Another Day

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

So Wall Street didn't blinker shut, and the ATMs didn't go on strike (I greenbacked one, so as to be sure), and the book that I'd been reading just kept getting better, and two new client projects reared, and three more marched bravely forward, and I'm not saying that we're out of the woods, that there's not real trouble, that we can put off doing what must be done, that there are not sacrifices to be made, and compromises, too.

I'm just saying: Another day.

Read more...

What Happens Next?

Stammered, stoppered, stunned by the news. By headlines four inches high. By images of strangers—panicked. By the realities of a country that has lived far too long on borrowed time, in the haze of inflated ambitions, under the scourge of obfuscating mechanisms and tools.

What happens next isn't up to most of us, but I think this much is true: Responsibility, in the midst of this crisis, means living on. It means going about our days as we would have elsewise gone about our days—a little kinder, maybe, a little more clear with ourselves that every moment of abundance is a gift, every gesture of goodness is a salve. Anxiety can't help us now. Obsessively watching the news won't change the news.

Outside our windows, the world goes on. The rain comes, the flocks descend, the sun rises, a neighbor brings a puppy home, inexplicably, the sweet William once more blooms. Life's incidentals, but right now, this is what we have.

Read more...

You’re Still Here, With Us: A Jayne Anne Phillips Story

Monday, September 29, 2008

Jayne Anne Phillips has a brilliant new book due out this coming January. A brilliant book: Faulkneresque. Unblinking. Committed. Not a shred of fear. It's called Lark & Termite, and in a future post I'll be getting to that, but for now, as I sit curled over the galleys, as I sit here celebrating Jayne Anne's unsinkable talent, I remember my first days with this writer, I remember an essay I once wrote. Because she is a rare, living legend, a rare female living legend, I post parts of that earlier piece here today, to provide context for what I'll post next week.

I met Jayne Anne Phillips in a city of puppets, on a night of daggering rain. It was Prague, the summer of 1995. She was across a gilded reception room, near a table piled high with apples and cheese, and I remember watching how she moved through the writers who had assembled there—moved through them, touched a hand to them, but escaped them just in time. Her long crimped hair sat on her shoulders like a cape. She seemed unspoiled by the rain.

Standing there, observing Jayne Anne, I was struck by contradictions, as readers of her work have always been. Here was the woman who had yielded characters who marched straight out of the dark side and spoke: Jamaica, you black doll, wobbling like a dead girl sewn of old socks …. Here was the author of tender reminisce: My mother’s ankles curve from the hem of a white suit as if the bones were water. Here was the teacher with the reputation for being obsessed with the miniscule, the line edit, the word and its hyphen, the punctuation mark. Here was the mother both saddled with beauty—charcoal blue eyes, sun-darkened skin, a photogenic nose and chin—and famously uncomfortable with beauty’s dark allure.

It occurred to her, I never did ask why, to speak to me that night. When had I gotten to Prague? Where was I from? Had I gone to the castle across the bridge? Had I seen the big cathedral? This morning, I said. Pennsylvania, I said. And no, I’d seen neither castle nor cathedral, though I’d hoped to at one point, when there was time. She asked me to call her the following morning at ten. She said we’d go see things together.

We spent the next day jostled by the summer crowds of Prague, Jayne Anne and me, our families. We spent it beneath pinched-high roofs, beside confessionals, in the trapped light behind stained glass. Cathedral and castle. Gardens and walls. Heat, and the sound of singers singing. It was mid-afternoon before we made our way back, over the bridge. We bought postcards and jewelry and architectural miniatures, then parted ways in Mala Strana.

Over the next ten days I got to know Jayne Anne, quietly and slowly. If she was cautious in among the crowds, she was generous in private. If she was guarded about the price of fame, she spoke without pretension. She talked about stories, about words, about the book that she’d been writing. She talked about the carnival that is the writer’s life. She asked questions, too—what it was that made me write, where I thought I might be going, what I hoped to get from books, and over coffee and hot chocolate and one kind of cookie then the next I said that I was writing because I always had, because I couldn’t break the habit. I said I was writing because I believed that words could be morally persuasive.

In Prague I wasn’t a writer yet; I was just a woman, writing. I was just a woman with a writing dream, and Jayne Anne listened to it. After ten days went by, I left for home; after more time passed, I got a postcard. A portrait of a Ferris wheel on the banged-up front, and on the back, a single gesture: Dear Beth, it said, are you really gone? No. No. You’re still here with us.

Being out in the world now with books of my own, I am overwhelmed when I think back on Prague, Jayne Anne, and castles. I know the price of advice, I know the weight of strangers’ manuscripts, I know the urgency behind the questions: Read me? Know me? Teach me? Promote me? Love my book? Make me a writer? When you lean in the direction of another’s work, you lean precariously out of your own. When you attend to the dreams and works of others, you are thrown from the path you had been on. In Prague I was a stranger—unknown, prone, as I continue to be prone, to wrecking sentences with elaborate extensions. I was living on the other side of books—unpublished, unread, linguistically ungainly—and still, on a night of rain, in a city of puppets, Jayne Anne asked if I had seen a castle. She opened a door, and I walked through. I invaded her world with my own.

Like the architect, the writer is a romanticized profession. It is the lavish drunkness of F. Scott Fitzgerald, the outrageous cruelty of Sinclair Lewis, the staggering machismo of Ernest Hemingway, the infidelities, always that. We love the brokenhearted writer. We love the beg for forgiveness, the confession of betrayal, the fragile ego smashed wide apart in the finest final pages. Writing, the myth goes, is tenderness reserved for the book, intelligence transferred to fiction, generosity given over to scene, and the writing life is the life that’s lived subservient to stories. Thieves, writers are, and shadows drag behind them. And wherever writers claim to broker the truth, they cast, instead, a net of lies.

