tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38076814262814885362024-03-12T18:42:34.998-07:00LiminalesqueOf or relating to a transition; occupying a position at, or on both sides of, a threshold.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.comBlogger96125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-3565992497444859802017-06-13T06:51:00.002-07:002017-06-13T06:51:42.759-07:00WTF<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-91Ikidaevmk/WT_jDKcvf3I/AAAAAAAAAWQ/fXcfTnO9LNcoR7hJJX-70XEvMWhuy5rIwCLcB/s1600/IMG_1537.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1200" data-original-width="1600" height="240" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-91Ikidaevmk/WT_jDKcvf3I/AAAAAAAAAWQ/fXcfTnO9LNcoR7hJJX-70XEvMWhuy5rIwCLcB/s320/IMG_1537.JPG" width="320" /></a></div>
<br />
Strange times we're in, but then everyone knows that. Aside from the obvious chaos, corruption and incompetence destroying this country, there are lately weird things happening on a smaller scale, even in my little corner of the world.<br />
I lost the entire month of May to a nasty upper respiratory virus that had me coughing every three or four minutes for weeks. Finally fed up, I went to my doctor. No, wait, my excellent doctor retired last year, so I went to the guy who took over his practice. When I told him I'd been coughing for a month (fortunately, no other symptoms), he announced I had whooping cough.<br />
WTF?<br />
No, I replied, I've actually had whooping cough, and while this cough was persistent and annoying, it wasn't anything like whooping cough. His response was to declare I needed testing for allergies, which--surprise--he could take care of onsite for an exorbitant fee. I do not have allergies. Double WTF. And don't even get me started on how much I had to pay for this diagnosis.<br />
Since we all know that bad things and weird things come in threes, here are two more examples of the alternate reality of contemporary life.<br />
The other morning as Woki and I were enjoying our morning walk, a couple of cyclists zoomed past, part of their conversation clearly audible: "Have fun, but don't use my name. If you use my name, I will deny this conversation."<br />
WTF?<br />
Spy? Leaker? Government troll? Or just your everyday, run-of-the-mill lawyer? Whatever the guy's profession and motivation, I find it alarming that it is now acceptable to covertly provide information without taking any responsibility or having the courage to stand by a claim. What does this say about our society? To me, such a statement might not raise an eyebrow in Beijing, but it just doesn't sound right on the leafy streets of Lake Forest.<br />
With my imagination in overdrive after hearing that, Woki and I continued our walk, following the same route we take every morning. A mile or so farther along, we strolled past a door set in a concrete wall bordering the property of a large house. We passed this door every day for years, but this time there was a strange yellow mass foaming along its edges, as seen in the photo above.<br />
WTF?<br />
If it was insulation, why would anyone insulate a door in a concrete wall that leads only to woods? Makes no sense. So if it's not insulating foam? Is it a new and lethal fungus? Some alien life form? The egg sacs of sci-fi spiders who will hatch and eat all the dogs and cats in the neighborhood before starting on the humans? Imagining took hold, and I had to steady myself, calm down and remind myself that sometimes the writer's creativity gets too wild, which is not such a good thing. There is a limit to what is acceptably bizarre.<br />
<br />
Hoping to ground myself in reality, I remembered what is going on with our government. WTF, indeed.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-85510547799819613902017-04-28T09:08:00.003-07:002017-04-28T09:19:59.029-07:00Spring Fever<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Spring in the Chicago area: early yesterday morning, the fragrant air hovered at a balmy seventy degrees, but by ten o'clock, the temperature had plummeted to forty-three, where it still remains this morning. And while the sun is shining brightly as I write this, clouds and severe thunderstorms are due to roll in by late afternoon and linger for days. A good time settle in for an extended period of reading and writing.<br />
Like the weather, my moods and focus seem also to swing from one place to another. Rapid fire distractions ricochet me like a pinball through the day, making it difficult to get work done in any reasonably logical way. A variety of partially completed tasks litter my desk, not the least of which is the next section of revisions for the new novel, so in an attempt to establish some order (and to actually complete one thing) I've decided to tackle this blog post.<br />
Clearly, the transition of seasons falls into the "limalesque" arena, but where to go from there? A photo I took of flowers acquired in the rough, woodsy area at the bottom of my property fits the spring fever theme, but then . . . what to write about?<br />
Three minutes of brainstorming yielded the following possibilities:<br />
Those flowers--are they jonquils, daffodils, or narcissus? Shouldn't I know the difference? The flowers showed up unbidden, and if I hadn't gone to the bottom of the garden to take care of storm-damaged branches, I never would have seen them. How much else to I miss literally right in my own back yard? (Topic #1)<br />
I picked a handful of the blooms and put them in a vase where, without any help from me, they arranged themselves like stars in the firmament. Rushed for time, I snapped a couple of photos, hoping to capture their sparkle and subtle pattern. The photos failed miserably. The intricate, overlapping pattern they formed might be better interpreted in a drawing, but could it be done in words? (Topic #2)<br />
Hmm, there's another thing I've been meaning to explore in a blog post. Crossing that threshold from visual art to writing has re-oriented my perceptions, and the single most difficult challenge is how to convey in words those colors, textures, and patterns that are the language of the non-verbal world. (Topic #3)<br />
And as for that whole pattern thing, I could write posts on patterns every week for years and never run out of new material. Patterns are arguably the key to the universe. Their importance in science, math, and art is undeniable, but how and where do patterns occur in writing? (Topic #4)<br />
Each of the above topics makes me want to delve deeper into the nooks and crannies of the subject. More than enough to keep me occupied throughout the rainy days to come, as long as I don't get too distracted.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-7920344877015816872017-04-14T15:40:00.003-07:002017-04-14T15:40:54.037-07:00A Thing of Beauty<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-77zQLr3RIWo/WPFGw-xZ4yI/AAAAAAAAAVQ/L_gjEP4dDBoyW1vFVxnXS68yjV8a9Wm5gCLcB/s1600/IMG_1510.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="240" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-77zQLr3RIWo/WPFGw-xZ4yI/AAAAAAAAAVQ/L_gjEP4dDBoyW1vFVxnXS68yjV8a9Wm5gCLcB/s320/IMG_1510.JPG" width="320" /></a></div>
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I plan to have a salad for dinner this evening. The lettuce I bought is pictured above. This photo doesn't really do it justice: the beautiful rosette pattern of the leaves, their sheen and rich color, the lack of blemishes, tears, or wilted edges so common to ordinary heads of lettuce set this particular specimen apart as a thing of beauty.<br />
This afternoon, I indulged myself at the bookstore (yes, again), purchasing two non-fiction books, <i>Lab Girl</i>, by Hope Jahren, and <i>Stoned</i>, by Aja Raden. The first title is a scientist's memoir, remarkable for its wonderful writing as much as for the information imparted. In one of those lovely happenstances some people call coincidence (I don't believe in coincidence), within the first pages of the book, the author talks about looking at leaves. Really looking at them. How are they shaped? What shade of green are they? Are they large? Small? You get the idea. Clearly, I got the message to study my dinner with Zen-like attention.<br />
