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Exiles in the Garden by Ward Just

Written by eastern writer on Wednesday, August 26, 2009

The Reluctant Emigrant

Every now and then, with a thrill of connection, you come across a passage in a book that feels as if it had been written with exact foreknowledge of your state of mind: a soothing, specific prescription for unquiet thoughts. During a long-ago solo trip to Rome — a self-­assigned distraction after a difficult breakup — I remember opening George Eliot’s “Silas Marner” while sitting at the window of a high room in a cold albergo (once a nuns’ cloister) as strains of conversation floated up from the courtyard. Describing her protagonist’s new start in a new town, Eliot wrote of the relief that “minds that have been unhinged from their old faith and love” may feel on finding themselves in a “new land, where the beings around them know nothing of their history, and share none of their ideas — where their mother earth shows another lap.” In such a setting, she wrote, “The past becomes dreamy because its symbols have all vanished, and the present too is dreamy because it is linked with no memories.”

For Silas Marner, this “exile” was self-sought. But for Eilis Lacey, the biddable daughter at the center of Colm Toibin’s new novel, “Brooklyn,” her leave-taking from Enniscorthy, in Ireland’s County Wexford, and her resettlement in New York in the fall of 1951 are imposed on her by her energetic, well-meaning older sister, Rose. Young, docile and incurious, unscarred by heartbreak or reversals of fortune, Eilis has no desire or need to quit her widowed mother, her friends, her familiar surroundings. Her “old faith and love” are intact, and she seeks no distance from her memories. But she submits to Rose’s plan for her transplanting, bending to a superior force of will, wishing to do what her mother and sister expect of her, wishing to please. “Eilis had always presumed that she would live in the town all her life, as her mother had done, knowing everyone, having the same friends and neighbors, the same routines in the same streets,” Toibin writes. “She had expected that she would find a job in the town, and then marry someone and give up the job and have children. Now, she felt that she was being singled out for something for which she was not in any way prepared.”

Confused by her family’s “almost unnaturally happy” mood in the days before her departure, Eilis is relieved to hear her mother, in response to a friend’s casual inquiry, blurt, “Oh, it’ll kill me when she goes.” But go she must, Eilis assumes, even though she “would have given anything to be able to say plainly that she did not want to go, that Rose could go instead.” But the Lacey women cannot speak plainly to one another. “They could do everything,” Toibin writes, “except say out loud what it was they were thinking.” And so, too young to understand the consequences of her reticence, too obedient to bolt at the dock, too humble to imagine that her own life is her own business, Eilis boards the liner for America, an irrevocable step that her mother, her sister and Eilis herself might never have wished her to make had they thought it through. America is peopled, for the most part, by the descendants of immigrants who had the resolve, the daring and the detachment to leave behind the places and people they had formerly known. But Eilis isn’t such a person; detachment isn’t part of her makeup. It has been thrust on her by women who are as attached to home and family as she is. What were they thinking? They wouldn’t, or couldn’t, say.

Colm Toibin, born, like Eilis, in Enniscorthy, is an expert, patient fisherman of submerged emotions. His characters and plots vary widely. In his beautiful, painful novel “The Blackwater Lightship,” he coaxed a touchy, lone-wolf woman to ­stiffly re-embrace her mother, their reconciliation precipitated by her brother’s battle with AIDS. In his best-known novel, “The Master,” he animated the inner world of Henry James. And in his story collection, “Mothers and Sons,” he tapped the hidden bonds and vexed motivations of diffident men and women — from thieves, shop owners and farmers to a grandmother who plays favorites and gay men who rally to the side of a friend whose mother has died. In one of these stories, “Famous Blue Raincoat,” a woman listens to a song, recorded by her long-dead sister, taken from an album her son has found in the garage. The song “gave her a hint, in case she needed one, of her own reduced self, like one of her negatives upstairs, all outline and shadow, and gave her a clear vision of her sister’s face.” She did not want that clarity, Toibin adds. “She hoped she would never have to listen to it again.”

In another story, “A Priest in the Family,” an aged mother accepts the fact that her son, a priest, will go on trial for molesting teenage boys. “When people stopped to talk to her, she was unsure if they knew about her son’s disgrace, or if they too had become so skilled at the plain language of small talk that they could conceal every thought from her, every sign, as she could from them.” Yet when her son urges her to leave town during the trial, to “spare” her, she refuses. “When he lifted his head and took her in with a glance,” she observes, “he had the face of a small boy.” She tells him: “Whatever we can do, we will do, and none of us will be going away. I’ll be here.”