It is the irreproachable loneliness of the writer we’ve come to expect, the miserly way they parcel out their flecks of available love. Those who love too much get nowhere. Those who teach will never sell. Those who give back cannot be classified as genius. Those who cede the stage are thrust aside. Don’t expect a thing from a writer but their books. Don’t look for their decency anywhere but before you, on the page.

Except I cannot prove the myth. Except I have lived within the graces of its polar opposite. I have opened my mailbox to a postcard from Michael Ondaatje, a careful, intricate, telling response to a letter I had written. I have found a pen in my mailbox, too—a gift from a novelist I met only once, after standing in line for hours at a bookstore. A writer friend brought my son paper stars, and another writer sent me seeds, and a writer’s blueberries have arrived as well—overnighted to preserve their wild freshness. And one day an orchid appeared with two dozen purple blooms and, another day, a pillbox from Dubai and always books and, astonishingly, more seeds and three packages of saffron, and a jar of jam and a bundle of photographs, a pen, a chocolate bar, a ceramic dragonfly, a subscription to a magazine. Dear Beth, are you really gone? No. No. You’re still here with us.

It is from the gifts and notes of writers that I have learned what writing is. It is how writers have reached far beyond their books that has rescued me from absurd and brazen dreams and taught me what really matters. What I thought writing was writing isn’t. How I thought writers were at least some writers aren’t. Where I thought I’d take my rewards, I have found nothing worth my keeping. Where I expected little, I’ve been overcome with flavor. If I thought I could write myself into kindness with words, I have learned, from my writer friends to know the extent of the possible. If I thought I’d write my way to truth, I have been helped to redefine my purpose. Memory is not memoir. Truth supercedes the tale. Arfulness induces artifice. And writing a book is not publishing a book. And being a writer sometimes means that one does anything but writing. And.

Lost, often lost in the dispiriting mechanics of publishing, or the disappointments of the trade, or the injustice that can be done to an ambition or a story, I have found my anchor in other writers, in the gifts and cards and emails that have floated in, across the nether. Beth, we are writers by virtue of our stance to the world. Plus the act makes us feel good. Writing makes me like myself. One email, out of many. It is such a scary time, when your novel is tender and green and you feel if it is not tended it must just dry up and blow away. Another. Don’t want to be that famous anymore, so we’ve cured each other, you and me, maybe.

When I was a child aspiring to be a writer, I never dreamed about growing up and knowing other writers; I wasn’t that audacious. I thought about how putting words together made me feel. I thought about riding a train and seeing my book on a stranger’s lap. I thought about the view I’d have from my writing window, and the places I’d go to find story, and the books I’d have stacked around me like old friends. What I knew about writers I’d know from their books; that was the assumption I’d made. Writers wouldn’t have the time, just as I wouldn’t have the time, to talk about books and their making.

But now I am on the other side of books, and what has begun to matter most to me is those who make the writing right. I celebrate the wisdom of writers and what they know. I celebrate the life I live, in writerly company. I celebrate the notes that I wake up to, the attention, the succor, the decency, the humor, the honorable and companionable quality of the endless conversation. It isn’t finally about writing. It is finally about living. It is about reaching out and listening, imagining another.

Read more...

A Freshman Comes Home (for the day)

Sunday, September 28, 2008

The federal bail out deal appears to be crafted, the candidates brought themselves to the debate, it rained where I live and the rivers flow more freely, and my boy was home for a blessed Saturday. The house was suddenly messy again, there was a sprawl of books (on logic, on media culture, on social justice) on the downstairs desk, and there were stories—everywhere I turned, there were.

I did nothing but sit here and take it in.

A child grows up and goes to college, and he crafts his own life. He returns and there is the rush of the familiar, but not just that: There is the interweave of what he's lived that you never will, the what he's learning that is his alone, the hours he keeps because he can.

The sun rising and falling. The promise steeped within the blaze.

Read more...

Samba-ing

Saturday, September 27, 2008

This isn't really me, but it is a photograph of happy dancing feet, which I found myself in possession of last evening. I'd been practicing the samba with the champion Belarusian, Jean Paulovich, and last night, among friends, we performed it. Though perhaps "perform" is too strong a word, perhaps "perform" suggests glitter and glued-on lashes and fish-netted thighs, and that will never (to Jean's professional despair) be me.

What is me is only this: The music goes on, and my bones take it in. My heart beats higher in its cage. Someone waits for me to get it right, and occasionally (but never wholly) I do. Frankly, I missed a few steps last night. But I never lost the music.

It's a privilege, dancing with Mr. Paulovich. It's a happy thing, to be forgiven for less than perfect bota fogas, voltas, whisks. It's good, after a stretch of worry, to come back home, to dance.

Read more...

Nothing but Ghosts: The Cover Reveal

Friday, September 26, 2008

There we were, visiting our son at college (he looks so good, he is so wise, my heart just flips when he's near). And there were Jill Santopolo and Carla Weise at HarperCollins, working toward a difficult cover deadline for Nothing but Ghosts. I was walking through a hotel lobby. I got a message from Jill. A few bumbling technical difficulties (on my end) and, suddenly, there sat the cover, on my husband's phone.

I fell in love.

You want to embrace those who have read your story and who have translated it into art. This blog is my embrace of Jill and Carla, for seeing this jacket through.

Nothing but Ghosts began life as a relentless finch and in the aftermath of my mother's passing. It went through countless iterations. It has emerged, it is emerging, as a book of which (forgive me) I am proud. A book that I hope says something.

Read more...

Pushing to Publish

Thursday, September 25, 2008

A posting here to share with you this URL, which will connect any of you who are Philly centric to the Push to Publish program, sponsored by Philadelphia Stories. Some of you might already know about this dedicated and graceful organization—writers and editors who care about opening the world of writing to others, and who publish a gorgeous magazine. Last year's event was, I've heard, a terrific success.