The second book, <i>Stoned</i>, is about jewelry and it, too, is receiving accolades for excellent writing. In the first few pages, Raden argues that "the history of the world is the history of desire," and humans naturally desire beautiful things.<br />
Ah, therein lies my conundrum. I want to keep the beauty of this perfect, fascinating plant. But that's impossible. I can't keep it sitting on the kitchen counter. Like all living things, it will ultimately spoil. The leaves will wither. Its perfect symmetry will be lost forever. <br />
Yet, shredding the plant, ripping off the leaves, and tearing them into bite-sized pieces fills me with angst. Shoving them in my mouth and eating them smacks of absolute savagery.<br />
However, it's nearing the dinner hour. I've duly recorded this lovely lettuce in a photo and with words. <span style="font-family: Times New Roman;">Savagery is rearing its ugly head, and this thing of beauty can not remain a joy forever.</span><br />
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<!--StartFragment--><span style="font-family: "Times New Roman"; font-size: 12.0pt; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA; mso-bidi-theme-font: minor-bidi; mso-fareast-font-family: "MS 明朝"; mso-fareast-language: JA; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-fareast;"> </span><!--EndFragment--><br />Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-28320991306806396942017-02-24T09:22:00.000-08:002017-02-24T09:26:25.569-08:00A Trip to India<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
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My latest mini-odyssey started with a novel that I picked up purely for some escapist reading. The story, set in Ceylon, was not particularly well written, but what it lacked in literary merit, it made up for in setting and cultural details. Within the first few pages, I ran into an unfamiliar term: jaggery. The dictionary defines jaggery as a course, brown sugar made from palm tree sap.<br />
A few days later, perhaps with subconscious influence from my reading, I spent the evening watching <i>The 100-Foot Journey</i> (Helen Mirren and Manish Dayal), a delightful movie in which culinary scenes are so beautifully photographed one can almost smell the spices, curries, and <i>haute cuisine </i>of a Michelin-quality restaurant.<br />
I've always been partial to a good curry and had been experimenting with adding extra turmeric and fresh ginger to my weeknight stir-fry (read: mix up of various leftovers). The movie, along with a colorful Williams-Sonoma catalogue chock full of exotic Indian-inspired table settings and their new line of masala and curry seasonings, put me right over the edge. I needed an excursion to the Indian subcontinent.<br />
Lack of time and money precluded actually going to India, so I did the next best thing: I found my way to an Indian restaurant not too far from home where I was able to indulge in a marvelous buffet. Samosas, patek paneer, channa masala, vindaloo, and tandoori. Fresh, aromatic, spicy but not so hot the flavors got lost in the burn, the dishes in this restaurant and its quiet ambience carried me along on my little travel fantasy. At the end of the meal, there was a table by the door on which sat four bowls (pictured above). Instead of the usual starlight mints or plastic-wrapped toothpicks, these bowls contained more interesting breath-freshening agents: cardamom seeds, fennel seeds, cloves, and sugar-coated anise seeds.<br />
To keep the fantasy going after I left the restaurant, I found my way to a nearby Indian grocery store. The small strip-mall space was stuffed to the rafters (literally) with exotic merchandise, most of which I had never seen before. I'm no stranger to ethnic groceries, but with the exception of a place in San Francisco's Chinatown, I've never been so transfixed by shelf after shelf of the unfamiliar. (MCH, if you're reading this, call me to schedule a field trip.) I made my purchases, coming away with mango powder, sandalwood soap, cardamom seeds, a jar of ghee, and, of course, jaggery.<br />
How fortunate I feel to be able to make an excursion like this. Within an hour's radius of my home, I can cross thresholds into many other cultures. I can purchase items I might not be entirely certain how to use and discover treasures I didn't know existed.<br />
In my humble opinion, that is what makes this country great.<br />
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Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-45132991461240561482017-01-31T07:09:00.000-08:002017-01-31T07:09:55.613-08:00Deadlines<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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This post is featuring a guest artist because this is the last day of January and the very last hours of my self-imposed deadline for my also self-imposed rule of writing a new post once a month.<br />
I haven't been good with deadlines lately, something I'm not proud of. Actually, I can't remember a time since sixth grade when I've failed to complete work by its due date. Setting goals and completing them when I say I will helps me pretend I can keep the general chaos of life at bay. Right now, however, we are living in unusual times. There have been a lot of distractions lately.<br />
Last week, I spent an inordinate amount of time writing emails and making phone calls to senators. <b><i>I</i></b> did this. Anyone who knows me will realize how weird that is. But like I said, these are unusual times. They are getting more unusual (and scarier) every day, too.<br />
Instead of working on my novel, I've spent far too much time letting my imagination run rampant over the dismal prospects that could be our future if this country continues to allow the current administration to systematically dismantle seventy-plus years of progress in human rights, environmental protection, public education, regulation of mega-corporations, and funding for the arts.<br />
Speaking of the arts, my guest artist, whose work is featured above, is Benjamin Williams, age two. I chose to use his creation today because it's clear evidence that humans need art, even very young humans. While it's wonderful to experience the art of the talented and widely acclaimed, many of us also need to create our own art. By painting or writing or playing music or whatever means is used to express oneself, troubles recede and the world becomes a better place, at least temporarily.<br />
Sounds like I should get back to that novel, eh?<br />
Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-8476018187125509972016-12-12T06:39:00.002-08:002016-12-12T06:40:27.738-08:00Marley's Ghost<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Christmas time. For many of us, the season would lose much of its atmosphere and charm without what is perhaps the second most famous Christmas story: Charles Dickens' <b><i>A Christmas Carol</i></b>. Reading it is as much a part of my family's tradition as baking cookies, trimming the tree, and eating the chocolate in our Christmas stockings before having breakfast.<br />
As a writer, an English literature tutor, and a huge fan of Dickens, I've read and analyzed several of his works, most notably <b><i>A Christmas Carol</i></b>, <b><i>Great Expectations</i></b> and <b><i>A Tale of Two Cities</i></b>. Indeed, I have notebooks filled with vocabulary, plot and character information, quiz questions, essay prompts, and all manner of things Dickensian. While I pride myself on knowing these works fairly well, I readily admit there is still much I can learn about and from one of my favorite masters of the English language.<br />
That point was brought home to me just a few days ago by my brother. Now, my brother hasn't read any Dickens <i>except <b>A Christmas Carol</b></i>, but he managed to point out a simile that occurs early in the story (page 15 in my copy) which I had managed to blow right past. Scrooge has just returned home after begrudgingly giving his clerk Christmas Day off.<br />
