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Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Beautiful Ape Girl Baby by Heather Fowler (2016)


A very wide ranging Q and A Session with Heather Fowler




 

Beautiful Ape Girl Baby by Heather Fowler is an amazing tour de force through contemporary America. It is sort of a cross between Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha, Jack Kerouac's On the Road with a bit of Fanny Hill and Don Quixote in the mix.  If you are a Pynchon lover, maybe you can see the lead character, Beautiful, in Southern California with Oedipus Mass.

Beautiful  was born with Ape like features and strength and appetites.  Her parents were very wealthy
and they never wanted to acknowledge there was anything odd or different about their daughter.
Much like the young Buddha, she was raised in a compound sheltered from the harshness, poverty, venality, and ugliness of American culture.  She was brought up by servants who saw to it that she was very well educated while never giving her any idea  she was not totally perfect in every way.  No one ever criticized her or told her "no".  As she reaches late adolescence, seventeen, she decides to leave her sheltered environment and in the company of her driver, sets out to experience life.  She has a very strong sexual appetite and she does not at first understand it is risky business in several ways for a girl who looks like an ape to demand sex from men she meets but barely know on her journey.

As Beautiful encounters strangers she begins to discover things about herself.  She is violent occasionally and reacts very badly to having her will thwarted.  Beautiful Baby Ape Girl is a savagely darkly humorous commentary on a world wide culture in which young women are valued for their looks, where intelligence is something to be shunned if not in the service of the corporate structure.

At times Beautiful Ape Girl Baby shocked me with it directness, darkness rarely seen.  It made me laugh out loud more than once.  I am so glad to have the opportunity to read this amazing first novel.  I have been following the literary development of Heather Fowler for several years now.  Her talent and imagination never fail to amaze me.

Biography
Heather Fowler is the author of the novel Beautiful Ape Girl Baby (Pink Narcissus Press, June 2016) and the story collections Suspended Heart (Aqueous Books, Dec. 2010), People with Holes (Pink Narcissus Press, July 2012), This Time, While We're Awake (Aqueous Books, May 2013), and Elegantly Naked in My Sexy Mental Illness (Queen's Ferry Press, May 2014). Fowler's People with Holes was named a 2012 finalist for Foreword Reviews Book of the Year Award in Short Fiction. This Time, While We're Awake was recently selected by artist Kate Protage for representation in the Ex Libris 100 Artists 100 Books exhibition this February and March in conjunction with the 2014 AWP Conference. Her fictive work has been made into fine art in several instances and her collaborative poetry collection, Bare Bulbs Swinging, written with Meg Tuite and Michelle Reale, is the winner of the 2013 TWIN ANTLERS PRIZE FOR COLLABORATIVE POETRY and was released in December of 2014. Fowler's stories and poems have been published online and in print in the U.S., England, Australia, and India, and appeared in such venues as PANK, Night Train, storyglossia, Surreal South, JMWW, Prick of the Spindle, Short Story America, Feminist Studies and others, as well as having been nominated for numerous prizes. She is Poetry Editor at Corium Magazine. Please visit her website: www.heatherfowler.c



Friday, February 24, 2017

Candelaria Readings - January 2017




I spent most of January in Candelaria, ancestral family home, in northern Zambales in extreme rural Philippines.  My favorite place to read is the verandah of one of the family houses. The air is lovely, there are huge mango trees, delicious food, and wonderful and kind people.




Yes, it really is this green


Candelaria Readings

1.  The Lonely City Adventures in the Art of Being Alone by Olivia Lang, 2016, a transcendently 


brilliant work.  