I'll be keynoting that day, but the whole day looks rich and worthwhile.

http://www.philadelphiastories.org/marketing/pushtopublish.php

Read more...

No Road Alone

I mean for there to be no melodrama, and so I begin this post like this: I am practically fine. But for the past two weeks, I've been taking the sorts of tests one takes to prove or disprove fine.

I'm not dwelling on that. I'm dwelling on this: The world is gooded through. Yes, I'm watching the news. I'm worrying out loud. I grow impatient for solutions, too. I bump up across all varieties of raw, of wrong, of unjust, of incalcuable; I feel myself sink into trenches of despair. But I am rocked and rescued by the good that nonetheless prevails. By people who do their jobs well, and do them humanely (barium, they say, is like an extended pina colada; try to remember your first kiss, they say, when your anxiety seems to stop your blood from flowing). By friends who send funny and loving emails. By bloggers who couldn't even begin to know how valued they are. By a son sending all hieroglyphic form of the famed 160-character text message.

Not to mention a husband who stopped one day beneath the dogwood tree outside my office and noticed that the finch had supped on every last skinny black seed. He reached up and took the feeder down. He filled it with new seed. He stretched and slid the feeder back into place, like he was ornamenting a Christmas tree. He went on his way, then, my husband did. And the birds returned in force.

Read more...

Finch on the First Day of Fall

Wednesday, September 24, 2008


The birds have returned, and yesterday they came in force, keeping me company while I waited for news. I have recorded their story here, their golded breasts and evaporative wings.

Read more...

Books as Vessels, Memoir and Non

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

It seems like decades since I wrote memoir, though one might argue (and indeed some have) that blogging is memoiring, too. I tussled with the genre, ultimately let it go, moved onto poetry, history, fable, and also the YA novels that I have been writing for HarperCollins.

What I have never relinquished, however, is my belief that memoir's highest purpose is to put into place, for all of time, the people, geographies, and ideas that have earned a permanent vessel. In Still Love in Strange Places, my third book, I wrote about my husband's birthplace, El Salvador—the wars, the coffee farm, the people of Santa Tecla, my marriage. I wrote and researched and photographed for more than ten years, and in the final weeks of my work on that manuscript, a terrible earthquake shook Santa Tecla to the ground. Still Love had become the vessel for that which was no more.

In my novels, I look for ways to keep the true alive as well. To celebrate an English teacher who mattered (Undercover). To honor a young man named Nick, whom I have watched grow up over these past 13 years (House of Dance). In a book coming out next June (Nothing but Ghosts), each important person bears the name of someone important to me—my nieces and nephews, for example, my editor, Jill Santopolo (whose doppelganger is actually a young, smart, patient, curly-headed blond named Danny Santopolo). In The Heart is Not a Size (which I've been editing of late), there is a young man named Drake, who is fashioned after K., the rising poet with the enormous heart whom I sometimes write of in this blog.

Our first responsibility is to readers, of course. But I have discovered that I write truest when I am writing from the truest corner of my heart.

Read more...

Above the Stump

I was so touched by the comments I received about the tree bear (below) that I went back and retrieved this great, wild bird, which was sitting above a stump nearby, in that same park in Vancouver, beneath that same lovely sky.

Miss Em said the stump might be a character in a woodlands fairytale. I wonder if this bird (so black it reads as blue) might be a character, too? I wonder if the bird might teach the stump to fly, or if the stump might persuade the bird of rootedness?

Read more...

Poetry Transcends Description

Monday, September 22, 2008

This is just a tree stump sheened with moss, but when I saw it (in a Vancouver park) I thought bear. The deep, but narrow eyes. The truncated nose. The mountainly stretches of cheek.

Still and only a tree bear unless I can animate him in a poem.

Read more...

Hope's Bookshelf

Sunday, September 21, 2008

And finally:

I am lucky again at the close of this weekend. Very.

A talented young reader and reviewer (and youtuber) has posted a generous review of House of Dance. She goes by many names. I include the link to Hope's fine bookshelf, hoping you'll take the journey to her site, and see what else she does.

http://princess2293.blogspot.com/2008/09/house-of-dance-beth-kephart.html

Gracias.

Read more...

Remaking History

In a posting earlier this week I spoke of the gifts that the books we write can yield—gifts that fall far outside wealth or fame, and reverberate far more sweetly. I was making reference to Flow, among other things, a book which tells a river's story through her own words and which managed to fall both to the left and right of any mainstream publication category. And where were you thinking bookstores would actually shelf this book? other publishers asked. Temple University Press opted to give the book a life, regardless.

Writing Flow, and giving countless talks based on it, led me to places I'd have never traveled otherwise. Last week, it led me to the Cassatt House in Philadelphia, where I was privileged to sit with historians, authors, and the inimitable Sam Katz, a former mayoral candidate and impassioned Philadelphia citizen, who has dared to suggest and inspire a film about the making and remaking of my city for a planned 25-part series. I was (as I usually am) the least qualified person in the room, but I was there nonetheless, thinking out loud, voicing opinions about framing questions and narrative flow, the threads that might bind such a film together. It was an interesting process. It is leading to interesting places. And I wouldn't have been there without a book that the mainstream publishing world thought little of.

Here's to Temple University Press, then. Here's to Mr. Katz. And thanks to Philip Katz, who happened to snap this picture.

Read more...

Not Being Done For

I scared up my courage this morning and went at my novel-in-progress again, dared myself to read the sentences out loud, which is not the same as reading them through in one's head.

A small discovery, which I seem to make (somehow anew?) at this stage with every project: Sentences are units of speed. They race, they drip, they dawdle, they stall, and if you take your eye off the inherent momentum of any sentence that you write, you mess with the story you are telling. You throw the passage off, you throw the chapter off, you throw the book off. You're done for. You know it.