<i>"And then let any man explain to me, if he can, how it happened that Scrooge, having his key in the lock of the door, saw in the knocker, without its undergoing any intermediate process of change: not a knocker, but Marley's face. Marley's face. It was not in impenetrable shadow as the other objects in the yard were, but had a dismal light about it, like a bad lobster in a dark cellar."</i><br />
Huh??? A bad lobster in a dark cellar?<br />
What kind of a simile is that?<br />
So, here's what I learned from my brother, who may not be an English lit scholar, but he knows his way around the sciences better than anyone I've ever met. He'd been reading a book called <b><i>A Field Guide to Bacteria</i></b> by Betsy Dexter Dyer when he ran across a passage explaining Dickens' seemingly bizarre reference to cellar-dwelling lobsters. Ms. Dyer explained that in Dickens' era, it was common to store lobsters in the cellar. Lobster exoskeletons are apparently covered in a bacteria that thrives in salty conditions (sea water) and phosphoresces in low temperatures such as those found in an ice chest or the cellar of a 19th century house. Indeed, a quick search of the internet will reveal that this trait is common to other seafood, especially crabmeat, shrimp, and prawns.<br />
Just for kicks, if you happen to be at a holiday party where a platter of shrimp is on the buffet, turn out the lights and see if it glows in the dark. Guaranteed to be a conversation starter.<br />
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Merry Christmas!!Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-39473653512781451722016-11-29T12:41:00.001-08:002016-11-29T12:47:27.517-08:00This Was Supposed To Be About No Vacations<br />
😡😡😡😡😡😡😡<br />
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This post was supposed to have a lovely picture from our October trip to Door County, Wisconsin, but apparently my limit has been reached with the amount of photos my computer will accept, so nothing is hitting up from my phone/camera.<br />
This post was supposed to be about writers never being able to take a vacation because our writing means taking a computer (or at least a fat notebook) with us on all trips. We juggle story ideas, characters, and plots in our heads during driving trips, in airports, walking along beaches, and hiking in the woods.<br />
I was going to mention the friend who recently posted on FaceBook a photo of the room that will be her home for a writing retreat, undoubtedly her idea of the perfect vacation. Another writer friend blogs about her habit of writing every day, no matter what.<br />
Clearly, I'm not that focused, dedicated, or free from distractibility. For instance, I've just spent 15 minutes looking up how to spell distractibility, which isn't actually a word according to spell check but shows up just fine on all the ADHD sites. It's even got a medical definition, so the damn word does exist.<br />
And this glitch with the photos probably means a trip to the Apple store, which measures only marginally higher on the Driver Scale of Blood Boiling Aggravation than dealing with Comcast. But, hey, computers make our lives so much easier, right? Here's where having Trumpian tons of money would be useful: I could just buy a new computer. Or four.<br />
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However, in an effort to prove to myself (because no one else seems to give a rat's ass about this blog) that I am a serious writer and can discipline myself to produce one post a month, no matter what, I am forging ahead, past the technical glitch, past the frustration, past the spelling issues, past my own insecurities and bad temper to get this frickin' post out there.<br />
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And once this is done, I will get back to my novel and the slew of short stories I'm working on because they are important to me. If we write to discover things about ourselves and the world, then I guess my take-away from this fiasco of a day's work is that I have rediscovered that Fictionland is my favorite vacation venue. In Fictionland, I can mine every boring, scary, uncertain, infuriating situation from real life into fictional (sort of) story material. And that is an awesome threshold to cross. 😎Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-78337872928712300262016-10-27T07:27:00.000-07:002016-10-27T07:27:10.483-07:00Go Cubs!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Full disclosure #1 --I stole the above image off someone's FB post. Disclosure #2 --only extreme circumstances would have me posting something about sports, let alone steal an image. And who would argue that the Cubs poised to beat 108-year curse is anything less than extreme?<br />
I didn't grow up in a sports-oriented house; it just wasn't important. My father "skated a little." His way of saying he played ice hockey for Harvard. My parents' only encounter with professional sports was most likely the night at Ravinia when my 4'11" mother turned to the talkative man seated next to her and told him to shut up. Turns out the guy was Mike Ditka. (Ditka was football, right?)<br />
But back to baseball, which along with ice hockey, are the only two games that make any sense to me. Of the two, baseball proved harder to grasp. My Dad taught me to skate and explained the basic rules of ice hockey when I was little, but no such lessons were offered for any other sport. Here's how I learned about baseball:<br />
Second grade, a sunny spring day. We raced out to the playground for gym class, where we were divided into two teams, weighting girls and boys equally because everyone knew girls couldn't throw the ball. Or hit it. I'd never played baseball before, but being me, and being a know-it-all second-grader, I figured I could just watch, do what everyone else was doing, and that would be that. Easy-peasy. Our team was at bat first. Clearly, you were supposed to stand, knees bent, with the bat resting on your shoulders and, when the ball came, you hit it. No big deal. In those days, I was a tough little monkey, strong for my size and fast. My turn came. The ball barreled at me. I swung and hit that sucker high and far across the playground. According to my observations, I was then supposed to run to first base. No problem. Everyone was yelling, cheering, I thought. But while I was trying to figure out what they were saying, a couple of the boys retrieved the ball and threw it to the kid standing next to me on first base. He caught it easily and touched it to my shoulder.<br />
"YOU'RE OUT!!"<br />
Huh?<br />
Turns out, I had missed a couple of critical components of play: I was supposed to keep running if I could and, most importantly, I was supposed to have literally stepped on the canvas base. The learning curve was a little steeper than I had thought. In fact, if memory serves, by the time I was in high school, we actually had written exams in gym class testing our knowledge of the intricacies of line-ups, fair and foul flies, and the short hand used to fill out score cards. (Like when would I ever need to know that again?)<br />
That day in second grade, I learned enough humility to still blush with shame at my ignorance and chutzpah, lo, these many decades later. And from the Cubs, I am seeing 108 years of perseverance. (Some days that feels like a great deal less than the length of time it will take me to get good at this writing stuff.) But the main take-away for me is that sticking with something despite disappointments and perceived failures is a pretty good lesson to learn from a game. <br />
So here's to the Cubs! Go get that World Series.<br />
Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-16267266269133246072016-09-25T17:21:00.000-07:002016-09-25T17:30:52.476-07:00Multi-tasking<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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The start of the school year has been typical in its craziness. Monday through Friday presents as a blur of racing from one thing to the next, always with an eye on the clock, always feeling like there are never enough hours on that clock. We all know the story. In our culture, most responsible adults are forced to multi-task just to get through the day, get dinner on the table, and attempt to sleep long enough to do it all again the following day.<br />
When my kids were little, I honed my multi-tasking skills getting a family of five dressed, fed, and out the door every morning. Most days, there were no major disasters, and somehow I lulled myself into the belief that not only was I able to multi-task, I was quite good at it. I could watch my children's soccer games and grade my students' homework. I could pay the bills and fold the laundry in the course of one television show, never losing the plot line. Weekly menus were planned and grocery lists written during staff meetings. Cookies for the bake sale scented the house as I prepped for the next day's classes. You get the idea. I flatter myself that I can still accomplish more in one day than some people will in an entire week, and I have two published novels and a slew of short stories to prove it. Ah, but therein lies the rub.<br />
This writing stuff can play havoc with multi-tasking. I now work from home and, perhaps because of that, doing more than one thing at a time poses an unexpected hazard. Yes, I'm fine developing characters and story arcs while scrubbing the floor, weeding the garden, or walking the dog. But I have learned I should never, ever, under any circumstances attempt to cook while I'm at my computer writing. The thing is, when I am into a story the way I need to be to understand my characters and what is happening to them, I cross a threshold. That threshold into Fictionland doesn't allow casual backward glances at reality to check what's happening in the kitchen. You're either in the story, or you're not, and crossing that threshold exacts a toll. It requires suspension of all else, including time. Equally tough is crossing back over the threshold to the real world. Deep in a story, sometimes only extreme external forces can pull me back. Like the smell of a dozen eggs boiled so hard the water in the pan evaporated. Anyone up for Green Eggs and Ham?Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-63656727613032188892016-08-25T06:16:00.000-07:002016-08-25T06:16:49.300-07:00Jiffy Mix<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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It's late August. My self-imposed deadline for the first draft of the next novel is Sept. 30. I'm about 3/4 of the way there and stuck like some pre-Cambrian creature in a tar pit. Hoping to tease the Muse back, I've been wandering around in the literary toy store, playing with flash fiction and poetry. Just for kicks; no great expectations. (Yes, those last two words were deliberate.)<br />
So here is one of the poems on which I have spent very little time, refusing to get all serious and angsty over it. I'll save that torture for the "real" writing.<br />
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Jiffy Mix</div>
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Still. they stand on grocery shelves,</div>
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This Jiffy blue and white boxes</div>
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Redolent of strawberry-filled sunshine,</div>
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Summer Sundays.</div>
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Thirty-three cents, then, for biscuit mix.</div>
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One egg and one cup of water</div>
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Rendered it to viscous batter,</div>
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Summer Sundays.</div>
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Batter baked to golden shortcake,</div>
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A hundred sweet, sliced berries within,</div>
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Released its buttered fragrance,</div>
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Summer Sundays.</div>
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A cavalcade of childhood days</div>
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Remains within those Jiffy boxes,</div>
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Now relegated to the lowest shelf, and ahlf-forgotten</div>
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Summer Sundays.</div>
Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-22262687853914054132016-07-26T12:45:00.000-07:002016-07-26T23:46:55.844-07:00The Haunting<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I should be writing this deep in the middle of a dark and stormy October night instead of high noon on a lovely July day, but ghosts apparently choose their own time and place.<br />
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The story begins innocently enough. I went to a summer luncheon meeting with one of my writers' groups. Over chicken salad and iced tea, one of the original members of the group reminisced about her early writing career in New York where she worked at <i>Mademoiselle</i> magazine with Sylvia Plath. She remembered Sylvia as someone amusing who liked parties and wore the bright red lipstick so fashionable at that time. The conversation evolved to discussion of Plath's work. I kept quiet, certain I was the only person in the room who had not read her poetry or <i>The Bell Jar</i>.<br />
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Easily influenced by the mood of what I read, depressing novels and poetry aren't good for me. Back in high school, I discovered Thomas Hardy, and while I loved his prose, his stories sent me into such black swamps of depression, I vowed to avoid further relentlessly bitter literary journeys.<br />
Still, after that summer lunch surrounded by lovely people who hadn't put their heads into ovens after reading Plath, I thought perhaps I should read her work.<br />
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This is where things get weird.<br />
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This past June, my husband retired from thirty-two years as a high school English teacher. Among his summer tasks was the clearing out of materials he would no longer need. On the very day of the luncheon with my writer friends, he sorted through several boxes of stuff, hanging on to a few items he thought I might like. I came home that afternoon to find <i>The Bell Jar</i> and <i>The Collected Poems of Sylvia Plath</i> on my desk. Coincidence?<br />
Okay, then what about two days later when I am looking for an exercise on metaphors for another writing group, and the first example I find is a Sylvia Plath poem. Coincidence?<br />
"Perhaps," says the phantasmal voice of Rod Serling.<br />
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I finished reading <i>The Bell Jar</i> last week, with no particular ill effects, though I don't seem to sleep well lately. The copy I read (see the photo above) looks as if its been to hell and back. Perhaps it is indeed a gift from a ghost.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-78571009792517528612016-06-27T04:10:00.000-07:002016-06-27T04:10:01.873-07:00Preconceived Misconceptions<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I didn't want to go. The weather forecast called for severe thunderstorms, the venue was not a place I frequented, and my previous experience with story tellers had been total embarrassment on behalf of wide-eyed, rambling raconteurs who substituted goofiness for story substance. However, I wanted to support my friend, Bobbie, who had been performing her stories with the <a href="http://www.shortstorytheatre.com/" target="_blank">Short Story Theater</a> group for several months. From the writing group we both belong to, I knew her stories were well-written, and she's the sort of capable person one can trust to do a good job with whatever she sets her mind to.<br />
