Today's post comes from a short story that entered my life long ago, but recently re-entered it thanks to the swag obtained from the Vintage Open Day: ‘Kew Gardens’ by Virginia Woolf. It is an ecstatic account of a sunny afternoon spent amongst the flowers, which sings with lyricism, colour and life. It is stunning, as hopefully the quote below, the first paragraph of the story, will demonstrate:
6.5.11
2.5.11
7 People I'd Like To Be [Friends With] When I Grow Up
Everyone needs role models. Here are mine:
29.4.11
A Royal Wedding Tribute
My friend's Mum provided all this beautiful china... I didn't make all this :) |
Labels:
Carol Ann Duffy,
Miscellaneous,
My Rants
25.4.11
Is this Machine Lying to Me?
At the beginning of last month I read a very entertaining post by Helen Caldwell on her blog 'My Writing Life' about a piece of online software called 'I Write Like...' which tells you, based on a passage or two, which famous writer your work most resembles.
She got Agatha Christie for prose, Chuck Palahniuk for blog posts and H.P. Lovecraft for interviews. I just did it too and got the following results:
She got Agatha Christie for prose, Chuck Palahniuk for blog posts and H.P. Lovecraft for interviews. I just did it too and got the following results:
Labels:
Jane Austen,
Miscellaneous
22.4.11
Book Quote Friday: Searching for the Apolitical
Whilst involved in the conversation about whether writing needs to be political to matter on this blog a few weeks ago, I tried to think of a novel that, rather than engaging with the politics of its era or setting, shunned any discussion of them, and was all the the richer for it. So often the personal struggles of characters are wider political commentary, and on occasion, if they is no political feeling in a novel, it can be unclear whether they were shunning involvement in it or whether there was just nothing going on at the time.
A thought then came to me, a whisper of a memory of a review, which turned out to be this:
Labels:
Book Quote Friday,
Sebastian Faulks,
Vintage,
Writing Theory
18.4.11
100 Things...
There is nothing for me to add to this. Just read it:
100 Things About a Novel by Koreanish.
It's perfect and ethereal and lovely. And true.
100 Things About a Novel by Koreanish.
It's perfect and ethereal and lovely. And true.
Labels:
Miscellaneous
15.4.11
Literature in Art, Part One: Yohji Yamamoto at the V&A
Last week I went to one of my favorite places on earth - the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the V&A for short - to see the retrospective exhibition of Yohji Yamamoto’s work that has been on show there since March. It was, as expected, beautiful and interesting, and put me much in mind of several writers, nuggets of literary history and distinctive literary styles, as things are apt to do.*
Labels:
Ernest Hemingway,
Haruki Murakami,
Japan,
Reviews,
Russia,
the V and A,
Tolstoy,
Yohji Yamamoto
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