I don't want to be done for. I'm still working.

Read more...

Something Almost Unlooked For, Something Given

Saturday, September 20, 2008

I spent the day being frustrated with myself—despite the gorgeous weather, despite the gift of time, I wasn't hitting the right rhythms with my new book. I was stumbling over sentences, fixing them, destroying pages. Taking out chapters, starting again. I kept watching the birds and the skies, taking deep breaths. Finally I came back inside.

And then I did something I vowed never again to do. I typed my own name into Google.

Was it procrastination or some heavenly hinting? I'll never know. But what I found when I did that was this most incredible gift—a Boston Globe story about House of Dance and Undercover. Written by the impeccable writer Liz Rosenberg, for whom I have such respect. I learned something from this review—was reminded of what I must do going forward, of what I must try to avoid, if I can. I'm grateful beyond measure for the time Ms. Rosenberg took to think out loud about the stories that I write. For rescuing me from this day of thwarted story.

http://www.boston.com/ae/books/articles/2008/09/07/lessons_for_teens_and_an_anxious_cat/

Read more...

Live Each Day

The weather continues to hold here—the bluest skies, the thin white streaking clouds—and today I'll sit out on the deck with a pile of magazines, newspapers, my own fourth-novel manuscript, which has reached that stage of not-quite-yet-complete; I want to cast one final spell of imagination over it; I want to remove the excess; I want to balance off the rhythms, find greater harmonies. I'll take my phone out there and hope for text messages from my son, whose wit has revealed itself newly in the 160-character range.

Days such as these are gifts, and I don't take one of them for granted.

I'll walk afterward, camera in hand. I'll begin the search for new ideas. A thread that might take my dreams somewhere.

Read more...

The End of Publishing?

Friday, September 19, 2008

The story is called "The End," its author is Boris Kachka, and there it sits—a mega feature in New York magazine, heralding the news (the news?) that "the book business as we know it will not be living happily ever after."

http://nymag.com/news/media/50279/

"... pretty much every aspect of the business seems to be in turmoil," Kachka writes. "There’s the floundering of the few remaining semi-independent midsize publishers; the ouster of two powerful CEOs—one who inspired editors and one who at least let them be; the desperate race to evolve into e-book producers; the dire state of Borders, the only real competitor to Barnes & Noble; the feeling that outrageous money is being wasted on mediocre books; and Amazon .com, which many publishers look upon as a power-hungry monster bent on cornering the whole business."

Across an-already vastly partitioned landscape, more fences are being thrown up, the skies are growing darker, and we writers, we readers, we lovers of ideas are—well, what? What are we supposed to be doing? What sort of future waits for us?

Does a future wait for us?

Call me crazy (others have), but I'm still going to bet on a future enriched by books. I'm going to remember that I never was one of those writers who earned a mega advance, or even a big advance, or even, well, you get the point. Indeed, one of my books earned no advance at all (the new "model" of publishing that New York magazine makes reference to); but, heck, that advance-free book went onto sell in several foreign countries, went on to get some bloggers talking, went on to sell out most of its print run. Another book netted me something like $800 after all was said and done—$800 and so many new friends, so many exquisite new opportunities, so many chances to get involved in the life of a city I love, not to mention, the chance to write a book in precisely the way I wanted to write that book, quirky point of view and all.

Writing books gives me an excuse to dwell—with ideas, with language, with research, with people who know more than I do, in places I wish to celebrate. And yes, I'm sad that Barnes & Noble has so much control over my future (literary YA not being high on its buy list at the moment, sad to say). Yes, I wish Amazon wouldn't leverage its power the way that it does, wouldn't insinuate itself so thoroughly into the making-books side of things. Yes, I wish that it were easier, at times, to spread the word about books.

But I'm not giving up on books quite yet. I'm not giving up on writing them, and I'm not giving up on talking about them, or rooting for them. I'm looking up to people like Melissa Walker, who takes three fine books into her own hands, surveys the virtual world, MySpaces and Blogs and Vlogs and FlipBooks and GoodReads and Throws Competitions and Goes ReaderGirlz and gets a lot of people talking about important things in an utterly charming fashion.

The old rules might not apply in publishing anymore. We're going to need some new hiking boots for the trek ahead. But I hope you'll take the journey with me. I hope that we won't ever stand on a hill (or in a valley) and see The End.

Read more...

Forging a Truce with Beauty

Thursday, September 18, 2008


I've posted this video log on the HarperTeen MySpace page today and (because these take me an embarrassingly long time to produce), I post it here as well. The headlines have been difficult lately. Losses are mounting. In this posting I'm talking about why books that matter matter especially so in times like these and how (despite the fact I've yet to write a book that meets my own high expectations) I keep going about the quiet business of forging a truce with beauty.

PJ, the finch have come to the feeder outside my window!

(there's glory in that)

Read more...

My Double Life and the Good Beyond

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Though I write mostly about literature and life on this blog, I am off much of the day running a boutique marketing communications firm. Sometimes this means that I'm strategizing with executives about corporate culture and intra-office dialogue. Sometimes it means I'm writing corporate magazines, annual reports, histories. Often I'm collaborating with my husband-partner, he being the designer, the artist, the one who knows the magic tricks that convert digital files into type-glossed, image-varnished paper.

My job requires acting, but it also requires listening, and lately, on behalf of St. Christopher's Foundation for Children, a truly wonderful organization, I've been listening to the leaders of North Philadelphia initiatives such as SquashSmarts and Centro Nuevo Creacion talk about the work they are doing, child by child, to make my city a stronger one, and to make the world a better place. I've learned about teens from difficult neighborhoods who have so dedicated themselves to learning and to athletics that they've gone on to such prestigious schools as Haverford College. I've learned about young North Philadelphia kids who have picked up a camera and become true artists—documenting their world, finding the color between the cracks.

http://www.scfchildren.org/

http://www.centronueva.org/

http://www.squashsmarts.org/

I write about this today on my blog, for sometimes we all need a reminder that, in the midst of a mud-slinging campaign and uncontrollable weather, in the midst of terrible losses, there are those out there who go to work each day with the ambition, the intention, of making something right. Of letting bright red seeds fall where they may.