2.  Near to the Wild Heart by Clarice Lispector, 1943, her first novel. Published at age 23, truly amazing


3.  "THE ORMOLU CLOCK", by Muriel Spark, Sept. 17, 1965, in The New Yorker.  Included in The Sixties, The Story of a Decade
5.  Stranger in a Strange Land Searching for Gershom Scholem and Jerusalem GEORGE PROCHNIK. Fascinating 
6. "A & P" by John Updike JULY 22, 1961, in The New Yorker, first work by Updike I have read since Rabbit Run was published
7. "Kabbalist" by I. L. Pertz, 1894, classic Yiddish short story on a small impoverished school in a small town 
8.   Watson's Apology by Beryl Bainbridge, 1985, shows her great range, among her best works
9. Babette's Feast by Isak Dinesin.  A beautiful fable 
10. THE SIX The Lives of the Mitford Sisters LAURA THOMPSON.  Very comprehensive story of the Mitford Family.  Only for Mitfordians.
11. Savage Beauty:  The Life of Edna Saint Vincent Millay by Nancy Milford, a beautiful biography, the ending will nearly break your heart.  2001
12. A Week End With Claude by Beryl Bainbridge, 1967, not among my favorite of her works
13. The Yid by Paul Goldberg, Russia 1953
14. The Dress Maker by Beryl Bainbridge 
15. The Famished Road by Ben Orki, 1991 Booker Prize Winner, a powerful work of magic realism, set in Nigeria

Some of these works I will or have already posted on, some I will not.








Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Ted Hughes The Unauthorized Biography by Jonathan Bate (2015)





Born August 17, 1930, died October 28, 1998- U. K.

Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom December 28, 1984 to death


Married Sylvia Plath June 16, 1956 to February 11, 1963 

Ted Hughes The Unauthorized Biography by Jonathan Bate is one of the best literary biographies I have so far read.  I think in the broader culture he is probably best known as the husband of Sylvia Plath.  Her suicide became a dominating event in his subsequent Life history.  

As of this moment I am dealing with a painful strength depleting lingering illness.  Ordinarily I would try to do a post worthy of this great book about a greater poet.  Hughes was a larger than life figure, two women in his life killed themselves as did his oldest son.  He was deeply into the reading life, a good friend of Seamus Heaney, close to the Queen of England.  He was a man of great depth.  Bate quotes generously from his poetry.  Hughes left an archive of over 100,000 pages.  He loved fishing, nature, farming, Ovid and Shakespeare.  He loved women and the feeling was reciprocated.  Bate takes us far into the world of Hughes.  We see him as a father, a husband, a teacher, a reader, a business man managing the estate of Sylvia Plath, and a friend.  We see him struggle to write and continually revising his work.  He created some of the most powerful poetry of the English language.

I am very glad I read this book.

Mel u

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

The Parasites by Daphne du Maurier (1949)








Daphne du Maurier on The Reading Life


Born: May 13, 1907, London, United Kingdom
Died: April 19, 1989, Fowey, United Kingdom

Rebecca, 1938

Not long ago I read a very well done biography of Daphne du Maurier Manderlay Forever by Tatiana Rosnay.  She talks a lot about the theatrical work of her parents.  She mentions the novel The Parasites as the one work which draws most directly on this aspect of the family life showing what it might have been like to have very famous actors as parents.  Rosnay cautions that this is not one of du Maurier's best works.

The main characters are the three children of the family.  The father is only loosely based on her father, he is more a singer and a dancer than a stage actor.  The children are called "the parasites" as they make their way through life living from the money and fame of their parents.  We see them develop from children and we see their mother die and their father's health and vigor greatly decline.  Du Maurier interestingly shows us how the children's upbringing shaped them as adults.

I am glad I read this book but those new to du Maurier need to read her more famous works first.

Mel u



Monday, February 20, 2017

"How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped" by Katherine Mansfield (1910, 2nd Reading)

Katherine Mansfield on The Reading Life





I last read this story nearly eight years ago.  I am currently reading a brilliant just published book Katherine Mansfield The Early Years by Gerri Kimber which has inspired me to begin rereading her stories, especially those set in New Zealand.  (I will post on this book soon.). My posts on these stories as I reread will be brief.

Pearl Button is a ten year or so old girl, the daughter of New Zealand colonists.  One day while she is out for a stroll two women from a nearby Maori tribe take her with them.  We see how the young girl viewed the women.  Mansfield makes wonderful use of color and close observation to help us see the Maori through the eyes of Pearl.  She has no fear of them and they mean her no harm at all.  At the end of the story the Maori tell her they will take her back to the "box houses".

In just a few pages, Mansfield draws us into Colonial New Zealand.