So off I went to Miramar in Highwood on a cloudy but dry Thursday evening. Parking was the first hurdle. I left my car four blocks from the restaurant, hoping I would not get a ticket if I departed the minute Bobbie's presentation was finished. Second hurdle: at the restaurant I was shown to the back room where the stage had been set up, but no one was allowed in. I and another woman who, like me, didn't think 6:45 was too early to show up for a 7:00 event, were both told to go away; rehearsals were in progress. The other woman and I stood outside on the sidewalk chatting until her husband and friend showed up. They went in the restaurant to get a table while I stayed put, feeling about as welcome as a Zika-bearing mosquito. I seriously debated ditching the whole event.<br />
Instead, I stood on the street corner, checking my phone like a teenager. Or whatever. Two messages: both from people in our writing group who said they, too, were coming to support Bobbie. All I had to do was wait. Back in the restaurant, the waiter who had led me to the back room noticed my re-entry.<br />
"You can sit at the bar."<br />
If there had been any seats available, that might have been okay, but the bar was packed.<br />
Just then, a voice behind me said, "You can sit here. I'm on my own."<br />
The voice belong to a pleasant-looking woman about my age, and the clincher for me was her British accent. Anyone who knows me knows I miss England every day, so I figure sitting with this stranger for a few minutes might give me an auditory mini-fix for the land I love.<br />
She introduced herself as Ruth and explained that she adores Short Story Theater and had been to multiple shows. We shared new-friend information and soon thereafter, we made our way to the back room. I was startled to see the place had filled up with at least fifty people, yet we managed to secure seats at a table near the stage. I was also startled to see several people I knew and began introducing Ruth to my other acquaintances.<br />
Long story short--the evening blossomed. The story tellers were first and foremost very capable writers who read their work with grace and style. Bobbie shone as one of the best. Our table, comprised of new friends and people I knew from various clubs, groups, and schools in town, was lively, friendly, and full of positive energy.<br />
The big surprise for me was seeing so many people I knew who knew each other and had shared the experience of this venue multiple times. Why had I not been here before? Here was a whole network of interesting people to whom I was connected by only the most peripheral of strands, but there were many more strands available to me should I choose to pursue them.<br />
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Much as I love the time I spend spinning stories, perhaps I've been spending a little too much time with fictional people. The real ones can be fun, too.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-58248939751880076432016-05-26T15:44:00.004-07:002016-05-26T15:44:40.437-07:00Friend or Foe<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Behold the lowly dandelion, scourge of gardeners everywhere. Google the poor plant's name and the first thing to show up is how to kill it. This is something I've never understood. If it weren't for the dandelions, I'd have a total of about three flowers on my property. In a good year.<br />
Dandelions are just as cheerful and bright a harbinger of spring and summer as their fussier cousins, daisies and asters, which actually have to be <i>purchased</i>. Dandelions are free. Maybe they are the essence of freedom. Certainly, no one thinks grim, funereal thoughts in the presence of dandelions, as they do with lilies. Dandelions are neither demanding nor pretentious, resting contentedly on the opposite end of the snob scale from roses, irises, and dahlias.<br />
The dandelion is easy to grow, resistant to disease, and--drum roll, please--they are edible. Soup. Salad. Wine! Our pioneer ancestors must roll in their graves at our cavalier treatment of this versatile botanic specimen.<br />
In case the above facts are not enough to persuade you of the dandelion's importance, how about some pure sentimental stuff? For how many children is the dandelion the first plant they can identify? For how many mothers is a bouquet of dandelions the first gift their child offers them? Who hasn't made a wish while blowing away the fluff of a spent dandelion?<br />
Yet, no florist I've ever encountered would include dandelions in an arrangement. None of the proud gardeners I know would tolerate them anywhere near their precious herbaceous beds. The average American would rather cover his lawn with poisonous chemicals than allow one Taraxacum to invade the lawn.<br />
That seems a shame, especially when they so quickly turn to wishes.<br />
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<span id="goog_962267687"></span><span id="goog_962267688"></span><br />Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-35052050371305909442016-04-26T15:22:00.001-07:002016-04-26T15:22:15.541-07:00So Not Cool<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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You know what this is. Everyone in the world recognizes the logo in this photo. Well, practically everyone. There may be someone on the planet who communicates via jungle drums and dines on tree bark and ants who has never worshiped at the altar of St. Arbucks.<br />
Full disclosure: Minus the dietary habits, I am closer to that poor clueless castaway than I am to the average American, since I never drink either of the two beverages essential to most writers (no alcohol, no caffeine--how do I survive??). I rarely set foot in a coffee shop. However, since I am a writer, and I don't live in total isolation, I'm occasionally given a Starbucks gift card. In fact, there have been several of them floating in the detritus of my handbag for years.<br />
Not long ago, I found myself stuck waiting for the groomer to finish with Woki. (Yes, I spend more on his haircuts than I do on my own.) With time to kill on a frigid winter morning, I wandered into the Starbucks next door to the groomer. It seemed like a good morning for a nice cup of tea, so after determining what elaborate tea-based concoction to request, I got in line with the cool people who know the drill. I figured if I watched closely, I could manage to place my order without making too much of a fool of myself.<br />
Wrong.<br />
Here among the beautiful ones, I was so out of my depth. The three men in line all sported designer stubble, ear buds, and distracted expressions. I imagined they were fretting over sports teams, the financial markets or, less likely, the car that had been parked in the handicapped spot outside. Of the eight or ten women in line, seven wore their blonde hair in a ponytail, four had perfectly applied makeup, all of them wore Lulu Lemon yoga pants, and not one of them weighed more than 100 pounds.<br />
So the line crept forward, and I listened to the patois of Starbucks: half-caf double venti latte with hazelnut; grande, iced, with soy; triple half-sweet carmel macchiato. And as if that wasn't confusing enough, why does tall = small?<br />
With increasing alarm, I saw the two people ahead of me pay not with money or gift cards, but by holding their phones to the credit card device (at least I think that's what it was). Hey, I've got a phone. It's even a smart phone. Trouble is, I'm not cool enough to tell it how to pay for my tea.<br />
It became MY TURN. <br />
I ordered a drink by the name printed on the overhead menu, not entirely sure what it would be. "May I please have a London Fog?"<br />
Server--oh, pardon me--barista's reply, "What? What do you want?" Like I was speaking Hurro-Uratian.<br />
I pointed to the menu and repeated my order slowly. She nodded, scribbled something on a cup which she handed off to a co-worker. I, in turn, handed her a grimy gift card. She took it carefully, as if it might be contaminated. Okay, maybe that wasn't unreasonable.<br />
