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Holiday Blogger Swap

I signed up again this year for the Holiday Blogger Swap and my gift arrived today!  No, I haven’t opened it yet, but I did take some photos of it when it arrived and when I took the paper off the outside to reveal a neat holiday box.

I want to tease you with these photos.  I’ll post about what I received once the holidays are over.  For now, you’ll have to be content with these:

So what do you think is inside?

Interview With Liz Gallagher, Author of The Wrong Miracle

Liz Gallagher’s collection of poems, The Wrong Miracle, are not only love poems, but poems with a unique view on love.  Check out the synopsis at Salt Publishing.  Here’s a selection from her collection:

Sun Over a Tree Line

I was buying a croissant when I saw
the execution photo. Sometimes we focus
on the explorer — the tangled weed inside

every Because they said so. Nerves can
be as frayed as a sofa. Faint hoof prints
take over and a last wish for a dictator

is a pedicure. Measures of change are
contained in names once held
in a cell phone — a baker missing,

a family, moved. A city under siege
is a Humpty Dumpty — its people grab
door handles and door frames collapse.

Moth-eaten fabric covers all wars.
A problem is dead bodies — blankets
waterlog, headlights turn off and it is

all about inching forward like thieves.
A mistake magnifies within its own
dimensions. Under the gaze of a camera,

there are epiphanies — God becomes
a ragged fellow who moves
from tree to tree in the back of the mind.

He pursues the living and the dead stay dead.

Liz Gallagher took time out of her busy schedule to answer some interview questions.  I hope you will give her a warm welcome.

Thanks for inviting me here. It’s a great looking Blog and I know I am going to feel very relaxed and at home here.

Could you describe a little bit about what inspired you to become a poet and how The Wrong Miracle came about?

Well, Serena, truthfully, I never set out to be a poet as such, it sort of ‘happened.’  I’ve always loved writing and after a spell of maybe 20 years without writing in a creative way, I found myself going back to writing creatively after I went through a rather long and disciplined time of studying and being very much in the academic world., that is up until about 4 years ago.  I remember being at a beach barbeque and thinking: ‘Freedom’ ‘I’m going to live for the moment, no more studying’ and actually saying to a friend that I was finished with studying and being all academic and I remember she said to me something in the line of ‘You’re so disciplined in your study, what do you think you will do with all that free time you are going to have?’ And I remember answering that that was exactly it . . . free-time was going to be free-time and nothing was going to take that away from me!  But before I knew it, I was seeking out online writing forums and writing poetry and getting ultra-involved and addicted.

So as not to bore any readers who have been lovely enough (and interested enough) to follow the tour from the beginning, and to answer the question for you, Serena, (and any new readers who might be following,) I spoke on TFE’s blog about how The Wrong Miracle came about….(at TFE’s we had a poetry poteen party and danced till dawn . . . The address is the following if you want to pop over there.   While approaching the answer, mind the poteen bottles and plead total ignorance of everything if Inspector Columbo or Inspector Clousseau approach to ask questions . . . ‘I know nothing’ is the preferred answer . . . . TFE will explain why . . . I truly know nothing ; ))

Poetry is often considered elitist or inaccessible by mainstream readers. Do poets have an obligation to dispel that myth and how do you think it could be accomplished?

I think that, yes, poetry up until recently had been hijacked (and consequently suffocated and quietened) by certain academics to the extent that it had become exclusive terrain. This is something which definitely has happened, however, poets are now, literally, re-claiming poetry for themselves and for their audiences.  They are metaphorically (and sometimes literally) climbing academic ladders and dusting down books and blowing dust off and saying ‘Listen, here!’  Poets, and consequently, people in general, through poetry readings and poetry performances and literary festivals are breathing life back into poetry and taking it on to the streets to show that, yeah, poetry does matter.  It is not just a subject for academic study.  The thing that I feel amazed by and very motivated by is that people are willing to give poetry a second chance, as most people (of my age, anyway) would have had awful classroom experiences of poetry been analysed to death in an excrutiatingly boring way . . . I remember my English teacher in secondary school saying something like: ‘None of you are going to appreciate any of this poetry that we are about to do now, but in 20 years time, you might want to re-pay all of this a visit . . . and in doing so, you might remember me and what I said to you regarding poetry.’  I remember thinking I am going to remember him saying this and I bet to myself then and there that it wouldn’t be true . . . that I wouldn’t be going within a hair’s breadth of poetry ever again . . . but here I am!  What a shame a teacher like that couldn’t have thought of a more creative way to get poetry to us, we were ripe for poetry with all our 16 and 17 year old emotions seeking some form of outlet . . . Poetry, with justice done to it, would have been ideal here.  

