prestige he created for the university. He was also a very canny and shrewd man, part horse trader, and I have no doubts that in convincing private businessmen or government officials or foundations to give him money especially for the IWP that he would emphasize the fact thattheir contributions would help promote the American way of life abroad and stave off the threat of communism – if that served his purpose. And he was a man with vision and a purpose who knew how to bend things towards his ends.  From what I recall of the IWP, and I was friends with many writers and an assistant to Paul’s wife, Hualing Engle  --  I wouldn’t say that the writers were subjected to direct or overt  propaganda or indoctrination, as would have been found in analogous programs in the Eastern bloc at that time.  

The writers were given a marvelous opportunity to visit the US, to write, to meet American writers and especially foreign writers, to travel, to meet students interested in their work, and often to have their work translated, and all they had to do in exchange was attend the meetings where the writers presented their work to each other. Most realized that the political and ideological implications of their presence there, and many were extremely critical of  U S  policies  ….we were embroiled in Viet Nam.  It would be interesting to contact some of the writers who attended in those years to hear their versions of the story and to see how they perceived it.


As for writers who were studied most:   There was a passion for John Cheever, John Barth,  William Gas,  the big names of American literary publishing back then.  Few women, unless  Isabel Allende, Ray Carver was just getting known then, and was teaching summer school, while the work of Ann Beattie was suddenly the rage, and everyone was writing minimalist stories and putting brand name products in their fiction.


7.  Tell us a bit about your methodology and pedagogical philosophy as a director of writer's workshops please.   Are their texts you use as teaching material.  What are the biggest obstacles you see students facing in realizing their potential?  



In my writing classes through the association and also in the literary travel writing class I taught for a number of years for an American University program in Italy,  I have often turned to a few basic sources:  myth and fairy-tale structures, archetypes, and soul of place as an inspiration for creative work,  and in general, an attunement to place as a way to explore new material and “open it up.”    I have written a lot of original craft of writing material and prompts, some of which have appeared in pedagogical journals like TEXT or the AWP Writers Chronicle, and others in The Writer magazine.  A current project is to complete a compilation of this material for a craft  of writing book, which I hope to publish next year.  I rarely use creative writing textbooks for my courses, and tend to select and create material on the basis of my students’ affinities.

As for your question about fulfilling one’s potential,  I think you get from the process what you put into it, but at the same time, processes of crystallization and refinement have to take place—  You put in ten pounds to extract ten ounces. so maybe I’d say, persistence is necessary, being willing to wait for rewards, knowing how to recognize them, and the ability to deal with rejection.



8.  How has your time in Italy changed you as a writer and reader?  

It has been my true birth into the world.

9.  Do you have a new novel in process?

I have three novels on back burners.  One is based on the life of Jeanne Hebuterne, one is a New Adult novel with male protagonist, The Brotherhood of Miguel, and the third carries on with Daphne DuBlanc from Signatures in Stone, and has her tangling with mermaids and Nazis in Lake Bolsena

10.  Favorite restaurant in Rome, in Tuscany, Paris 

Alas, Paris, my favorite restaurant, the Degres de Notre Dame,closed down, although it still operates as a hotel.  So I’d suggest  the Café Charlot, or the Pierre du Marais, just down the street from each other, in the Marais.  Tuscany…hmm, that’s a hard one. Most of my trips to Tuscany are by car to  the area of Siena, though sometimes Florence, and what I like best is, while on a car trip and hunger strikes at lunchtime  is to follow the yellow signs with knife and fork to some little place along a backroad,where you know you aren’t likely to be again,  and stop somewhere for a delightful meal of local cuisine.  In Rome, we are fans of Valentino’s in Via delBoschetto, where we often meet friends, and La Fiaschetteria Marini, near Porta Pia. Both have cheap prices, homey food, and a good wine cellar.





A.  Can you tell us a bit about your writing routine.  Do you typically set aside a certain period to write, always write in same place, do you listen to music while you write, do you need solitude to write?

I wish I did all of the above, but I just write when I can.  I always write, but fiction takes a certain gathering of energy that takes me awhile to garner. I do need solitude.  I have a hard time concentrating if someone else is in the room or comes in and out needing something.