I sauntered casually to the little counter where drinks appeared and recognized mine easily enough, even though it was now called a "tea latte" rather than the much cooler sounding London Fog. Settling into a corner with what proved to be a delicious beverage, I surveyed the shop, content to be sitting amongst the young and caffeinated with my iconic paper cup. I might not be cool these days, but once upon a time, I could have given everyone in the place a run for their money . . . or their phones.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-11230115236732197732016-03-17T15:54:00.001-07:002016-03-17T15:54:28.170-07:00Cloud of Unknowing<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Last night, I took this shot of an unusual golden cloud formation over the south end of Forest Park. There are all sorts of cheesy metaphors that I could spin (mostly to justify using this photo, which I find pleasing), but I think instead I'll simply tie it to a quote one of my fellow writers shared with me last week. The quote resonated because I don't often come across musings on the word that forms the basis for this blog title. I've lost track of the number of people who have told me Liminalesque is a terrible title for a blog--and I agree with every one of them, but I'm sufficiently stubborn and enamored of the word to ignore the good advice. The passage below appears on page 244 of <i><u>The Practice of Happiness: Political Economy, Religion, and Wellbeing</u></i> edited by John R. Atherton, Elaine Graham, and Ian Steedman.<br />
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<i>"'Limen' is the Latin term which translates as threshold . . . There are those from within the spiritual traditions who perceive the liminal space to be the location for growth and change, the space betwixt and between where God is often leading be where we feel uncomfortable and insecure. The tried and tested has to be left behind and we have to be willing to live with the not knowing and not being in control . . .The temptation is always to return from this scary place too quickly, to retreat from this 'cloud of unknowing' . . . by resorting to quick-fix solutions and interpretations. Few of us know how to stay on the thresholds or to remain in the liminal spaces. . ."</i><br />
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Now, while I don't agree with every notion stated or implied here (the title alone makes me want to hide under my desk), I have to admit that I wholeheartedly endorse the idea that the liminal space is equally scary and full of potential. Like everything else I commit to written language and put out in the world, this blog takes a toll on my courage. Yet, I'm compelled to wander in my "cloud of unknowing" with the hope of . . . well, I'm not even sure about that.<i> </i><br />
Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-7759322207870688882016-02-22T13:24:00.000-08:002016-02-22T13:26:59.259-08:00Fun Stuff<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Usually, the winter months of January and February are so very dreary they seem to drag on forever, but that hasn't been the case this year. Some of the credit goes to El Nino for making the weather tolerable--even pleasant--for a few choice days, but the real honors go to the fun stuff on my calendar. Pictured at the left: me with the Crystal Lake Book Club in late January. What a fun Sunday afternoon I spent with them! We had an interesting discussion of major themes and characters in my books, preceded by a fantastic brunch. These ladies are smart, charming, and terrific cooks. (When did you say you'd like me to come back?)<br />
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In mid-January, I was also a guest speaker at the Lake Bluff Library Book Club. Once again, I was flattered and honored to be asked to talk to this group of intelligent, thoughtful readers. Only a couple of members are pictured with me here because I got so caught up in the great discussions, I totally forgot to get pictures until after the event when most people had already left. Again, this is a group I would love to return to when I have another book to discuss. They asked so many excellent questions and clearly picked up on some of the subtler themes in my stories.<br />
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Another big event in January was the publication of an article about the writers' group I founded and facilitate in Lake Forest. My thanks to Nicki Koetting at The Lake Forest Leader for a great write-up! Out group has been going for nine years, now, and though we've had ups and downs with membership, we currently have a great group of highly skilled writers. Each meeting, we read manuscripts from one or more members, and I provide an exercise prompt to hone writing chops between our monthly meetings. This month's prompt is to write about something you've never noticed before. To add an extra element, there is also a challenge to use two or three words that are not in your usual vocabulary. I've chosen "niveous" and "hamate" as my two words. (Trolling the dictionary for these gems is amazingly relaxing.)<br />
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Finally, the greatest event of the winter (and the most distracting) was the birth of my third grandchild and first granddaughter, Sarah.<br />
She's now two weeks old, and I'm just getting back to work on a regular basis after happily dropping everything to welcome her and help tend to her 18-month old brother, Graham.<br />
Now, however, the characters in my next book are jumping up and down, screaming at me to pay attention to them and leave the real people to the real world.<br />
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This week, as a last blast of winter weather is approaching the Chicago area, I've done the grocery shopping, cleaned the house, and organized myself to hunker down and get to work. And that sounds absolutely delightful.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-60814721917094283212016-01-11T14:57:00.000-08:002016-01-11T14:57:25.078-08:00What Are the Odds?<br />
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Okay, so there are lines going out the door at convenience stores and gas stations because people have gone crazy over the Powerball Lottery. The prize is, as of this writing, $1.3 BILLION. A sum I would wait in line for, except that--as I quote from some unknown but wise source--this is a game for the mathematically challenged. The odds are 292 million to 1 that plunking down real money for a chance at the fantasy is a complete waste. I've never been a gambler. Too many other ways to get rid of money.<br />
You're winning odds are better for getting hit by an asteroid, being elected president of the United States, or becoming a saint. (Well, in my case, that last one might not be valid.) As someone who enjoys math (though I admit probability is my least favorite branch), I just don't see the attraction for a game with that much weight on the losing side.<br />
So that begs the question, "Why exactly do I think my chances are better as a writer?"<br />
Entirely likely success will be just as much of a wild goose chase for me as it is for those people in the gas station line. Still, we all have our dreams. Without them, life would be dreary indeed. I wish all those people in the lines the best of luck, especially the couple who want to use their winnings "to buy out Trump." <br />
And I'll continue to take my chances in the publishing business.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-40897823456344538302015-12-31T14:18:00.000-08:002015-12-31T14:20:33.444-08:00Blogged Down<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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No news that a discarded Christmas tree is one of the saddest of sights ever. The most iconic symbol of holiday cheer and happiness kicked to the curb like an old drunk.<br />