So, Serena, basically, with the live poetry scene taking off really well, especially in Ireland, and in a tiny way, here in the Canaries, I think that poetry is becoming relevant in people’s everyday life.  Hopefully, it will keep on happening and that more and more people will get involved.

Do you have any obsessions that you would like to share?

Well, let’s see, I love the dark and writing in and into the dark.  I love being up drinking tea on my own at dawn.  

When I find a new poet’s work that I love, I become easily obsessed by them and seek their work out, high and low, and think ‘I’ve got to read everything they have ever written!’

Also chocolate at around 5 pm!  And a glass of wine at 10 pm. ; ) And also Thai massage, Thailand . . . and planning getaways! : ) 

How do you stay fit and healthy as a writer?

I have got two very demanding (and very amusing) dogs who bark the house down if I don’t take them on daily treks into the valley.  We also own a tumble-down farm so most days I try to do something there to make it less tumble-down looking!  The farm has six terraces which are step-like land masses and going from one spot to another involves lots of climbing.  And I eat lots of oranges because we have about twenty orange trees on the farm so that means oranges the whole year round!  Oh and yes!  I’m a 2-litre-a-day water drinker . . . I am always to be seen with a bottle in my hand (not the TFE-poteen-party type bottle!) 

Thank you so much for having me here, Serena…looking forward to popping back next week to continue our chat.

About the Poet: (Photo Credit: Vladi Valido)

Liz Gallagher was born and brought up in Donegal, Ireland. She has been living in Gran Canary Island for the past 14 years. She has an Education degree where she specialised in Irish language. She also has a Computer Science degree. She is at present doing research into online debating for her PhD. She began writing about 5 years ago and has won a variety of awards in both Ireland and the US: Best New Poet 2007 (Meridian Press, Virginia University) First Prize in The Listowel Writers’ Single Poem Competition 2009 and she was selected by Poetry Ireland for their 2009 Introductions Series in recognition of her status as an emerging poet.

Interview With Karen White

I recently had an opportunity to interview Karen White, author of The Girl on Legare Street, for the D.C. Literature Examiner.  It will be another two part interview.

If you are interested in my review of her book, The Girl on Legare Street, check it out.

You also can check out my review of The House on Tradd Street and her guest post about writing.

Ok, really what you want are the links to my interview with her, so here you go — part one and part two.  I hope you enjoy them!  Leave a comment, sign up for email alerts when new interviews are posted, and become a subscriber.

MJ Tapes and Karen White Winners

After sending along my copy of this book to Gautami at Everything Distils Into Reading, I drew winners for The Michael Jackson Tapes by Rabbi Shmuley Boteach giveaway.

Lucky Sandy from You’ve Gotta Read This! was the winner.  I should be mailing this book out soon.  Sorry for the delay!

Hopefully, you both enjoy the book.

The latest giveaway here on the blog was for Karen White’s latest addition to her ghostly mystery series.  The Girl on Legare Street is the second book in the series and there were over 30 entrants.

But the lucky winner this time was Jennifer of Up Close & Personal With LadyTink and The Movieholic & Bibliophile’s Blog.

I hope you gals enjoy your books.

Wanna win your own new book before the holidays?  Check out the latest giveaway for Searching for Pemberley by Mary Lydon Simonsen.  Deadline is Dec. 14.

Searching for Pemberley by Mary Lydon Simonsen

Mary Lydon Simonsen’s Searching for Pemberley starts was a premise many interviewers often ask authors about their fiction:  “Are any of your characters based upon real people?”  Did Jane Austen use real people to write the great love story of Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy?  Simonsen’s book may not offer the truth behind Austen’s characters, but it does spin a unique mystery tale through which one possible reality of Mr. Darcy and Ms. Bennet are discovered.