This story can easily be found online.

Mel u

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Near to the Wild Heart by Clarice Lispector (1943)















This is the 3000th post on The Reading Life.  I think for me Near to the Wild Heart by Clarice Lispector (1920 to 1970)is a perfect subject for this post.  She is one of my favorite writers, her image is on my blog sidebar. If I had never started my blog I would have, I am quite sure, died having never heard about much less read her great work.  There are hundreds of other writers of which the same can be said featured on the blog.  

As of now I am still dealing with a painful and strength sapping illness, but nothing on the level of the pain of the terminal cancer Clarice dealt with in the final days of her life.  In Clarice's family and life story much of the history of the 20th century can be encapsulated.  

Near to the Wild Heart, the title comes from Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, was her first novel, published at age twenty three when she was still in law school and working as a journalist.  Her prose style mesmerized Brazilian literary society.  Early critics proclaimed it the best novel ever written in Portuguese by a woman.  



It is a stream of consciousness work, not conventionally plotted, in which Joana, a recently married woman in her early twenties, recalls incidents from her life.  I was struck by her extensive quotations from Spinoza.  

There is background information on Clarice in my prior posts.  




Thursday, February 16, 2017

Saint-Exupéry A Biography by Stacy Schiff (1994)


My Great Thanks to Max u for the Amazon Gift Card that Allowed me to Acquire this Work



Antoine Marie Jean-Baptiste Roger, Comte de Saint-Exupéry

Born June 29, 1900 Lyon, France

Missing in action and presumed dead, July 31, 1944

1943, published The Little Prince, one of ten best selling books of the 20th century, translated into over 250 languages and dialects.

Antoine Saint-Exupréry and the era and milieu in which he lived is elegantly and memorably described in Saint-Exupéry A Biography by Stacey Schiff.  Last year I read her Pulitzer Price winning biography Vera Mrs Vladimir Nabokov and when I saw her name among the contemporary literary biographers admired by Richard Holmes I was happy to find on Amazon a Kindle edition of her biography of the author of The Little Prince.

Schiff initiates her work by describing the aristocratic roots of her subject.  She described him as a Nobel Man, a Count, without a great fortune.  Schiff elegantly presents a man with three great loves, his mother, piloting planes, and women.  He epitomized the image of a charming, refined ladies man often short of money until his writings relieved him of financial anxiety.  He married an odd woman, they lived apart much of the time and neither seemed to have really loved the other.

The first real commercial application of the airplane was for mail delivery.  From an early age Saint-Exupéry was obsessed with flying.  His first real job was flying the mail run between Casablanca and Daka.  His experiences were the stuff of legend, with crashes in the desert, pursuit by angry tribesmen and many a night drinking in the clubs in Casablanca (he would have been equally at home at the Elegant Rick's Cafe or the noir Blue Parrot).  Everywhere he went ladies were spell bound by his stories and captivated by his charm and good looks.

He became director of a Buenos Aires based postal airline and flew over much of South America.  His best selling book, Night Flight, published 1931, was based on these experiences.  Returning to France upon the death of his mother he began flying again all the while his concern over the build up of Germany increased.

Schiff spends a lot of time describing what it was like to fly in the mail planes of those days, many died or were badly injured.  Saint Exupéry suffered a serious back injury.  When France surrendered to Germany he and his wife made it to New York City where they lived from 1941 to 1943.  He had money from his book sales and he was working hard to bring America into the war.  We also learn a lot about the competition of De Gaule with others to be the leader of the French liberation effort. 

In 1944 he returned to Europe.  Doctors said he was not really medically fit to fly, he was also way older than most pilots.  He wanted very badly to help defeat the Germans.  He was declared missing in action on July 31, 1944 when his recognizance flight did not return.

Saint Expuréy was a heroic life loving man. He loved good food and wine, when he had money he was generous.  Sadly he never saw the huge financial rewards of the 1943 publication of The Little Prince but his widow lived like a queen on them for many years.  He had no children.  Schiff makes no ill-advised attempt to explain how he created  The Little Prince.  He probably a triffle haughty seeming to some.  There were rumors he had an affair with Anne Lindbergh, wife of Charles.  