Read more...

Alive with Process

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

I hung a bird feeder outside my window, and I wait. For winged company and song. For the feathers left behind.

I'm at work on The Heart is Not a Size, my fourth YA novel, writing in some final scenes. It is a melancholy business, finishing a book begun a few years back, knowing that soon the characters will be frozen into place, not knowing if I'll ever write such a book again. I never feel as if a finished book is truly mine. Books are mine when I am living them, when there's still room, and time, to discover who these characters meant to be all along. Who they are to me. Why I needed them in the first place.

Process is alive to me. It's what the writing me lives for.

Read more...

Dark Skies

Monday, September 15, 2008

The loss of writer David Foster Wallace to an apparent suicide this weekend darkened skies already darkened by Ike, by skurvy politics, by homes and home lives forfeited to an economy that can't got a hold of itself. Wind, rain, floods, and a man too certain that no more choices existed, that tomorrow wasn't something to be waited for or looked toward. He was a writer, a teacher, a husband, a son. He was loved.

I am reeling for him and for those who loved him, just as I am reeling for the boy at a beautiful college who took his own life last week. I am holding my breath for the freshmen and freshwomen everywhere who are finding their way inside new walls, feeling their way toward light.

Sometimes I think words are the most fragile things there are.

Sometimes they are my grounding, my earth.

Today I do not rise above or even rise to anything but this: Hope for tomorrow. Hope for healing. Hope for a coming easiness.

Read more...

Nothing but Ghosts, Chanticleer Garden, and Reflections on Place

Sunday, September 14, 2008


I'm thinking out loud about place today on this vlog. I'm also sharing some recent photos of that most-exquisite Chanticleer garden, where my fifth memoir was rooted, and where many scenes from Nothing but Ghosts, due out next June, take place. Nothing but Ghosts is fiction; Chanticleer is, on those pages, correspondingly transformed. What matters is the first impulse—the shadows and bird song and watercress creek that fired my imagination, the details that only geography and terrain can yield.

Read more...

Least Attractive

Friday, September 12, 2008

The headline reads "Philly Ranks Last in Attractiveness for Second Year in a Row." Survey results, you know. People's opinions.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26657145

Can I ask you a question? What is the point of such a survey? What, in the end, does it mean?

Read more...

Introducing Professor Jane Satterfield of Loyola University

I'd never taken a writing course during my undergraduate days at Penn, and when I wrote I was forever writing alone, reading alone, gauging all the gaps alone. It wasn't until I was in my thirties, then, that I inserted myself into the writing world, taking "family vacations" at workshops in Spoleto, in Prague, and finally at Bread Loaf in Vermont. (My husband being a good sport to go along, my toddler son not having much say in the matter.)

It was at Bread Loaf that I met the poet and memoirist Jane Satterfield. She was ethereal and talented, but also groundedly kind. She was working through transitions, speaking of England, where she'd been born, musing over photographs. The conference was soon over, but we remained friends, and I have watched her come into her own ever since, publishing poetry collections (
Shepherdess with an Automatic, Assignation at Vanishing Point), winning poetry grants (including a National Endowment for the Arts award), gaining recognition for her nonfiction as well. Raising a daughter through it all, marrying fellow poet Ned Balbo, and teaching at Loyola, where one day not so long ago she invited me in for a day of teaching as well, and where I saw first hand just how carefully and lovingly she prepares for every day.

It's one thing to be a student of writing. It's another to try to light the way. Today I post excerpts from a recent conversation that I had with Jane—the first of what will be two Jane postings—to help remind us all (as this school year begins) just what teaching writers do, how much of themselves they give.


How did Loyola find you, and when? What made that university and your interests a fit?

That’s an interesting question, Beth, because my story’s a little unusual. After I finished my M.F.A at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop I was doing some composition teaching at a local community college when Phil McCaffrey, the English and Writing Chair at Loyola, called to see if I could cover two classes at the last minute. There were other young writers like me teaching in the program and there was a great deal of literary energy and a sense of community: we had—and still have—a vital reading series, for instance, and many of us shared work-in-progress that would later appear in our first books. Loyola’s commitment to the liberal arts is strong and I felt very comfortable teaching at an institution where interdisciplinary study is encouraged.

Your students are some of the luckiest souls around. Talk a little bit about the classes you teach, the students you meet, and the one or two lessons you hope your students will remember.

Thanks, Beth, that’s so generous. I enjoy seeing my students discover new ways of thinking and writing. There’s so much growth that happens for students over the course of a single semester and I’ve been lucky in recent years to have “repeaters” so I can really watch young writers develop into formidable stylists. I teach workshop courses in the essay and in poetry and all my classes are very interactive—lots of group work and presentations along with daily writing and discussion centering on what we can learn, as writers, from each work we read.

I’ve met so many wonderful students over the years. There’s always some excitement in the classroom—moments of thoughtful discussion or good workshop sessions where students’ generous response to each others’ work sparks real growth. I remember one group of first-students who were especially kind and honest. “Tom, we love you,” one student said to another, “and this is why I can say this: verbosity is pomposity. Tell it to us true.” I held my breath. Wondered what would happen next. “You’re right,” Tom said, “point well taken.” And the class burst into laughter.

Is there a book or a poem that you always teach, always reference in some way?