“‘Mr. Crowell, you don’t know me.  I’m Maggie Joyce, but I was wondering if . . .’  But that was as far as I got.

‘You’re here about the Darcy’s right?  Don Caton rang me to let me know you might be coming ’round.  Come through.  Any friend of Jane Austen’s is a friend of mine.'”  (Page 12 of the ARC)

Maggie Joyce is the main protagonist and an American from a coal mining town in Pennsylvania.  She quickly leaves her hometown of Minooka for Washington, D.C., to help with the government with its World War II-related administrative work.  Eventually she is stationed in Germany and later in England following the end of the war.  She meets a fantastic family, the Crowells, who help her unravel the real family behind Jane Austen’s characters.

“Beth gestured for me to follow her into the parlor.  She had a way of carrying herself that was almost regal, especially when compared to her husband, who reminded me of a former football player who had taken a hit or two.”  (Page 25 of ARC)

Told from Maggie’s point of view, the novel grabs readers with its immediacy as Maggie moves through war-torn Europe and reads through a variety of diary entries and letters to uncover the origins of Pride & Prejudice.  Readers who have read Austen’s novel once or more than a dozen times will recognize echoes of Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy in the Crowells and may even find parts of the mystery obvious.  However, this story is more than a look at where Austen may have found inspiration, it is about a nation (England) and its people in the midst of rebuilding after the devastation of the German blitzkrieg and World War II.  There also a healthy dose of romance between Maggie and two beaus that add to the tension.

“‘Nightmares from the war that I hadn’t had in ten, fifteen years came back.  Jesus, they all came back,’ he said, massaging his temples as if the act would block out any unwanted images.  ‘Picking up bodies and having them fall apart in my hands.  Stepping on limbs.  Being scared shitless during barrages.'”  (Page 254 of ARC)

Simonsen does an excellent job examining the shell shock felt by airmen and other military personnel and how their war experiences could impact their relationships with family, friends, and lovers.  While there are some occasions in this nearly 500-page book that are bogged down by too much detail, Simonsen’s characters are well developed and the twists and turns as Maggie unravels the mystery of the Bennets and the Darcys are fun.  The aftermath of World War II is well done and rich in emotional and physical detail, showing Simonsen’s deft research and keen eye.  Searching for Pemberley is an excellent addition to the every growing market of Jane Austen spin-offs.

This is the 8th book I’ve read that qualifies for the 2009 WWII Reading Challenge.  Though I officially met my goal of reading 5 WWII-related books some time ago, I’ve continued to find them on my shelves and review them here.  I’m sure there will be more, stay tuned.

Searching for Pemberley is the 6th item and fulfills my obligations under the Everything Austen Challenge 2009.   I hope that everyone has been reading along for this challenge.  It has been fun to see the mix of books and movies that everyone has reviewed.  I may even read another book before this challenge ends, since my main goal in joining was to read Persuasion, one of the only Austen novels I haven’t read.

Have you missed the giveaway for Searching for Pemberley?  Don’t worry there’s still time to enter.  Go here, and comment on Mary Lydon Simonsen’s interview for an additional entry.  Deadline is Dec. 14, 2009 at 11:59PM EST.


THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED!!

Additionally, I would like to thank Mary Lydon Simonsen and Sourcebooks for sending me a free copy of Searching for Pemberley for review.  Clicking on title links will bring you to my Amazon Affiliate page, no purchase necessary. 

Interview With Mary Lydon Simonsen, Author of Searching for Pemberley

Mary Lydon Simonsen’s Searching for Pemberley hit stores earlier this month and takes place shortly after World War II as American Maggie Joyce uncovers the mystery of which English families inspired Jane Austen to write Pride & Prejudice.

Ms. Simonsen was kind enough to take some time out of her busy schedule to answer a few questions about her book and her writing.  I hope you’ll enjoy the interview, stay tuned for my review of her book, and think about entering the giveaway.

Please welcome, Mary Lydon Simonsen.

Searching for Pemberley explores how real people could have inspired Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.  Is this an idea that you’ve discovered elsewhere or how did you decide to write about this aspect of the novel? 