Through all these books and stories, intimations of attachment, abandonment and strong feeling (felt but rarely spoken) fall like a plumb line. Toibin’s new novel stands apart because its protagonist has such an uncritical nature that she doesn’t see she has grounds for complaint, much less possess any impulse to initiate confrontation. But slowly, equably, and without malice, Eilis exacts a bittersweet revenge for the expatriation she never intended — or, rather, one unfolds for her unsought, organically.

In tracking the experience, at the remove of half a century, of a girl as unsophisticated and simple as Eilis — a girl who permits herself no extremes of temperament, who accords herself no right to self-assertion — Toibin exercises sustained subtlety and touching respect. He shows no condescension for Eilis’s passivity but records her cautious adventures matter-of-factly, as if she were writing them herself in her journal. Accompanying her on the ghastly voyage from Ireland to America, where the sea swell has all the passengers green and reeling, he soon brings her to a Brooklyn boarding house run by a respectable Irishwoman. Eilis numbs herself against nostalgia until letters from home awaken her homesickness. Then she grieves. “She was nobody here,” she thinks. “It was not just that she had no friends and family; it was rather that she was a ghost in this room, in the streets on the way to work, on the shop floor. . . . Nothing here was part of her. It was false, empty.”

Unlike Silas Marner, unlike intentional voyagers everywhere, Eilis hasn’t sought the consolations of anonymity. And so, when she meets a man, an Italian-­American named Tony, she does what her instinct dictates: puts down roots. When her family calls her back to Enniscorthy, Tony seems to her like “part of a dream from which she had woken.” And yet, back in Ireland, Eilis knows that if she were in New York it would be Enniscorthy that seemed like a “strange, hazy dream.” Is it surprising if a seed grows where it lands, once it’s been scattered? Can it be helped? In “Brooklyn,” Colm Toibin quietly, modestly shows how place can assert itself, enfolding the visitor, staking its claim.


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Written by son of rambow on Wednesday, August 26, 2009

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The Actor and the Housewife by Shannon Hale

Written by eastern writer on Sunday, August 09, 2009

List Price: $24.00
Pages: 352
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781596912885
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA

Seven months pregnant and far from home, Becky Jack walks into the office of a Hollywood producer to sell her first screenplay and, much to her shock, meets silver screen heartthrob (and the object of her celebrity affection) Felix Callahan. They spend an awkward and unexpected day together and, though his cursing and drinking contradict her strict Mormon values, Felix and Becky somehow form an unshakable friendship.

Through the next decade, Felix and Becky experience tests of their bond they could never have anticipated. The everyday challenges of raising four unique children and running her household are exacerbated when Becky’s community expresses increasing curiosity and doubt about her handsome, dashing best friend. When her sweet, supportive husband Mike expresses discomfort with Felix’s role in Becky’s life, Becky protects her marriage and ends her friendship. But as the years go by, both Mike and Felix’s gorgeous French wife Celeste realize that the strange love their spouses have for each other is utterly platonic. Felix and Becky see each other through the good times, like co-starring in a romantic comedy written by Becky and even walking the red carpet together, and the bad, when Celeste leaves Felix for another man and then, worst of all, Mike loses his battle with cancer. After Mike’s death, Becky finds herself restarting her life as a widow, and eventually wondering if, after everything, she can find a new way to love Felix, ’til death do they part.

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Written by eastern writer on Sunday, August 09, 2009

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Flinx Transcendent by Alan Dean Foster

Written by eastern writer on Sunday, August 09, 2009

After thirty-five years and more than a dozen Pip & Flinx novels, Alan Dean Foster delivers the final installment in this hugely popular series

From science fiction icon Alan Dean Foster comes the highly anticipated final Pip & Flinx adventure for fans of the green-eyed redhead with awesome mental powers and his miniature flying dragon. In this dazzling novel Foster answers all the questions that his fans have been asking about their favorite hero over the years, while saving the universe in the process.

Flinx Transcendent wraps up the storylines that Alan Dean Foster has been weaving through thirteen Pip & Flinx novels. Twice as long as any previous book in the series, this represents a major milestone in science fiction publishing.

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Quick and Dirty Guide to Reading Poetry

Written by son of rambow on Tuesday, August 04, 2009

3 Simple Rules of the Road of Poetry
by Dr. Rampey

Some of my colleagues might really frown on this, but I've found that poetry is an obstacle for many students because they lack a basic technique for making sense of it. They've heard all about the sound and the rhythm and the imagery and all that good stuff. And yeah, yeah, that's important, but it has to come later. It has to come after you figure out what the darned thing means in the first place. Contrary to what you might think, you already have the skills to do that. Here are three quick tips that might take the mystery out of reading poetry.

Absolute Rule #1:

Do NOT read line by line! I've found that this is the biggest mistake readers can make. Here's an example of the first few lines of Hamlet's famous soliloquy:
To be, or not to be, that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles
And by opposing end them. To die: to sleep.
This is what many students who read poetry line by line are hearing in their heads when they read that:
To be, or not to be, that is the question: Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer. The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Or to take arms against a sea of troubles. And by opposing end them. To die: to sleep.
For sure, that doesn't make any sense at all. So, let's try something different. Let's IGNORE the line breaks. Instead, pay careful attention to the punctuation, and read SENTENCE BY SENTENCE rather than line by line. Then what you hear in your head will sound more like this:
To be, or not to be, that is the question. Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, or to take arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing end them. To die: to sleep.
Doesn't that sound better? Now at least we have a prayer of making sense out of this. Let's go on to the next tip...

Rule #2:

Remember that in poetry you often will encounter words out of their normal word order -- just as you do in some song lyrics. Here are some familiar examples:

ORIGINAL LYRIC IN NORMAL ORDER
My country, 'tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
Of thee I sing.
My country, I sing of thee, of thee, sweet land of liberty.
'Round and 'round the cobbler's bench,
The monkey chased the weasel.
The monkey chased the weasel 'round and 'round the cobbler's bench.
From this valley they say you are going. They say you are going [away] from this valley.
Mind the music and the step,
And with the girls be handy!
Mind the music and the step, and be handy with the girls!
All up and down the whole creation,
Sadly I roam...
I roam sadly all up and down the whole creation...
In Dixie Land I'll take my stand... I'll take my stand in Dixie Land...
A wonderful Savior is Jesus my Lord,
A wonderful Savior to me;
He hideth my soul in the cleft of the rock,
Where rivers of pleasure I see.
Jesus my Lord is a wonderful Savior, a wonderful Savior to me; he hideth my soul in the cleft of the rock where I see rivers of pleasure.
His movements were graceful;
All girls he could please.
His movements were graceful; he could please all girls.


So, you get the idea. Remember that the normal word order you are used to is SUBJECT-VERB-OBJECT (or S-V-O). If a sentence is puzzling you, look for the subject and the verb, and re-phrase the sentence in it's normal order. Let's try it with another line from Hamlet:
This to me
In dreadful secrecy impart they did,
And I with them the third night kept the watch;...

* 1) Take the first clause, up to the word "did."
* 2) Look for the subject. It can only be "they".
* 3) So, what did "they" do? The main verb is "impart", and the auxilliary verb is "did". So, they "did impart".
* 4) What did they impart? "This".
* 5) To whom did they impart this? To "me".
* 6) In what manner did they impart this to me? "In dreadful secrecy".


So, we have...
They did impart this to me in dreadful secrecy,...
Now, let's do the same to the second clause of the sentence. The subject is "I", the verb is "kept", the object is "the watch", and the rest of the sentence falls in place. So, our whole sentence reads:
They did impart this to me in dreadful secrecy, and I kept the watch with them the third night.
This really does get pretty easy after you do it a few times. Just remember that your mind wants to hear S-V-O, so give it what it wants. Now there's just one more thing...

Rule #3:
Don't let single words, or omissions of words, trip you up. You will come across some unusual words or familiar words that are used in unusual ways. When you're reading, don't move on to the next sentence until you know what each word means. Often in literature textbooks, footnotes or marginal notes will help you out. Use them! Other times, you may have to resort to a dictionary. Let's take a few examples from above. Remember Hamlet's
To be, or not to be...
So, what's this "to be" anyway? Think about it for a moment. What could you substitute? If you be, you are -- right? If you are, you "exist" or "live." Now, that gives you a better idea what Hamlet is wondering about.
How about "From this valley they say you are going" which we re-worded to read, "They say you are going [away] from this valley"? We did have to add "away" to make it sound normal to us. So, if something doesn't sound right even after you have put it in S-V-O order, try adding something.
Sometimes, you'll see some just plain unusual words or usages. For example, the first song lyrics in the table above:
My country, 'tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
Of thee I sing.
So, what's the deal with this "'tis" and "thee"? No one talks like that! No, they don't any longer, but they did once, and it's just a fact that you will see some older forms and usages in poetry, so you need to get used to them. The"'tis" (also occurring in the first Hamlet quotation) is simply an old contraction of "it is. So, there we have "it is of thee I sing", or, in more normal order we would omit the "it is" anyway: "I sing of thee". And "thee"? Well, if you've spent much time in church, you know that "thee" is an older form of "you". Still, "I sing of you" just doesn't sound quite right to us. So, again you need to think a little bit and try a substitution. How about "about"? Then we'd have, "I sing about you", and, as we know, that makes perfect sense in the context of the song.
Finally, there may be words you just don't know or words that are used in ways that are not familiar to you. In the second song lyric in the table above, what's a "cobbler" around whose bench the money is chasing the weasel? How about in the second quotation from Hamlet when the speaker says he will keep "the watch"? Um, "watch" -- wrist watch? Probably not. So, these are cases in which you might need a dictionary.

Last Words:

Just remember the three skills you already have:

* 1) You know how to read in sentences.
* 2) You know that your mind wants to hear S-V-O.
* 3) You know to be wary of what still doesn't sound right even after you've done both of the above.

Now, you can go on to learn about sound and rhythm and imagery and all the other devices that make reading poetry such a rich experience!

If you have any question, you can contact Dr Rampey at LRampey@warrior.mgc.peachnet.edu.

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The Devil's Company by David Liss

Written by eastern writer on Saturday, August 01, 2009

By Jody Seaborn
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Sunday, July 12, 2009

"The Devil's Company" is the third novel from San Antonio author David Liss to feature Benjamin Weaver, a former pugilist who now makes his profit as a "thieftaker" — that is, as someone hired to recover stolen goods. Weaver has an admirable though sometimes violent sense of justice, and his vocation has earned him a degree of notoriety from the press — he even has a few star-struck fans in high places. When he takes a job that turns into a blackmail trap, Weaver is forced to join the British East India Company to protect himself and a few relatives and friends from financial ruin and debtor's prison.

Weaver narrates this historical thriller, or literary or intellectual thriller, if you prefer, recalling events that have taken place in 1722 London some 30 years after their occurrence. To stay true to an 18th-century first-person narrative, Liss writes in a style suggestive of the period, wrapping his prose in a great coat with a well-placed periwig on top. It's a risky contrivance, full of potentially phony distractions, but Liss perfectly echoes the tone, language and manners of the 1700s while keeping his characters and action accessible to contemporary readers — though as a fan of 18th-century literature (few eras produced so many enduring works as caustic or inventive) I regret that Liss achieves accessibility partly by avoiding the quirky punctuation — those seemingly randomly placed semicolons, colons and dashes — common to the century's writing.

As with any good thriller, there is plenty of espionage and machinations, conspiracies and counter-conspiracies. Stratagems are invented and prepared, hardly anyone is who they seem to be and few situations are settled until the end. The novel suffers slightly from the hazards of the genre: The occasional convenient coincidence helps the plot along, and there are a couple of twists not worth going back several pages to unknot. But "The Devil's Company" offers more than intrigue: The origins of corporate power and reach — what one character calls "the warping power of greed" — inform the book's action, giving it some relevance to current events.

The British empire was ascendant in the early 1700s, its rise significantly abetted by "mercantile conquest" from the likes of the East India Company. If any business of the period was too big to fail, the East India Company was it. I don't want to make too much of this thin, timely layer beneath the book's surface suspense, but it's there and Liss, to his credit, adds it skillfully and subtly.

Liss clearly is a student of the period he chronicles. There are wispy hints of the coming gin plague — the abuse of the readily available drink reached epidemic proportions by the middle of the 18th century. There are quick references to arcane things like the window tax (the more windows a building had, the higher the taxes a landlord had to pay). To escape the tax, landords simply boarded up windows, contributing to the tightness of dark, airless rooms.

Liss also paints a good portrait of life in 18th-century London — the filthy, coal-smoky, grimy rot of it all, where class differences were sharply defined and prejudices openly expressed. Weaver, a Jew, endures frequent insults; other outsiders suffer worse fates. Despite Samuel Johnson's well-known quote that "when a man is tired of London, he is tired of life," life in the metropolis must have been, for most of its citizens, unpleasant and unhealthy.

These historical details give "The Devil's Company" a richness that make it more than an enjoyable diversion, though, dear reader, it is foremost and most agreeably that.

jseaborn@statesman.com; 445-1702

David Liss

What: Reading and signing

When: 7 p.m. Thursday

Where: BookPeople, 603 N. Lamar Blvd.

Information:472-5050; www.book people.com

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Quote on Art and Literature

    "There is only one school of literature - that of talent."
~ Vladimir Nabokov (1899 - 1977)



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