This entire month has passed in the usual blur of work, shopping, cooking, parties, more shopping and, in between all the holiday fuss, writing. Short stories, one with deadline in January (who thought that was a good idea??), a new novel clawing its way to the surface, book promos, etc. And this blog. Even though I don't have a vast following, posting once a month is my own personal touchstone, the place where I prove to myself that I can do this, with or without permission, support, or any other extrinsic reward. Hey, this is the writing life. Extrinsic rewards are in short supply.<br />
But I was utterly "blogged down" trying to think of something interesting enough to me, let alone any poor sucker who happens across this entry. <br />
Finally, today, December 31st, at just past three in the afternoon, I figured out what I'd write about: soldiering on even when it feels like my work is about as appreciated as last year's Christmas tree. <br />
I'd seen a tree across the street, tossed in the snow, the perfect image. Scurrying into my coat, I went out to take the photo.<br />
The tree was gone. Recycled. Turned to dust.<br />
Oh, God--was this a symbol of my writing future? I had the choice to cave in or refuse to take such treatment from the Universe.<br />
Somewhere, surely, there must be another tree lying at the side of the road. I hopped in the car, trying not to consider the sigilistic aspects of my quest. No tree = no blog post = no writing future.<br />
But the Universe smiled, or possibly smirked, and seven or eight blocks from my house, I found the tree pictured above. So perhaps it is a sign after all. Perseverance. Always. Amen.<br />
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<br />Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-58162913107591021762015-11-09T07:41:00.000-08:002015-11-09T07:41:09.984-08:00Letter to a Stranger<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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In honor of Veteran's Day and all the men and women who have served this country, I am posting the contents of a letter I wrote to someone I've never met. A writer friend asked a few fellow writers to pen a note to his father, a WWII vet, so here is what I came up with:<br />
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<span style="font-family: "Trebuchet MS",sans-serif;">Though I don't know you personally, I'd like to thank you for your service in World War II. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "Trebuchet MS",sans-serif;">My father, though American, served with the British Royal Engineers in North Africa and Italy, and I grew up hearing some of his stories. As I got older, I realized these stories--funny ones, scary ones, reminiscences of people and places he always hoped to see again--were only the vignettes he was willing to share. There were many more memories he kept to himself.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "Trebuchet MS",sans-serif;">He instilled in me a fascination for that period in history, and I am currently working on a short story set in England in 1944. In the course of my research, I learned about Operation Tiger, a rehearsal for D-Day conducted on Slapton Sands on the south coast of England. The exercise went terribly wrong when a convoy of LSTs approaching the coast was discovered by German E-boats out of Cherbourg. 946 men were lost. Because of concerns that D-Day plans would be disrupted, this tragedy was kept secret for 40 years. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "Trebuchet MS",sans-serif;">While this story may not be news now, I relate it here so that you will know such sacrifices will not be lost in the tides of time. Decades after the event, there are still those of us who are learning anew how indebted we are to the service men and women of WWII. The strength and courage of your generation will not be forgotten.</span><br />
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Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-18605437745098606442015-10-13T08:59:00.000-07:002015-10-13T08:59:17.781-07:00Poison Pen<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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October. The time of year when the veil is thin and dark thoughts creep about in the night. On our daily walks, Woki and I often walk past my grandmother's house. There are many stories I could post here about her. She probably had more influence on me than any other adult, which I consider a very good thing. It is from her that I get my insatiable drive to draw, paint, and write. She was the person who read me stories and taught me to appreciate classical music. Of the myriad memories I have of her, there is one that comes to mind at this time of year.<br />
Whether it was a rainy October evening or some sunny summer afternoon, I couldn't say, but I remember my grandmother and my father talking about someone who "wrote with a poison pen". My child's imagination immediately conjured up Disney-esque images of some wicked person writing lethal notes by candle light in a stone-walled cellar riddled with spiders and bats.<br />
It was a terrible disappointment to learn that "poison pen" was just another term for hate mail.<br />
I'm definitely not into writing hate mail, but I'm still intrigued by those childhood images, and a poison pen letter offers a lot of short story possibilities. Especially this time of year, exploring the dark side (in fiction, let's be clear) is a delicious thrill. The cauldron is bubbling; a new story seems to be taking shape . . .<br />
Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-90872980358308403072015-09-21T11:11:00.001-07:002015-09-21T11:13:52.957-07:00House of Cards<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Monday morning, and I have my writing plan for the week. To keep myself on task, I set up assignments for each day, and each day's writing is dependent on finishing the work of the previous day. Revise a story, post a blog, outline a new draft, check over submission possibilities, send work out. In my mind, at least, it's a logical and orderly process.<br />
Furthermore, setting specific goals is my way of combating procrastination, the bane of any writer's existence. It's so easy to procrastinate. Household chores beckon, there's something I need at the store, Woki gives me a "let's go for <i>another</i> walk" stare. Ten thousand distractions. But I won't be tempted because I have my plan.<br />
Until I don't.<br />
The photo I took yesterday (on my brand new phone) for the blog post I want to write isn't syncing to my computer. In fact, my entire photo library seems to have a major issue, which stems suspiciously from the acquisition of the new phone. Apple Care can't solve the problem and the earliest available appointment with the Genius Bar isn't until Thursday afternoon. #&%!$!, as they used to say before cussing became basic to contemporary vocabulary.<br />
So my carefully constructed plan is in the crapper. Just trying to set up a time to get the trouble fixed--never mind actually fixing it--has trashed my schedule. My house-of-cards writing plans have fallen like, well, a house of cards, and walking another 6 miles, mowing the lawn, or cleaning out the gutters has taken on unexpected appeal.<br />
Flexibility has never been my strong suit, but I need to focus on writing, not leaf-clogged gutters. Ergo, this entire post is an exercise in working through the issue. Photo courtesy of Morguefile.com, and text akin to moldy, rotting gutter slime, here it is. Old dogs and penmonkeys can learn new tricks.<br />
But now, perhaps, it's time for a walk.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-29916760914087269842015-08-17T07:15:00.000-07:002015-08-17T07:24:52.899-07:00Outside, Looking In<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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This photo was taken in Unionville, MI, a town I drove through this summer that was unique for its abandonment. Shop after shop stood shuttered and neglected, furniture and merchandise left behind along with hopes and dreams. My reflection is just visible at the edge of the dusty window as I stood snapping pictures, sad for the economic downturn of this once vibrant town and state.<br />