This is a fascinating biography, rich in detail and understanding. 

Details about the authors other books and her bio data can be found at

http://www.stacyschiff.com/about-stacy-schiff.html

I very highly recommend this book, as much for the aviation and social history as for the magnificent biography 

Mel u





















Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Savage Beauty The Life of Edna Saint Vincent Millay by Nancy Milford







Doubt no more that Oberon—
Never doubt that Pan
Lived, and played a reed, and ran
After nymphs in a dark forest,
In the merry, credulous days,—
Lived, and led a fairy band
Over the indulgent land!
Ah, for in this dourest, sorest
Age man's eye has looked upon,
Death to fauns and death to fays,
Still the dog-wood dares to raise—
Healthy tree, with trunk and root—
Ivory bowls that bear no fruit,
And the starlings and the jays—
Birds that cannot even sing—
Dare to come again in spring!


"My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends—It gives a lovely light!"

1892 Born Rockland, Maine

1952, Died Austeritz, New York

1943 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

Edna Saint Vincent Millay was the most read poet of her generation.

Recently I read a great work that may well become required reading for those into reading or writing literary biographies, This Long Pursuit Adventures of a Romantic Biographer by Richard Holmes, himself one of the true masters of the form.  In it he recommends a number of contemporary writers of literary biographies, among them Nancy Milford.  I did an Amazon check on her and acquired her biography of Edna Saint Vincent Millay.

Savage Beauty is a wonderful biography, doing the very difficult if not impossible task of showing how Millay's life experiences, her education, her relationships (she was openly bisexual) and reading and her own brilliance germinated together to produce her poetry.

Millay grew up in near poverty.  Her father left her mother and she struggled to make a living as a seamstress.  Wherever the family moved, the mother carried a trunk full of classic literature. By age ten Millay was reading Milton and Shakespeare.  She graduated from Vassar in 1917.

Her first poem was published in 1912, the very powerful "Renascence".  Her work was in demand from that point onwards.  Mitford lets us see the hardships she suffered.  Her like took an upswing when she married a man very devoted to her, accepting of her older same sex relationships.  He managed her business affairs and took care of all domestic duties freeing her to write.  In addition to her poetry, she wrote a number of plays, largely for income.

The end of her life was a period of great pain from cancer which she tried to fight by resorting to alcohol.  Of course this just made things all the worse.

I am very glad I read this book. It is made me feel I knew the poet.

I have also acquired her Collected Works and am slowly reading her magnificent poems.

Mel u





Monday, February 13, 2017

Babette's Feast by Karen Blixen (1950, written under pen name Isak Dinesen,)





1885 to 1962 - Denmark

Most Famous Works 

Out of Africa -her autobiography 1937

Gothic Tales 1938

"Babette's Feast" (first published in Ladies Home Journal) is a delight fable-like work set in 19th century Denmark.  Babette, from France, is the cook for two middle aged spinsters sisters.  Their deceased father was the leader of a religious cult once very popular in Denmark.  The sisters have romantic memories of affairs that almost happened.

Babette is from Paris.  One day she wins a substantial prize in a French lottery.  She decides to use the money to stage a magnificent feast for the sisters and their friends.  We learn Babette was once one of the greatest chefs in all of Paris. I super enjoyed this story.

Right now I am impacted by a lingering weaking  health issue so some posts like this one will be more like reading journal entries.  


There is a highly rated movie based on this story, 1987, I hope to see one day

Mel u





Friday, February 10, 2017

Letters to a Young Writer by Colum McCann (April, 2017)


My Posts on Colum McCann

Letters to a Young Writer by Colum McCann


Through the wonderful fiction of Colum McCann I have wandered through ravaged post World War Two Eastern Europe with Roma, been a tunnel digger in New York City, made a transatlantic flight in 1917 from the USA to Ireland, met Rudolf Nureyev and Frederick Douglas, walked across a very high wire while the great world spinned on.

