Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Naughty but nice!

So I have been slacking a bit in my authorial pursuits (not that anyone cares!) and have rather been reading a bit.  I am branching out into the lesser known cousins of 'Anne of Green Gables' and rather enjoying them (some classicists somewhere just keeled over in shock and disdain).  I found this quote in 'Jane of Lantern Hill,' and thought it wonderful.  In a day and age when great literature is considered either shocking or incomprehensible, it is nice to find someone who remembers how beautiful and useful and interesting these immortal words can be.  So for all of you that have had a poor introduction to the Bible (as had our poor Jane), perhaps you will find a little encouragement in the following:

"'When all the morning stars sang together' . . . the essence of creation's joy is in that, Jane. Can't you hear that immortal music of the spheres? 'Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon and thou, moon, in the vale of Ajalon.' Such sublime arrogance, Jane . . . Mussolini himself couldn't rival that. 'Here shall thy proud waves be stayed' . . . look at them rolling in there, Jane . . . 'so far and no farther' . . . the majestic law to which they yield obedience never falters or fails. 'Give me neither poverty nor riches' . . . the prayer of Agar, son of Jakeh. A sensible man was Agar, my Jane. Didn't I tell you the Bible was full of common sense? 'A fool uttereth all his mind.' Proverbs is harder on the fool than on anybody else, Jane . . . and rightly. It's the fools that make all the trouble in the world, not the wicked. 'Whither thou goest I will go; and where thou lodgest I will lodge; thy people shall be my people and thy God my God; where thou diest will I die and there will I be buried; the Lord do so to me and more also if aught but death part thee and me.' The high-water mark of the expression of emotion in any language that I'm acquainted with, Jane . . . Ruth to Naomi . . . and all such simple words. Hardly any of more than one syllable . . . the writer of that verse knew how to marry words as no one else has ever done. And he knew enough not to use too many of them. Jane, the most awful as well as the most beautiful things in the world can be said in three words or less . . . 'I love you' . . . 'he is gone' . . . 'he is come' . . . 'she is dead' . . . 'too late' . . . and life is illumined or ruined. 'All the daughters of music shall be brought low' . . . aren't you a little sorry for them, Jane . . . those foolish, light-footed daughters of music? Do you think they quite deserved such a humiliation? 'They have taken away my lord and I know not where they have laid him' . . . that supreme cry of desolation! 'Ask for the old paths and walk therein and ye shall find rest.' Ah, Jane, the feet of some of us have strayed far from the old paths . . . we can't find our way back to them, much as we may long to. 'As cold water to a thirsty soul so is good news from a far country.' Were you ever thirsty, Jane . . . really thirsty . . . burning with fever . . . thinking of heaven in terms of cold water? I was, more than once. 'A thousand years in thy sight is but as yesterday when it is past and as a watch in the night.' Think of a Being like that, Jane, when the little moments torture you. 'Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free.' The most terrible and tremendous saying in the world, Jane . . . because we are all afraid of truth and afraid of freedom . . . that's why we murdered Jesus."

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Your next assignment

Dear avid readership,

As you well know, this book specific blog is anything but, and in keeping with this tradition, I have a new reading assignment for you (ever get the feeling I should have been and English Teacher?).  L. M. Montgomery's The Blue Castle is due by the end of an unspecified Thursday, go forth and read!

This ends today's announcement.

Sincerely,

Management

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Word of the Day, Volume VI, Issue 5

I found another amusing word that I just had to share with someone, anyone (which is counterproductive as no on reads this blog!).  The word is transmogrify.  It means to change or mutate or transform, often with humorous connotations (that was the dictionary's comment, by the way I love old dictionaries!).  So go use it in conversation today, just make sure the connotations are humorous.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

On three volume novels

"Anybody can write a three-volume novel; it merely requires a complete ignorance of both life and literature," quoth Oscar Wilde.  Whether our friend Oscar is correct or not, I am at least well qualified to find out.  I wrote 'On Princesses,' as a stand alone, complete story but that dreaded modern epidemic: the sequel, is starting to show signs of having infected the pitiful thing.  I am playing with further adventures in that silly world and we shall see what comes of it.

Sunday, January 5, 2014

About the weather

Nothing is so exciting as talking about the weather, unless it is the crops.  What is there to say about the weather that your listeners do not already know (assuming they are physically present)?  "It is sunny," said I.  "Sure is," says you.  Charming, really…when does the movie come out?  Well, this post is about weather.  But thankfully, you are not physically present so have no idea what it is like here (see how that adds tension and excitement).  Continuing our Christmas carol theme, it is summed up well with, 'the weather outside is frightful,' and 'frosty wind made moan.'  Yes, I know it is after Christmas, but I cannot think of any adverse weather songs except 'rain rain go away' and 'its raining, its pouring' and it is 60 degrees too cold for rain so you will have to put up with more christmas music.  So, if you are reading this I would recommend finding a good book versus enduring yet another tedious conversation about the weather!

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Terribly funny

Dear aspiring authors (and anyone who needs a good laugh),

Check out these 'worst of' 2013 Christian book covers, there are some rather amusingly hideous ones.  This is also a good introduction on 'how not to do' book covers.  These almost make mine look good!

Enjoy!

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Poetry? Seriously?

Alas and alack, dear readers, I have slipped into the strange and stereotyped world of poetry, not intentionally mind you, but it has been a gradual decay as it were.  A love for hymn lyrics here, some Dr. Seuss there, a partial reading of Sir Robert Stevenson's 'Lady of the Lake,' Anne Shirley reading Tennyson, recently stumbling upon a lovely book of nursery rhymes, but thankfully Tolkien's elf poetry  had no ill influence, though I like his lyrics about other things, namely roads and lost kings, but one should not write poetry about imaginary worlds…the normal stuff is hard enough to understand.  I knew G. K. Chesterton wrote poetry, but I had avoided it, but someone wrote an article and included some which made me curious, and then I was hooked.  So your reading assignment is of a higher type today.  Find Chesterton's 'Poems' here.  I still do not understand some of his prose, but most of his poetry actually makes sense.  If you've figured out 'The Man Who was Thursday,' let me know, but only after you write a 56 page paper on his poetry.