I don’t know of anyone else who has written about Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy being modeled on real people. But I was intrigued by the idea of a man from England’s upper class marrying the daughter of a gentleman farmer “whose station in life is so decidedly beneath my own.” I was curious about what a real Lizzy and Darcy would have experienced in their courtship and marriage because they had a wide chasm to bridge because of their different places in society.

How much research did you do to create these characters who inspired Jane Austen?  And do you find that any of your characters are inspired by real people that you know or have known? 

I’ve been reading and studying about the Georgian/Regency Era since I first read Pride and Prejudice in my high school English class, and that’s going back decades. When I started to write the story, I already knew a lot about that time period, so there’s about 35 years of research in my novel. As for my inspiration for the characters, I don’t know anyone who is even remotely close to the privileged Fitzwilliam Darcy, but I do know a lot of down-to-earth Lizzy Bennets. My life experience is much closer to Maggie Joyce, my main character, who grew up in a coal mining town in the 1930s. I’m actually a coal miner’s granddaughter. (I hear Loretta Lynn singing in the background.)

Who is your favorite Jane Austen hero and why?
 

Definitely Elizabeth Bennet because she has spunk, something I definitely didn’t have when I was 21, Lizzy’s age. It took a lot of courage to stand up to Mr. Darcy and to say “no” to an offer of marriage from a man who had it all: looks, wealth, rank, and who was a scion of a prestigious family. Lizzy is her own person, and I’d like to think her independence is part of her attraction.

Most authors using classic characters and stories to spur their own creations fell in love with those characters and stories early on, but wanted something more.  Is this how you felt about Pride and Prejudice?  What motivated you to craft your own tale based upon Jane Austen’s story? 

As a teenager, I was very shy, and because of that, I wanted to be like the self-confident Elizabeth Bennet. If you read Pride and Prejudice, you will see that Mr. Darcy actually has very little dialog, but I took care of that. Over the years, Mr. Darcy and I, as Lizzy Bennet, have had some very interesting conversations, which always ended in his asking me to marry him. Who wouldn’t want to be the wife of Fitzwilliam Darcy? In a recent survey, Australian women voted for Mr. Darcy over Brad Pitt as their dream guy. I’m in full agreement with the results.  

Why choose Jane Austen novels versus other classic authors’ novels. 

I love Jane Austen’s wit, especially in Pride and Prejudice. Once you get into Victorian Era literature, things get a lot more serious, e.g., Jane Eyre and Mary Barton, and I didn’t want that. I write Austen fan fiction for meryton.com, and my stories are light, funny (I hope), low angst, and always have a happy ending.

Do you have any obsessions that you would like to share?
 

The only obsession I have at the moment, other than chocolate, is writing. Once I started writing fiction, which was only four years ago, I found it to be addictive, and I have to force myself to leave the computer room to do things like dust, run a vacuum, cook dinner. I’m sure I have carpal tunnel syndrome because of all the typing I do.

Which books have you been reading lately, and are there any you would like to recommend? 

May I recommend my own modern novel, The Second Date, Love Italian-American Style? It’s a light-hearted look at love in the Italian-American community of North Jersey. Personally, I thought it was really funny. I recently finished The Wordy Shipmates by Sarah Vowell and Murder at Longbourn by Tracy Kiely, both of which I enjoyed. I’m also reading a biography of Andrew Carnegie.

Finally, following Searching for Pemberley, do you have any other projects in the works? Do they deal with other classic literature or do you see yourself flourishing in the Pride and Prejudice market?  

I seem to have found a home at Sourcebooks, the leading publisher of Austen sequels in the country. They have bought the rights to two more novels with tie-ins to Pride and Prejudice. Longbourn to Pemberley (working title) will be out in December 2010, and More Than Tolerable (also a working title) will be out probably a year after that. I’ve also written a parody of Persuasion and a love story where Mr. Darcy is a werewolf for meryton.com

Obviously, I’m a big Austen fan. Thanks again for having me on your blog!

Thanks to you Ms. Simonsen for taking time to answer my questions.  Ok, here’s the giveaway details: 2 copies of Searching for Pemberley for U.S./Canada only.

1.  Leave a comment on this interview about what you found most interesting.
2.  Leave a comment on my review, which appears Dec. 8, for a second entry.
3.  Purchase a Pride & Prejudice spin-off or Jane Austen’s novel through any of the enclosed Amazon Affiliate links and email me (savvyverseandwit AT gmail DOT com) the purchase information for 3 additional entries.
4.  Follow this blog for another entry.