B.  if you could give your eighteen year old self one suggestion, what would it be?    

Study more foreign languages.  Take more risks.  Try to be less self-conscious. 


C. " in the name of a humanism hypocritically turned champion of the reader’s rights. Classic criticism has never paid any attention to the reader; for it, the writer is the only person in literature. We are now beginning to let ourselves be fooled no longer by the arrogant antiphrastical recriminations of good society in favour of the very thing it sets aside, ignores, smothers, or destroys; we know that to give writing its future, it is necessary to overthrow the myth: the birth of the reader must be at the cost of the death of the Author."
What is your reaction to these very famous lines from "The Death of the Author" by Roland Barthes?  Does anybody outside of literary academics care about this?

There are many possible interpretations of Barthes notorious announcement, not only academic, which are of great interest probably to few but writers, critics, and the literary minded.  But there are other angles from which to view the question. Look at what is happening nowadays thanks to ebooks, people want books for free, contemporary readers reject the idea of copyright, which in its own way leads to a certain kind of death of the author.

D. UNCHARTED LIVES is a fascinating study by gay psychotherapist Stanley Siegel and straight Newsday columnist Ed Lowe Jr. The text is a mass analysis of how gay men develop through the eight male life passages from 'pre-emergence' to 'mentorin'’. The book is the result of numerous interviews and research. This data is balanced with Siegel's own dramatic mid-life coming out story.
When asked why such a seemingly disproportionate number of creative men are gay this was Siegel's response-  

"I think that because gay men live in a society that is hostile to them, because they are oppressed, have few role models, and in most cases have no legal rights or institutions that support and honor us we became extraordinarily inventive in the ways we live our lives. The process of become gay, of accepting one's sexuality, is a process of living an extremely original life. The apparatus of a creative life begins early, when we feel we are different in some way but have no language to explain the difference. Young gay boys feel that almost always and consequently they often isolate themselves or are isolated by the outside world. Isolation presents a creative world. Sometimes in fantasy we deal with separation by becoming highly productive - drawing, writing, creating. Usually this stays with the person the rest of their life and is only enhanced by the challenges they meet later on."
My question is do you think he is onto something?  Is the creativity of Gay men derivative from growing up without role models, from having to create a sense of self?

This is a very interesting study, and sounds plausible.  But not just gay people suffer from the lack of suitable role models.   It is an issue that affects women, and many other people who find that for whatever reason they are out of sync with dominating modes of their culture, or who don’t fit perfectly with the prevailing trends in their particular sphere of activity.  Homogenization is the key to our culture, marketers strive  make everybody act and think and dress and speak the same way. ( This is a very important part of the global market strategy, to make everybody in the world think they must have the same clothes,  the same ipad or iphone, wear the same brands, crave the same foods, attend the same world class events or at least follow them on tv, ultimately have the same values, which is, madness).  If you don’t conform to the mainstream, you will experience a certain degree of isolation and perhaps that does drive you to create to fill in the gaps. Accepting one’s “difference” whether sexual or anything else is probably always a long journey.


E. "It is the habit of approaching works of art in order to interpret them that sustains the fancy that there really is such a thing as the content of a work of art" - from  "Against Interpetation" by Susan Sontag

As a writer, how do you feel when people Interpet your work, attribute meaning to it?, see things in it you never thought about?  

I am generally pleased or at least have been so far.

Who is your ideal reader?  

An educated, open minded reader, curious about the places I write about.



G.  How important is seeing different parts of the world to you in terms of stimulating your creativity?  

This has been the number one stimulus.

H. Do you perceive a difference in Italian Literature from the north versus Sicily?  

I am not able to make an informed comment on this.  I haven’t studied Italian literature in depth, only picked and chosen from things I like

I.  Do you miss anything besides people you are close to about America?  

There are so many things I miss about America, but I sometimes wonder if they still exist.


What are you glad to be away from?   

People who bring guns to school

J.  Please tell us something about your recent publications and/or works in progress.





Well, Signatures in Stone (2013), my mystery novel which you reviewed here is a finalist for the Daphne Du MaurierAward from Romance Writers of America, in the history category. I am excited about that. It is hard for small press books to get noticed, so I feel very lucky to be on the list.