If I’m relentless on one thing, it’s reading. Sometimes I maybe assign (is it truly possible?) too much. Jamaica Kincaid’s essays “Columbus in Chains,” “On Seeing England for the First Time,” “Girl” and “Biography of a Dress” are standards for me. They’re so visually sharp and deal with uncomfortable truths. Although many of my students aren’t likely to have experienced the tragedies of colonialism and oppression first-hand, Kincaid reveals just how deeply our language and education shape us.

One of my favorite books to teach is Michael Ondaatje’s Running in the Family. It’s simply gorgeous prose, a narrative mosaic that’s fugue-like and dense but also poignant and funny. The historical backdrop is powerfully woven throughout the book; his portraits are sharply honest and empathetic. What’s not to love? Plus his acknowledgements are long and detailed—his material comes out of book research, interviews, and travel and he makes it clear that writing’s a collaborative act born out of connection to a community. I like students to learn those lessons.

How does one begin a conversation about books? How much can you really frame up in advance? How much of teaching requires being able to think and assimilate right there, in that room?

How right you are! There’s a certain degree of preparation: you decide you’re going to highlight voice or use of controlling metaphor or character or whatever; maybe you give discussion questions ahead of time or at the start of class. But sometimes the class swings to something else entirely, issues that concern your young writers at that very moment in that very room. For instance, "What makes Don DeLillo think he can or should write about 9/11 in a novel?" That came up in a class of seniors recently. The teacher’s choice is: we can stop and think about that or we can move on. I like to stop and linger when questions come up spontaneously. Even if that question sounded slightly critical and was voiced a little sarcastically, I like to think the student was really asking something quite different: how do we—and should we—decide what’s a “fit” topic for literature?

Learning’s not always linear. The same senior class reacted very negatively to an innovative book of poems. I was so disappointed. I had to find a way to turn discussion around without sounding like a scolding parent. But when the students attended the writer’s reading, they gained additional insights and became rather fond of the book. Reading’s an intellectual act but it’s also very emotional. Guiding discussion is a tough balance.

(to be continued)

Read more...

Thursday, September 11, 2008

In yesterday's mail: Galleys for my dear friend Jayne Anne Phillips' much-anticipated new novel, Lark & Termite. Proof pages for my own Nothing but Ghosts.

On yesterday's phone: utterly endearing text messages from my kid.

In yesterday's sky: an infinity of blue.

Today we honor losses by living forward. By loving out loud. By moving past disappointment, by yielding to the vibrant, by ushering in compassion, by recognizing need.

Read more...

On Style

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

I am thinking today about style—about what makes a book brilliant, a story stand apart.

I am thinking about The Book Thief and The Road Home and Out Stealing Horses—three books that could not be more different from each other and yet all earn "brilliant" as the first accolade, all are manifestly genius. I am thinking about a conversation I had late last night with a young writer who is so talented, so emergent, so on the precipice. Who asks, Is writing worth it?

I decide this today:

Style is tenacity, authority, authenticity. An idea shaped and held to by words. Style is a writer writing toward the true, shafting the superfluous, wading in deep to places others won't go. Style is not blinking until the work is done.

Style is surviving the journey.

Read more...

Introducing Liviana (In Bed With Books)

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

This isn't actually my door (or my overpainted doorknob), but that silver shine against that sun-hued frame does remind me of a friend I've made over the past several weeks, a young blogger who has been self-christened Liviana. She caught my eye from the get go, for her unexpected reviews—no mere story summaries, no mincing of words, no pretending to like something that frankly doesn't suit. Who, I wondered, is Liviana, and why does she talk about tomatoes in her banner?

http://www.inbedwithbooks.blogspot.com/

One question led to a conversation, led to condolences about hair (we have similarly strong-minded hair, as it turns out), led to help on the days leading to my son's departure for college (don't forget the shelf liners, she warned, and I didn't), led to more questions. Finally it was time to turn the tables and to interview her— to find out how this nineteen year old with enough college credits to be a junior gets her work done, her blog updated, and her future (as a possible editor) in order.

You are an entirely charming, probably precocious reader and writer. When did you decide you wanted to have a blog-public presence, all in the name of books?

Thank you! I owe most of my decision to my ninth grade librarian, who is the sort of lady all readers aspire to be. She introduced me to the world of galleys and ARCs, seeking my opinion about various novels. My sophomore year, some older students started a book club at the high school. Between our sponsor (an incredible English teacher, also the sort of lady readers aspire to be) and her, we were kept in books and went to the ALA Conference in San Antonio. I've been involved with various publishers before I started a blog, as well as reading other blogs, but eventually I just decided to start my own. (Plans are for other people.) It felt like the natural thing to do.

What was the first book you reviewed on your blog, and why, and when? What was your first early favorite blog comment?

I reviewed Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J. K. Rowling on March 20th of this year. I read through my personal blog and it was the first book on which I wrote a mini-review, so I decided that made it the perfect choice.

I really loved receiving this comment, "Many thanks for the reviews. You remind me that I should put a sex warning on Cerbo en Vitra ujo," from Mary Robinette Kowal, because dude. The author READ my blog. My tiny, just started blog.

You share your blogging powers with a friend. What is it like to share such responsibilities?

It might be different for some bloggers, who only meet online before working together. I've known Deimyts for years, and if he doesn't write a review soon I'll go to his house and steal his kimono made out of a living room. But basically, he knew about my blog and thought it sounded kind of fun, so I told him he could just write on mine instead of opening his own. I gave him some books I thought he might like (which I would've done anyway, since we share books pretty freely) and told him I'd like at least a review a month. Currently he's working on a picture to represent the both of us, which I know will be awesome because he's a fabulous artist and only getting better due to his classes.

What are you studying, as a college sophomore? How does blogging affect the way you think about what you are learning, and what you might do?

Due to testing hours, I'm technically a junior. (So, yay for upper division courses!) I am primarily studying English, but my program allows great flexibility in curriculum. My schedule this semester includes a philosophy section about the nature of knowledge, an intro linguistics course, Chinese history, medieval literature with an emphasis on how Europe viewed its "others," and a biological course focused on AIDS. It may sound disparate, but the courses complement each other almost too well.