Deadline is Dec. 14, 2009 at 11:59 PM EST.

THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED!!

FTC Disclosure:  Clicking on images or titles will bring you to my Amazon Affiliate page; No purchase required. 

Mailbox Monday #59

Marcia at The Printed Page and Kristi of The Story Siren both sponsor memes in which bloggers share what books they’ve received in the past week.  I’m going to continue calling these Mailbox Mondays, but The Story Siren also has In My Mailbox.  It’s another edition of Mailbox Monday and In My Mailbox on Sunday!  Got a great tour starting on Monday, 12/7 for Mary Lydon Simonsen’s Searching for Pemberley.

Anyway, enough of that!  Let’s get to the books, shall we?!

1.  Ivy + Bean:  Doomed to Dance by Annie Barrows and Sophie Blackall, which I received for review.

2.  Government Girl by Stacy Parker Aab, which I received for TLC Book Tour.

3.  Our Choice:  A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis by Al Gore (audio), which I received from The Green Books Campaign after all you wonderful commentators checked out my review of Saffron Dreams (click for my review during the campaign).

4.  The Glass Room by Simon Mawer, which I received for review from BlueDot Literary

5.  The Lotus Eaters by Tatjana Soli, which I received for a TLC Book Tour.

6.  The Wives of Henry Oades by Johanna Moran, which I received from the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program.

7.  Kitty’s House of Horrors by Carrie Vaughn, which I received from Hachette Group for review.

8.  Broken Birds:  The Story of my Momila by Jeannette Katzir, which Anna at Diary of an Eccentric gave me over the weekend.

What did you get in your mailbox?!

FTC Disclosure:  Clicking on images or titles will bring you to my Amazon Affiliate page; No purchase required.

24th Virtual Poetry Circle

Welcome to the 24th Virtual Poetry Circle!  We’re one Virtual Poetry Circle away from the big giveaway.  Are you ready?

On December 12 everyone who has commented on these weekly events will have an opportunity to win some poetry for yourself.  I’ll pop your names in a hat and choose a winner.  All you have to do is keep commenting.  Easy right?!

OK, Here’s a poem up for reactions, interaction, and–dare I say it–analysis:

Remember, this is just for fun and is not meant to be stressful.

Keep in mind what Molly Peacock’s books suggested. Look at a line, a stanza, sentences, and images; describe what you like or don’t like; and offer an opinion. If you missed my review of her book, check it out here.

We’re back to contemporary poetry again today.  Today’s poem comes from Holocaust Poetry compiled by Hilda Schiff:

If
by Edward Bond (Page 155)

If Auschwitz had been in Hampshire
There would have been Englishmen to guard it
To administer records
Marshall transports
Work the gas ovens
And keep silent
The smoke would have drifted over these green hills

It’s not that all men are evil or creatures of instinct
We — even our subjective self — are products of history
Of political change
In history two things join
Our will and things beyond our will
We change what we are as a means of controlling these things
That is:  we create a new culture
We remain human only by changing
Each generation must create its own humanity

And the smoke will drift over these green hills
Our culture makes us barbarians
It does not allow us to live humanely
We must create a new culture
Or cease to be human

Let me know your thoughts, ideas, feelings, impressions. Let’s have a great discussion…pick a line, pick an image, pick a sentence.

I’ve you missed the other Virtual Poetry Circles, check them out here. It’s never too late to join the discussion.

War Through the Generations Challenge 2010: Vietnam War

2010 is right around the corner.  Have you signed up for your reading challenges yet?  I know you’ve seen some of mine, which I posted over Thanksgiving break.  Take a look if you’re interested.

But today isn’t about any old reading challenge.  Today is my announcement unveiling the 2010 War Through the Generations Reading Challenge on the Vietnam War.

In 2009, Anna and I were surprised by the number of participants.  Many of you already have finished your goals.  Don’t worry there are still prizes to be had.  So, congrats to you, and I hope you’ll think about joining us for the new year.

Sign ups for the 2010 Vietnam War Reading Challenge are up NOW.  Click here to find out the various reading goal options.