Recent publications include mainly articles connected to my “writing and the soul of place” research.  I recently published an essay on Lawrence Durrell, “Books  & Islands, On Reading Lawrence Durrell in Greece,”  in the AWP Writers’ Chronicle. The germ was a blog I published on WebdelSol a while earlier. It deals with Durrell’s views of soul of place in his Corfu memoir, Prospero’s Cell.  I also published a pedagogical article on using deep maps, the soul of place, and landscape narratives in creative writing, in the Australian creative writing pedagogy journal, TEXT, and an essay onquest and pilgrim narratives in The Writer Magazine.   I have an upcoming piece in August in The Writer  on Flanerie – the Parisan tradition of strolling and writing. These articles and essays are drawn from my creative writing book on Soul of Place.



1.   how and when did you begin to write? 

 I started as a child, before fourth grade

2.   How impacted is your creativity by the cycles of the seasons? I have a little more time to write in the summer, or at least I used to.

3.   Who are some of your favorite contemporary short story writers, poets or novelists?  What classic writers do you find your self drawn to reread.  If a neophyte writer in your primary focus were to ask you who to read, what might you suggest?

Poets:  Charles Wright, Don Justice, Elizabeth Bishop, A.E. Stallings,  Fiction:  Lawrence Durrell,  Shirley Hazzard, JohnFowles, are writers I return to again and again.  Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Annie Proulx and Francine Prose have good styles, as does memoirist Wallis Wilde Menozzi.   But other classic favorites are Henry James, Charlotte Bronte, Virginia Woolf.

To the neophyte I would probably suggest something that his or her own writing expressed an affinity for.


4.  Frank  O'Connor in The Lonely Voice:  A Study of the Short Story said short stories seem to be about marginalized people, the lonely, those with with little voice in society.   Do you think he is on to something illuminating about the format?  Why is there so much loneliness in the short story?  An interesting theory that merits consideration,


5.  I sometimes wonder why such a disproportionate amount of the regarded as great literature of the world is written in the colder temperate zones rather than in the tropics.   How big a factor do you think the Irish Weather is in shaping the literary output of its writers.?   I cannot imagine The Brothers Karamazov being written on tropical island, for example.

The great classic epics of India, and of Ancient Greece and Mesopotamia, other parts of the Arab world  all produced before the advent of air conditioning,   would rather disprove that notion!  Probably it is necessary to examine the reigning economic systems and the ways in which novels as cultural products fit into these schemes as well as the expansion of the language in which they are written, the driving aesthetic concepts of the period in which they were created, and the role of the writers and readers in the society at the time to make any real evaluations of this issue.

We do have some great writing from hot places, like India, Africa, and even the American south, where it gets very hot, indeed


6.   Many cultures are permeated with references to seemingly supernatural creatures, some kind some malevolent.  Do you feel any sense of these entities in the world you look out on in your daily life or in your writings?  Do you sense a continuity between the natural and supernatural worlds.  Is a belief in the supernatural just escapism and wishful thinking?  Is the believe in occult systems the refuge of the powerless?

Anyone who believes in the power of writing believes that shadows of the imagination have real power to influence human life. Characters like Hamlet or Mrs Dalloway or Holden Caulfield have a real presence that endures through time. So if there is a link to other worlds or  parallel worlds, it happens through the imagination. So many things that exit in the real world began as a thought, an image, an idea in the mind that then became manifest.

7.  These are loaded question coming from me, but with the decline of print reviews, are book blogs becoming more important?  Professional critics have denigrated book bloggers as reviewers without credentials,book bloggers have replied professional reviewers just don't like bloggers doing for free what they ask money for doing? Reviewers do it for money, bloggers for love.  What is your reaction to this?  Do you join book tours or send bulk mailings out asking for reviews?  

All that marketing business takes so much time. It is the death of writing, but you have to do some of it.  I think we need all kinds of reviewers –bloggers, paid reviewers, and amazon reviewers play their part. In all three, you will find people very well prepared who are good at what they do and approach the task with certain standards and values which are shared with their reading public. Often in paid reviewing, reviewers don’t always get to choose what they review, and  they may or may not have an affinity for the genre or particular book being reviewed, but you can be pretty sure that a reputable print venue will turn out a fairly decent review, respectful of the author and the work even when the judgment is negative, and attempting to understand the writer’s intention, which is a key element in reviewing, I think. A good reviewer probably bases part of his judgment on this aspect:  Did the writer fulfill his intention, whether or not we agree with it, or like /dislike it. That is what makes a professional reviewer.

Bloggers offer the option of enthusiastically praising or blaming books/writers in a particular niche, and that has its uses too. If I like women’s mysteries with cats, I will go to those bloggers who review books like that. If I like literary fiction, I will find one who posts on literary fiction. Bloggers who regularly keep up a blog are engaging in a literary operation, and they generally work hard at it, as you know! honing their skills because they know they have to keep their readers’ interest if they want their blog to survive. On the other hand, they may be prejudiced for or against a book and they may have vested interests, they may be paid by the publisher or author to praise a book ( or the opposite, to criticize one) etc.  Amazon reviews are trickier. There are many good reviewers are amazon, people who, like  bloggers or paid reviewers, apply a high standard and take their role seriously.  But there are also other types of reviewers, You will see books given bad reviews by people who have only 2 – 3 reviews to their name, and of non book products, who are inarticulate about what they disliked about a book, except by saying  “it was a waste of time, or waste of money”  and are obviously not qualified to comment on the literary quality of a book. They do not respect the writer, the work, or the form,  they just want to say they don’t like it.  If you look at these reviews, you will see that probably the reviewer expected the book to be completely different from what s/he thought it should be. He was expecting a traditional narrative and it turns out experimental,  she wanted a happy ending romance and it ends tragically. There is mention of some opinion with which the reviewer disagrees intensely. Or simply, s/he thought it was going to be about a dog, and it turns out to be about a cat, and s/ he despises cats, so…. It has supposedly been proven that some amazon reviews are fake, others are paid for by promotional campaigns to promote books, and it may be some reviewers are even paid to produce bad reviews of some titles in some strange algorithm game. I won’t mention the actual trolling that goes on, when some famous authors are insulted by disappointed fans or stalkers. So amazon reviews are a mixed blessing.

 I try to use facebook to promote my books, but I have such a small following, it’s really just sharing things with an intimate circle of friends. I don’t use mass mailings.  They don’t get read, anyway.


8.  When you write, do you picture and audience or do you just write?  

Just write

9.  Assuming this applies to you, how do you get past creative "dry spells", periods when you have a hard time coming up with ideas or when things seem futile? 

 Very often everything seems futile.  Not dry spells, exactly, but times when I can’t get enough mental space together to work on a longer project, or when shorter projects take over.

10.  If someone says to you, "I prefer to live life, not just read about it " what is your reaction inside?  (Besides cringing!)


Hmm, a brave soul,  Most of us are prisoners of an idiot box that we use for just about everything… our computers/ipads/iphones

11.  What are the last three novels you read?  Last three movies?  do you have any favorite TV shows?  Are there literary works you find reverberate in your mind in happy or in dark times?

I sometimes catch TV programs on the computer, ages afterwards.  I liked Lost, Dexter, and Downton Abbey, but those are the only ones I followed via computer. I absolutely adore Bruno Cremer as Maigret! I was so sad when he died.

I just read A Tale for Time Being, by Ruth Ozeki.  Do you know it? A masterpiece!  I am re-reading Lawrence Durrell’s The Dark Labyrinth  and Elizabeth Hardwick’s  Sleepless Nights

The most recent film I saw was Voyage to Cytheria  by Theo Angelopoulous.
I can’t remember the other ones, except the film short my husband Sergio Baldassarre has been working on, called The Party’s Over.  I will send you the link when it is ready

Jane Eyre  and Villette  are with me always, like some of the poems by Sylvia Plath and Elizabeth Bishop.  Mrs Dalloway. The Magus.   Many others.
In dark times, a song by Weird Al.  Do you know him?  It is called “Everything you know is wrong.”