Letters to a Young Writer is based on the experience and wisdom McCann acquired in teaching for twenty years in the MFA program at Hunter College in New York City.  The program takes two years and accepts only twelve applicants out of hundreds.  Students have

 gone on to win a Booker Prize and other top literary awards.  He tells us he begins his class by informing  his students creative writing cannot really be taught and then he tells them to open their minds and prepare to learn.

There are fifty three chapters, each one readable in just a minute or two.  McCann ranges over topics such as what to read (read difficult books, Ulysses is his candidate for greatest novel ever written), where to write, what music you might play while writing, finding and dealing with an agent, how to employ your personal life in your work, assuming your readers are at least as smart as you think you are, down to dealing with success and learning from failure.

I am not an aspiring writer of fiction but I believe very strongly that deep reading is one of the most creative arts and the greatest tribute one can pay to a writer.  Much of McCann's advise about writing could apply to reading. You just have to use your imagination and free yourself from the bonds of pedagogy.

I highly recommend this book to all aspiring  writers.





Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Grigory Rasputin Faith, Power, and the Twilight of the Romanovs by Douglas Smith (2016, 850 pages)

Grigory Rasputin Faith, Power, and the Twilight of the Romanovs by Douglas Smith (2016, 850 pages)

In November 2016, I read a marvelous book, Former People- The Last Days of the Russian Aristocracy by Douglas Smith.  After reading it, I lost my romantic admiration for White Russians due to their vehement anti-Semitic actions and views.  They blamed the Jews for the loss of their privileged positions.

I have long been interested in the declining years of the Romanov dynasty and the role of Grigory Rasputin in the fall of the empire.  I was delighted to learn of Douglas Smith's just published book Grigory Rasputin Faith, Power, and the Decline of the Romanovs.

Much of this book is devoted to correcting the legend of Rasputin as a mad wandering monk who walked out of deepest Siberia and became a close advisor to the last royal family of Russia.  He gained an emotional hold on the Empress Alexandra through his seeming ability to stop the potentially deadly hemophiliac episodes of her son, heir to the throne.  Smith provides the first plausible explanation for this I have read in saying that the attacks are made worse through tension and by calming the mother this calmed the son and stopped the bleeding.  He first met the imperial family in November 1905.

Rasputin had large sexual appetites.  He mingled with street women as well as women of high rank.  He had large parties, often described as orgies in the press.  Rasputin knew aristocratic Russian women would be fascinated by his roughness and his wild often filthy dress and outrageous manners and Rasputin, a master psychologist, played the holy mad man role for all it was worth. False rumors spread about he and Alexandra.  Smith details all of this and separates fact from fiction while painting a vivid social portrait not just of capital Life but of the country.  Rasputin had a wife and children whom he supported.

Rasputin 1869 to 1917

Royal Family Executed July 17, 2018


Rasputin became an advisor to the Czar, who was in no way fit to rule Russia.  Rasputin was influential in his suggestions for political office.  He gave the Czar advise, which to his credit the Czar at times ignored.  It was, as Smith elegantly portrays the Czarina who was most under the influence of Rasputin.

This is a book full of fascinating interludes.  The story of the assassination of Rasputin has been told many times and Smith does a very good job of this.

He tells us about Rasputin's role in WW One.

Smith sees Rasputin as a very important figure in Russian and indeed world history.  He suggests without Rasputin there might never have been a Russian Revolution and without the Russian Revolution there may not have been a Nazi regime in Germany.  This is a lot to accept but it should be pondered.

This is a very good book.  It is long, with nearly 250 pages of notes.  It is probably going to be the definitive work on Rasputin for a long time. It is not for casual readers but for those seriously interested in Russian history.





Sunday, February 5, 2017

The Dressmaker by Beryl Bainbridge (1973)


Beryl Bainbridge on The Reading Life

For a while my posts may be quite short.  I am kind of working of a weaking illness but still want to keep track of my reading.

The Dressmaker is a very good depiction of England at home during W W Two.   It focuses on two unmarried  middle aged sisters and their brother living together along with the brother's daughter.  His wife died in child birth.

We see them coping with rationing, facing the destruction of London. I was a bit surprised how much the American troops were resented, mostly jealousy it seemed.

I highly recommend this book for the fine character depictions and descriptions of London wartime life