I don't know if blogging affects the way I'm learning, but what I'm learning certainly affects the way I read and blog. I always enjoy reading fiction about subjects I'm interested in reality, but the more I learn about the subject the more I'm likely to get annoyed by the author making an honest, factual mistake about some obscure bit of knowledge.

Basically, there are some analytical parts of my mind I can no longer shut off while reading. Not a bad thing, not a good thing, just is. As I write my reviews based on what I remember most about the book, how I perceive a book is very important. As for how it affects what I might do - I've already got the basic idea of what I would like to do, but I am keeping my mind open in case something stirs my passion.

How do you make time for blogging?

I'm decent at budgeting time, and I'm only planning one post a week. One post takes about 30 minutes to an hour, so it's not too much of a strain. The trouble is keeping on top of my TBR pile. I'm assigned 40-70 pages each class in all my classes, so some days I just don't feel like reading more. (On the other hand, I watch more movies. Free videos in the Union Wednesday and Thursday, free video showing in the dorm library, plus free rentals from the A/V library. Perfect for procrastination.)

Do you have aspirations of writing your own book?

Depends on which day you ask me that question. My real goal is to become an editor, but I don't think writing a book and being an editor are mutually exclusive. I write several short stories each year (most of which aren't fit to see the light of day, in my opinion), but most of my writing goes into an epic fantasy series.

Read more...

The Road Home

I have turned my attention to Rose Tremain's The Road Home, a book that kept me reading much of the night, on the long, black couch where I am parked many a night. It's her precision that is so thrilling, not a single superfluous word and yet no scene that feels thin or meagerly adjoined to another.

Indeed, The Road Home is a seamless book, at least so far. Which makes it feel like a faultless book. Not flawless, perhaps there's that too. But faultless in that each of the characters is living what seems like a true life, nothing fancied up or muddied up for the sake of plot spark, plot sparkle. Authenticity is the sparkle here. That and these incredible scenes of, say, fishing at night in a lake whose dirtied waters have blued the fish, turned them neon colors.

The Road Home is a widower's story—a journey made from Eastern Europe to London. It is rocking this reader hard.

Read more...

The Line of Truth

Monday, September 8, 2008

In John Updike's predictably wonderful piece on the master William Maxwell in The New Yorker, the following line stands out—a line Maxwell wrote about the poet Louise Bogan:

In whatever she wrote, the line of truth was exactly superimposed on the line of feeling.

Read more...

Betty Boop, Jill Santopolo, Phoenixville, and the (famous) Melissa Walker Blog

Yesterday, post storm, the air shimmered, and Bill and I set off for Phoenixville, a former steel mecca that fell on hard times and has lately begun the long process of dusting itself off—fitting out old thick-walled buildings and cute Victorian structures with book stores and urban barber shops and trendy restaurants. It's the same town that Alice Sebold chose to skewer (along with human nature in general) in Almost Moon (she chose to see its ugliness; many of us prefer the sunny side).

The point is, Bill and I walked along in the shimmer and stopped at the windows and then we came to Betty Boop, who goes back with me a long, long time. My dancing maternal grandmother called me this (she also called me Rosie, hence the protagonist's name in House of Dance) and whenever I see Betty, I think of her. I have Betty Boop Christmas ornaments and Betty Boop cards and a little Betty Boop light-up, laser-into-glass replica, sent to me by my dear friend, Andree (you might have met Andree in my second book, Into the Tangle of Friendship).

Seeing Betty made me happy yesterday. Being in the shimmer always does. And when I woke this morning, I was in that happy mood all over again.

Which just got even happier, because the amazingly talented, perpetually generous Melissa Walker just posted the cover story that I wrote for her blog. This story talks about the genesis of the Undercover cover (what it might have been, where it might have gone), and a little bit about the genesis of Undercover itself.

http://www.melissacwalker.com/blog/2008/09/cover_stories_undercover_by_be.html

The story also mentions Laura Geringer, the editor who invited me to start writing young adult books in the first place and set me off in this new and unfathomably fulfilling direction. Sadly, Laura left Harper just three days after I finished the all-day, all-night-for-days-and-weeks marathon that yielded the second draft of my fourth YA novel, The Heart is not a Size. I have, as you can imagine, been living in literary limbo ever since.

(Note to self: Best not to combine your only child's flight to college with the loss of your editor with the loss of two major client projects (due to internal client issues) all in the same week; it can do damage. It can set you off doing all kinds of odd things like, say, vlogging.)

Late last week I learned that I do have a future at Harper with Heart. Jill Santopolo, also mentioned in the story on Melissa's blog, is taking me forward under the Harper imprint Balzer & Bray. She's whip-smart, reliable, funny, and promises me a night out on the town, if only I'd drink mojitos.

Who knows. If anything else happens here, I might just have to drink mojitos.

(For the record, you can meet Jill in my third novel, Nothing but Ghosts. Or you can meet the character she inspired — a good-looking, curly-headed blond guy named Danny Santopolo.)

For now, I'm raising my literary glass to Miss Melissa Walker, who has promised me an interview for my blog soon. Can't wait for that!

And I'm raising my glass to Jill. Yes. Absolutely. We are kicking butt with Heart.

Read more...

The Sign Says It

Sunday, September 7, 2008

With my only child now at college, and with so much now undefined and thus unscripted, I find that several extra hours seem to creep into every day. The mornings aren't punctuated by that mad school rush. I don't spend the afternoons plopped across a couch, listening to my son's artful stories. I don't sneak out while the dinner is cooking to replenish the just zested-through snacks.

In fact, during the last three weeks, I've hardly bought any snacks.

I've never had time—never enough time. And now, all of a sudden, here time is.