Sign up officially using this Google Form link.  We’d love to have you.  The minimum is 5 books in 12 months, and you know you want to see your name on this list.

If you’re not sure about joining because you haven’t seen many or read many Vietnam War fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or other books, you’re in luck!  We’re compiling a list for you.  Check out the recommended reading.

Signups for this challenge are ongoing throughout 2010, so you have plenty of time to decide based on books you have lined up or come across on a whim.

For those who sign up, we have a bunch of buttons for you to use on your blog, but Vietnam War specific buttons are still in the works.  Keep your eyes on the War Through the Generations blog for other announcements.

The only things I have left to talk about are the fun group reading project we have planned this year with Paco’s Story by Larry Heinemann, which we hope to have read and reviewed with everyone who participates midway through the challenge, and my own reading goals.

Ok, I guess I just did tell you about Paco’s Story!

So here are my reading goals; I will read 11 or more books throughout 2010 in which the Vietnam War is a primary or secondary theme.

At the Threshold of Alchemy by John Amen

the woman in the shower (Page 36)

the woman in the shower washes herself constantly and never ages.  she
scrubs her nails, shampoos her hair, lathers her body.  she’s attractive, and
many serenade her, offering love songs in various languages.  newspapers
send interviewers to ascertain her greater mission.  she receives letters from
admirers around the world.  political and religious leaders pay a visit.  a few
crazies try to break into the shower stall and molest the woman, but guards
throw them out.  one man masturbates, shooting his seed onto the glass
before he is arrested.  nothing, though, distracts or fazes the woman in the
shower.  she keeps lathering and scrubbing and rinsing.  generations pass;
the woman is considered a saint of sorts, her shower stall a mecca.  it’s 
assumed, finally, that the woman in the shower, the woman who never 
stops washing, has always been, always will be.  she’s a timeless fact, like air
or war or hunger or god.

At the Threshold of Alchemy by John Amen conjures profound statements about the human condition often from unusual or incongruous elements in nature, pop culture, and religion.  Many of these poems comment on the darker side of humanity, and the narrator tends to seek out destruction and mischief.  There are some longer poems in the collection that could become tedious for certain readers, but taken in slowly — one section at a time — readers can delve deeper into the verse.

“. . . Mary plants clematis and bougainvillea.
I’m writing ballads on a ’71 Gibson.  We’re purchasing
mulch, two tons of soil.  We’re collecting ripe moments,”  (Portraits of Mary, Page 43)

Vivid images and situations permeate these pages, and Amen is a poet prepared to comment on the taboo or the elephant in the room.  Several poems titled “missive” address unknown recipients and offer harsh criticisms in which the sarcastic undertones is palpable.

“Had I known you were more concerned with baubles
than the outcomes of the election, I’d have planned
to craft a wreath for the occasion.  Bless tabloids
and puppet governments, I take my salvation as
I can get it.”  (Missive #12, Page 68)

Musical elements also weave their way into the poems, much like they did in Amen’s More of Me Disappears (click for my review).  Entwined with these musical lines, readers will note an atmosphere of self-deprecation created by the narrator’s repentance or observations.

“Forgive me for eating this bountiful meal.
Forgive me for sleeping beneath this roof.
Forgive me for making love to my wife.
Forgive me for everything I fail to see and do
and avenge.  Forgive me for this insular life.”  (Rampage, Page 24) 

At the Threshold of Alchemy by John Amen is a collection that readers will need to let simmer, breathing in each line like an exotic incense.  Readers can read each poem in this collection more than once and still uncover new layers of meaning.  From short poems to long poems, this collection has a variety to please a multitude of readers. 

***On a side note, At the Threshold of Alchemy is published on acid-free, recycled paper.***  Ever since the Green Books Campaign, I’ve been keeping a watchful eye on my books to see what their “green” properties may be.

FTC Disclosure:  I received a free copy of At the Threshold of Alchemy from the poet John Amen for review.  Additionally, title and image links will bring readers to my Amazon Affiliate page; no purchases are necessary, but are appreciated to cover the costs of international giveaway shipping.

I read this book as part of the recent Thankfully Reading Weekend Challenge.  Did you participate?  Which books did you read?  I only read two.

This also qualifies as my 8th book for the Poetry review challenge.