12. William Butler Yeats said in "The Literary Movement"-- "“The popular poetry of England celebrates her victories, but the popular poetry of Ireland remembers only defeats and defeated persons.” I see a similarity of this to the heroes of the Philippines.  American heroes were all victors, they won wars and achieved independence. The national heroes of the Philippines were almost all ultimately failures, most executed by Spanish or American Rulers..  How has the fact Yeats is alluding too, assuming you agree,  shaped Irish literature? In America it seems somehow the best short stories writers like Flannery O'Connor, Eudora Welty, and Carson McCullers, all writers admired by Irish authors,  had their sensibilitesshaped by the defeat of the south in the American Civil  War.  Feel free to apply this to your heritage.

I  will pass this one up as I don’t know enough about Ireland, or even of the defeat of the South, though I grew up in the south, though am not Southern.

13.  If you could live any where in the past for six months, or forever, and be rich and safe, where would you pick and why? 

would pick Paris, and then somewhere in Greece, simply because they are my dream landscapes.

14.  Amazon - as a reader I like it a lot-  but is it a monster slowly taking down small publishers and independent book stores, controlling what books succeed? Is it bad for authors?

We are in a storm and you don’t really know which way the wind is blowing.  In the long run it will probably be bad, but in the meantime we scramble to make use of it as long as so many things are free, like KDP and Create Space.

15.  Are you open to  e mail, Facebook or Twitter, contact with your readers.  
Facebook and Twitter

I would love it if anyone who has read The Etruscan or Signatures in Stone would post a comment on my FB pages for those books.  Here they are  The Etruscan   https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Etruscan/431594963572164
Signatures in Stone https://www.facebook.com/SignaturesInStone  I have had some interaction through Good Reads too.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/15754786-the-etruscan

16.  A while ago i read and posted on a long biography of Hart Crane, author of the Bridge-few read it but many known of his life style as one of the first Gay poets living out a life of rough trade and wealthy older benefactors-he lived a very chaotic life and died young from suicide by jumping off a cruise ship. His father invented Life Saver Candy and wanted Hart to go in the Candy business with him-so if  Hart had done this and died at 75 rich living in ohio fat bald and married would he still be even much thought about let alone read?  One of the most referenced poets  by Irish writers last year was Arthur Rimbaud who likewise had a short and chaotic life.   Does a poet  need or naturally tend to a chaotic life?  why so much seeming admiration for writers like Jack Kerouac and others who died way to young from alcohol abuse.  If Ezra Pound had not gone mad, would he still be a role model for the contemporary poet?  (I know this is long, please just respond to it as you will.). Some of this may just be a story about a poet with a stable marriage, a job and no substance issues may seem dull compared to wilder lives.  

Yes, it’s true that there is a certain glamor to being a poet  who leads a reckless life and dies young.   But there are many exceptions. Goethe is one. Wallace Stevens.  Pessoa,  even TS Eliot ( but his wife was mentally ill) Henry James. It doesn’t have to be part of the job description, though it often has been.


17.  Is a certain amount of suffering good for a writer?  


18.  Why do you focus on Etruscan history rather than Roman? 



Visiting the Etruscan area just made it more alive for me, and more mysterious




19.  Not long ago I was sent several very hostile messages from Irish writers demanding to know why I had posted on the works of other writers and not them.  Some suggested I had been influenced  by some sort of shadowy group to ignore their work. I was informed there is a small elite group who decides who gets reviewed, published or receives grants and it was also  suggested they had sent me negative feedback on writers I should ignore. What is mentally behind this?  Is there anything like a Literary Mafia within your area.?

This just shows how paranoid we writers are, and how badly we need readers. There is always a clique in every context of human life and location, people and trends who are in, people and trends who are out, and people scrambling to find a position because they haven’t got one. It is very hard to “break in” if you haven’t got some support from someone who is established, but the whole thing whirls along so fast, even those who are established fear they will slide off the stage at any moment.

20. One of the characters in Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolano, set in Mexico city and centering on poets, says that the main reason poets, nearly all male in Bolano's book,  read at work shops is to meet the way disproportional number of women who come to them in search of a tortured soul to nourish.  is there truth in this?  Why are attendees preponderantly female, or is that not true?  Male writers, have you ever used the "troubled artist who feels too much" routine on women?  Ladies, does this persona have an appeal to you?

Most readers of books, probably not just fiction, but also poetry are women.  





21.   Who are three dead or living writers you would like to do a q and a session with?
Virginia Woolf   Katherine Mansfield   Rilke


22. Quick Pick Questions

A.  tablets or laptops or smart phones? All 3

B.  E readers or traditional books? both

C.  American Fast Food- love it, hate it, or once and a while?
Haven’t for awhile.  

D.  Cats or dogs?  Definitely dogs  Also donkeys

E.  best city to inspire a writer- Paris, London, Dublin, or?  Paris!
F.  Walt Whitman or Willam Butler Yeats?   Both
G.  Roberto Bolano or Gabriel Cruz Marquez ?   Marquez

K.  Winter or Summer? Day or Night? All four


I.  Would you rather witness opening night for Waiting for Godot, King Lear, Playboy of the Western World or Ubu Roi?
It depends on who is directing.


23. How important is it to you to have readers?  Does it matter. ?

It is important to get feedback, to know that someone else will share your world

24.From Paris Review Interview with Alberto Moravio in which he was asked to talk about the state of the Italian novel-

"That’s a pretty large question, isn’t it? But I’ll try to answer. I think one could say that Italy has had the novel, way back. When the bourgeois was really bourgeois, in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, narrative was fully developed (remember that all that painting was narrative too) but since the Counter-Reformation, Italian society doesn’t like to look at itself in a mirror. The main bulk of narrative literature is, after all, criticism in one form or another. In Italy when they say something is beautiful that’s the last word: Italians prefer beauty to truth. The art of the novel, too, is connected with the growth and development of the European bourgeoisie. Italy hasn’t yet achieved a modern bourgeoisie. Italy is really a very old country; in some ways it looks new because it’s so old. Culturally, now, it follows the rest of Europe: does what the others do, but later. Another thing—in our literary history, there are great writers—titans—but no middle-sized ones. Petrarch wrote in the fourteenth century, then for four centuries everybody imitated him. Boccaccio completely exhausted the possibilities of the Italian short story in the fourteenth century. Our golden centuries were then, our literary language existed then, had crystallized. England and France had their golden centuries much later. Take, for example, Dante. Dante wrote a pure Italian, is still perfectly understandable. But his contemporary Chaucer wrote in a developing tongue: today he must be practically translated for the modern reader. That’s why most modern Italian writers are not very Italian, and must look abroad for their masters: because their tradition is so far back there, is really medieval. In the last ten years, they’ve looked to America for their masters."

My question is designed to draw responses - it seems literary cultures are strongly impacted by continuity.  The literary culture of American seems to have much more shallow roots, to assume a less cultured audience. Contrasting Indian literature, which has older roots than any other culture, it seems to really begin about 1920.  The continuity of Indian literature was destroyed by the British rule and writers at first had to use English formats.  So what is a very old culture, has a shallowly rooted literary tradition less than 100 years old.  Something similar happened in Ireland which has a new literary culture on top of cut off old roots?  Question is just react to this, is it nuts or onto something about the differences in literary culture.

I think Moravia has given a very sound and profound analysis of the Italian literature of his era, and I believe it is still true that many Italian writers today continue to imitate American models. But there is no alternative, probably, America imposes its cultural models with great enthusiasm and tons of money to the detriment of the creative arts elsewhere,  hence the crisis in the production of European cinema or theater.
 Only great Italians, no middle-sized. Among the greats, we would have to mention Calvino who sought very different sources, contemporary French literature and critical theory, for example, or the fable-fairy tale tradition of Italian folklore.I find Moravia’s comments very insightful. Particularly about beauty, and the willingness to look at oneself in the mirror as a prime factor in the genesis of the novel.



25. How important is social media in the development of the career of writers?  Do you have your own web page and if so why? Do you suggest your students set up web pages or blogs?  Do you think it is good business savvy to post free samples of your work online?  Can you estimate how many hours a week you are online?

Yes I have a webpage to showcase my work, www.lindalappin.net though I recently took down one dedicated to The Etruscan. Free samples can’t hurt. But one does spend too much time online.  I can’t say how much.  When I am working at the computer, I am always connected, except on the week ends, as I don’t have internet in my getaway place.

End

I offer my greatest thanks to a Linda for taking the time to provide such interesting, articulate, and illuminating responses to my questions.  

I will read all of her future novels and endorse her work to all lovers of quality fiction.  








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