So that I am reading more, and therefore knowing more. I am stopping on stories I might not have seen just a few weeks ago, and today I stopped, while reading the New York Times, to read Alex Williams' moving story about the young mother and blogger who literally fell from the sky in an airplane accident and today lies in a hospital ICU, burned over most of her body, mummied over with bandages, and fighting for her life. Her husband was with her in the plane, and he, badly injured, lies near. Their four young children wait at home.

The story was a tribute of sorts to this young woman, Stephanie Nielson. But it was a tribute, most of all, to the community of bloggers, the majority of whom had never met this woman, who have come together to raise money by many means and to set free balloons full of well wishes from places as distant as Australia and Guam. These are people who read Stephanie's blog. Who came to know her in that way. And to care.

If you are ever asked, as I have been asked, whether the communities we create about ourselves with our machines matter, if such communities are real, I am thinking today that Stephanie Nielson's story answers that question. For real.

http://nieniedialogues.blogspot.com/

Read more...

Breaking our Hearts with Words


The rain did come—much of the afternoon, most of the night—and now it has lifted, unveiling a day saturated with wet light.

In the meantime, I finished The Book Thief. I finished, and suddenly I understood why this author, Markus Zusak, moves me just as much as Michael Ondaatje always (even in his imperfections) does. Something I set out to explain in this video, albeit briefly and albeit imperfectly, against the backdrop of yesterday's weather.

Read more...

Headed our Way

Saturday, September 6, 2008

There's a storm coming in—September's first, where I live. The skies are heavy, the trees still, the newspapers on the gray driveways hunkered down and bruised with anticipation.

I reconcile what I know is coming with all that actually (at this moment) is. This is a writer's work: smudging the present, hurrying the clock, running between the poles of knowing and not.

Read more...

FLOW: The River's Story

Friday, September 5, 2008


I wrote a book about a river — told her story in her own words—and today I'm reading from a page called "Ooze." Many of the images here are here because of the generosity of my dear friend Adam Levine, who yields his knowledge about the river to the many of us who ask.

Read more...

Butterfly Wings

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Read more...

The Book Thief Rave and a Shout Out to Alyson Hagy

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Read more...

Walking into Shadows

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Read more...

On Books Just Read

I read the final chapters of The Soloist this weekend. You've heard of it, I'm sure; maybe you'll see the movie version come November. This is the true story of a former Julliard musician who suffers schizophrenia and lives as a homeless man making music in the streets until he is discovered by the LA Times reporter, Steve Lopez. I loved this book on many counts; I read it slowly. But this weekend the book had me thinking again about memoir, a form I am perhaps too familiar with, having written five such books myself.

With memoir you have two choices. The first is to recall something that happened once and to try to make sense of it (and if you were truly living that once, you weren't recording it as it happened; hence you will have lost pieces along the way, you will have to imagine yourself back to some aspect of the truth, you will have to stretch). The second is to record something that is happening right this instant which means, necessarily, that the moment will get manipulated for the sake of the story—that the moment cannot be lived without it being somehow framed by the expectation that it will be lived again on a page. There are no two ways around this, and while I loved Mr. Lopez's book, I also began to wonder just how much of the story had to be precipitated by Mr. Lopez himself, so that the story might rise to a powerful close.

I turned, after The Soloist, to a historical novel which I'll leave unnamed, for I didn't like it nearly as much as I hoped I would, and there's no point in sending out daggers. What I want to mention here is what the story reminded me of, and that is this: History cannot rule in historical novels. It is touchstone, it is mood, it is ambiance, but no novel benefits from textbook-sounding prose, nor from plots that feel dictated to by an author's exuberant research. An author might know a great deal, say, about a certain 19th c. riot. But if that riot doesn't fit into the emotional scheme of things, we readers are going to sense (and mind) the wrong-ness of the fit.

Sunday afternoon I read (like most of the world has already read) Nancy Horan's Loving Frank. Ever since I was a girl wandering around my great uncle's studio (that would be Uncle Lloyd, who designed the Waldorf Astoria, The Pierre, the Boca Ratan, and others), I was determined to marry an architect, and I did. I worked for architects for years, I hang out with architects, I live with one, and therefore I did enjoy learning more about this famous, ill-fated affair that Frank Lloyd Wright conducts with a client's wife. As an author, though, I wondered why the story didn't feel quite as rich as I imagined it might, and then I realized this: In Loving Frank, dialogue carries the plot and discloses most of the facts. In dialogue, there's far less room to reach with language, to let it soar.

By last night, I was able to turn the lamp on over Melissa Walker's Violet in Private. Melissa herself is such a dear, and Violet is by now a familiar friend. Violet is also in college when this story, the third in a trilogy, begins, taking a class much like the one my son is now taking as she wends her way through the fashion world. Curled up, smiling, I realized that I wasn't reading Melissa's story to critique it; I was reading to enjoy it. Which says, I realize at the end of this long blog, all the right things about Violet.

Onto The Book Thief (and then to SarahBeth Carter).

Read more...

Dancing Classrooms Philly

Monday, September 1, 2008

Last year I had the privilege of bearing witness to the Dancing Classrooms Philly program—of meeting those who teach and those who dance and those who make it possible. Today's two-minute vlog tells the story briefly, with but a handful of the more than 1,000 photographs that I took over the course of several days. Background music is "Caresse Sur L'Ocean," Bruno Coulais. The words are drawn from an essay I wrote to commemorate the program's launch in Philadelphia.

Thanks to Harvey Kimmel, Jane Brooks, Joyce Burd, and Leslie Swinney Kase for launching the program here in Philadelphia. Thanks to Pierre Dulaine and Yvonne Marceau for conceiving the program in the first place. Their story is brilliantly told in the documentary "Mad Hot Ballroom."

Read more...

  © Blogger templates Newspaper II by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP