Tag: Literature
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MELANCHOLY VERSE
To the Greeks, melancholia was one of the four humors to be avoided—a black bile that brought on an unhealthy state of sadness, fear, mania; a condition that was negative and to be avoided. Over time, humans came to realize that there were appropriate times to be melancholy; to reflect; to grieve. I tend toward…
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COMING THROUGH SLAUGHTER
Michael Ondaatje is a Sri-Lankan born Canadian poet and novelist best known for The English Patient, which won the Booker Prize and was made into an award-winning film. Ondaatje writes thought-provoking, lyrical novels about outsiders, the “other” – which makes his books rich for analysis and study. His early novella, Coming Through Slaughter, tells the…
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HAMLET BY ANOTHER NAME
I came to William Shakespeare late in life, when pursuing a second Bachelor’s and then an MFA in literature. Multiple studies of the Bard were required at Portland’s Liberal Arts school, Marylhurst University. In those classes, I learned of the magnitude of Shakespeare’s contribution to literature–the timeless lessons on the nature of humans. Later, I…
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LITERARY WESTERNS
While I worked on my MFA and the writing of my master’s thesis (WRANGLE, a novel based on Texas quarter horse racing) I also immersed myself in the best of the literary westerns published over the years. And that was a challenge—because there are not many of those. To look back in time, the West…
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THE HALF-KNOWN WORLD
There are a raft of good writers, excellent craftsman that never gain international fame. Men and women who publish small works, teach at universities, coach and inspire the young writers coming behind them. Percival Everett was one of those yeoman for quite some time. He shunned publicity, taught at the University of Southern California, published…
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WRITING WITH A LILT
Over the years I’ve noticed that I am drawn to literary writing with a lilt—a cadence as though the author was a poet or came from a culture like Ireland or Scotland, with their shared Gaelic history. Anne Michaels, a Canadian poet, writes in a loosely structured novelistic style and infuses her poetic self throughout.…
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THE REAL CROMWELL?
History is written by the victors. . . and then rewritten over the following decades, as it suits those in power. Or makes good reading or an exciting film. This is never more obvious than the changing descriptions of Thomas Cromwell, who rose from relative obscurity to great wealth as the chief adviser to King…
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GROWING OLD
Very few literary novels deal with the delicate subject of growing old. After all, even the most scholarly author, the most erudite, needs to attract readers, and this is hardly a jolly topic—old age, with its proximity to death. And yet, if literary works are an exploration of the human condition, aging must be among…
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NOVELS AS MOVIES
In 2025, a spate of movies were released based on literary novels, modern and classical. There was Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein (a re-imagining of Mary Shelley’s gothic work); Francois Ozon’s The Stranger (Albert Camus’ 1942 novella); Kei Ishikawa’s A Pale View of Hills (Kazuo Ishiguro);Chloe Zhao’s Hamnet (Maggie O’Farrell) and Clint Bentley’s Train Dreams (Denis…
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OUT OF FAVOR
Back in 2005, I discovered Irish author John Banville and his Booker Prize-winning novel, The Sea. His protagonist Max Morden is recently widowed and dealing with earlier losses in his life. Personally, I found Morden to be insufferably self-absorbed—which is a cruel thought, really—the man is in mourning! And yet that is the drum-beat of…