Naturally, my imagination began to spin stories: who owned the glassware? Was it the pride and joy of a farmer's wife, or the everyday pieces used in the grand home of a lumber or auto baron? And what would become of these things now? The fate of these delicate, gentle reminders of a bygone era when families took the time to sit at a table, perhaps enjoying the rare treat of ice cream served in a graceful shell-pink glass dish, troubled me.<br />
I believe it was Chekhov who, when asked where he got ideas for his stories, replied, "Everywhere." Then, he picked up a nearby ashtray and said if he was so inclined, he could write a story about it. He would have had a field day with the glassware in this shop window.<br />
Indeed, there are stories everywhere, but it seems the ideas for them come most often from observing something from physical or emotional distance. It's not always a comfortable place, but it affords a perspective that "insiders" rarely have.<br />
One of my oldest friends recently criticized a description of boarding school life in one of my books. She attended boarding school; I did not. I paraphrase, but she said something like, "You were in our group, but not really <i>of</i> it."<br />
Fair enough, and true enough, but that doesn't mean I don't know what I'm talking about. My perspective, I believe, is broader than her fond and particular memories and, by virtue of the fact that I wasn't <i>of</i> the group, I had a more fluid point of view. Forest for the trees sort of thing.<br />
It's what writers do. We stand on the outside, looking in, and report on the world as we see it.<br />
<br />Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-28945750622082671382015-07-22T06:25:00.001-07:002015-07-22T16:41:19.052-07:00Visitations from the Past<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Inside the sun-bleached cover, the pristine pages are thick and oatmeal-y, a quality uncommon in recent publications. The author, Isser Harel, was born in 1912. The events of the non-fiction account of the capture of Adolf Eichmann occurred in the 1940s and 50s. My husband purchased the book--new--in 1975. For forty years, it sat on a shelf in his office, unread. But here's the thing about books: they don't lose their value or relevance over time. Two weeks ago, he picked up <i>The House on Garibaldi Street</i> (Viking Press, 1975) and began reading a chapter or two each evening. The third night, he thrashed in the grip of a nightmare, literally screaming in his sleep.<br />
I haven't read the book, but I get the general context, and there is plenty of nightmare-inducing material. Coincidence or not (and I don't believe in coincidence), I'm also reading about events from World War II, researching a short story I feel compelled to write. The story is based on a railway disaster in England (<a href="http://www.soham.org/index.php/history/43-soham-railway-disaster-2nd-june-1944?start=9" target="_blank">Soham Railway Disaster</a> June 2, 1944) but is germane to recent railway crashes here and in Canada. This is my first attempt at historical fiction, and immersing myself in the details of that era has fomented my own night terrors of running through the woods, hiding from jack-booted thugs.<br />
There are probably multiple reasons that the Harel book and my WWII story have swirled out of the mists of time to haunt us now. That era has always held fascinations, both nostalgic and terrifying. Everyone knows revisiting the past offers important lessons for the future, but is anyone paying attention? Though I prefer to steer clear of politics, given the current crop of buffoons and jack-a-napes running for the highest office in this land, I'm alarmed. Hitler wasn't taken seriously at first, either.<br />
We need our stories of the past, the present, and the future to remember where we've been and hopefully, to light a safe and sane path to the future. Every day, when I sit in my little office, with my imaginary friends, it's my goal to carve out such a path, even it it's only for myself. Given the power of the written word, if I'm good enough and lucky enough, that might not be a complete waste of time. <br />
<br />Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-44950061343787599112015-06-18T06:58:00.001-07:002015-06-18T06:58:47.039-07:00Distractions<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<span id="goog_63572526">I'm currently working on a short story that that's driving me bat-shit crazy</span> and underscoring the reason so many writers are drawn to large quantities of alcohol. The part of my brain that has turned to bat guano longs to wallow in a vat of good Russian vodka. Fortunately, saner cells still prevail.<br />
Sort of.<br />
Instead of booze, I often indulge in math problems in an attempt to distract myself from the stalled story line, the underdeveloped characters, and perturbations that have no apparent resolution. Math problems are generally solvable, allowing me some sense of accomplishment. And the pay is comparable to writing short stories for publication.<br />
I ran across the above problem in my files the other day and spent the better part of yesterday solving it in hopes the Universe might get the message. Obviously, each letter stands for a number and the object is to figure out what those letters are so the addition works out. Try it--I double dog dare you.<br />
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P.S. It's a lot easier to figure out than the plot of a good short story.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3807681426281488536.post-83594257479401611622015-05-17T10:07:00.002-07:002015-05-18T07:23:22.782-07:00No Accountin' For It<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I took the above photo to illustrate an issue that I grapple with on a regular basis. The way art is perceived is so subjective that I often find myself in a head-scratching, "huh? what?" frame of mind. There are so many artists, writers and performers who never get the break they deserve, but conversely, there are too many who get recognition for stuff that sends my aesthetic dander to the stratosphere. <br />
The sculpture above sits at a public building in my town and undoubtedly cost a packet of money to have commissioned and installed. Yet, <i>gratis</i>, my dog produces nearly identical work every morning on my front lawn. In whose eyes does the bronze version look like anything worthy of commemoration?<br />
The New York Times list of best selling fiction is rife with titles that are the literary equivalent of Mountain Dew. These books might give you a quick rush, but they'll rot your teeth. They are financial angels for author and publisher, but demons for readers. Fifty shades of high-priced marketing will, clearly, put any kind of sleazy, hackneyed crap on the best-seller list.<br />
Where are the emperor's clothes? <br />
Last week, the Art Institute conferred an honorary doctorate upon Kanye West. Really? The Chicago Tribune sang his praises with an op-ed piece titled "The Brilliant Kanye West" and described him as a "creative and wide-ranging thinker." <i>Really?</i> This is a guy who boasts about not reading. And don't even get me started on the ah, attributes of his wife and her family.<br />
Great diversity in culture should be encouraged and celebrated, but the operative word is culture. Culture: "<span class="ssens">the act of developing the intellectual and moral faculties especially by education"--<a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/culture" target="_blank">Merriam Webster</a></span> Could someone please explain either the intellectual or moral merits possessed by Mr. West?<br />
Oh, wait, it's all about the marketing, isn't it?<br />
I recall that grand old adage, somewhat revised for this post: one person's art is another person's dog shit.Mary Driverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04193250934622391846noreply@blogger.com0