Showing posts with label My blogger buddies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My blogger buddies. Show all posts

09/11/2011

DEBRA BROWN - THE WONDERFUL AUTHOR AND READER COMMUNITY - GUESTPOST AND DOUBLE GIVEAWAY

Join me and welcome author Debra Brown on Fly High! Read her guestblog and leave your comment + e-mail address to enter the double giveaway contest:
1. A signed paperback copy of Debra's "The Companion of Lady Holmeshire" for US and Canada readers only

2. An e-book version of the same book for readers from the rest of the world. 



Please, specify if you enter the contest from the US or elsewhere. This giveaway ends on November 16th

12/09/2011

WELCOME TO BBWA 2011! DAY ONE - COMMUNITY SPIRIT


As you know Fly High is not a place to discuss  books only , but books and literature have always been an important presence in my life, both real and virtual. This great celebration ,  Book Blogger Appreciation Week, which is meant to give awards to best ones in the huge community of Book Bloggers, is a great occasion to celebrate books and blogging all together, meeting old and new friends, discovering new blogs and sites.
Day 1, which is today, is meant to highlight a couple of bloggers that have made book blogging a unique experience for us. They can be our mentors, a blogger that encouraged us to try a different kind of book, opened our eyes to a new issue, made us laugh when we needed it, or left the first comment we ever got on our blog.
In the first steps of my blogging experience, two bloggers have been very inspirational and also very supportive of my first attempts. Both have wonderful book blogs with thousands of  visitors everyday and hundreds of regular followers. 

08/08/2010

MY BLOGGER BUDDIES - MEET JULIET D001 / LADY MARIAN D001


When I first noticed her I thought she wa  a romantic, passionate Juliet. Her Romeo was Richard Armitage, it seemed. I found her JULIETD001 videos  dedicated to Richard’s characters (especially Lucas and Guy) on Utube and liked them. Then I met her by chance on Twitter .Well,  I met LADYMARIAND001 , and that Lady Marian was a bit naughty but very amusing. At first I didn’t understand they were the same person! But after a while… I GOT IT!!!
Today I’m happy she’s my guest on Fly High! and glad to have the chance to ask her some questions.

First of all, shall I call you Juliet, Marian or… the Nightwatchman?
Hi Mary, I seem to answer to most things these days… but Juliet is probably the one I’d rather be known as…she’s a lot less complicated than poor Marian. In fact I’m really not sure how I got into the Twitter lark in the first place, or why I had the notion to use Marian as a character. Problematic at best.

Would you please tell us something more about yourself?
Well I am Juliet…and I live in the lovely UK not far from the beautiful city of Bath in Avon. I live with my OH and I have 3 cats that seem to see me as their surrogate mother, Cats! such funny animals. One aptly called Gisborne! And he certainly is a handful..
I am a senior Manager by day and sometimes night.. And let’s just say it can at times be both challenging and full of stress! But I love it and would happily work 24 hours if I could. I have a passion for Aviation and I’m currently studying for my PPL private pilots license. I enjoy music…history and visiting places of interest. I also have a passion for Art and have been lucky enough to have sold a couple of pieces.

Gisborne (not Juliet's cat, of course)

Both Marian and Juliet are passionate, unconventional heroines if we compare them to women in their relative historical contexts. Do you feel you are more like Juliet or Marian?
OOoh tough one, I’m fairly cynical about love and romance! However in Marian’s defense, I am fiercely independent and a bit of a rebel. Tell me something can’t be done and I’ll show you why it can. I’m something of a tomboy and a rebel at heart. So I guess I do have some of her traits…fiery and stubborn! But fiercely loyal…to my friends. I don’t suffer fools gladly…

Proud  and stubborn, OK.  But how could you resist him?

Now, this question comes naturally to my mind. Is your ideal man more a Romeo (a dreamer, conventional but passionate lover, a bit naive) or more a Gisborne type?
OMG! That’s a tough one; I tend to go for the bad boys so I guess…it would have to be Gisborne type. I’d rather be challenged by a man…in terms of intellect and respect. Not sure Gisborne falls into those categories?*smiles* but he’s awfully nice to look at!

Do you really think he is not your guy?

I'm afraid,  you don't know him very well Marian!  I bet he hides many interesting thoughts behing his frowning look. But let's go on...Of course Richard Armitage and his work is one interest we share. What is among his roles and characters the one you’ve liked the most so far and which is instead your least favorite?
I think my favorite would have to be Lucas purely from a character depth POV. Lucas has a lot of history; I’ve studied him pretty closely in my videos. He’s misunderstood, full of pain and questions everything. My least favorite gosh…about to run for cover here, most likely anything he’s done where he’s not had a primary role.*safe answer* I confess if we are talking from a personal gratification view then once again then Lucas and Gisborne …it doesn’t get much better than those two.


 Let’s talk about your videos. I love your Lucas / Elizabeta video “Tell me you love me?” I’ve watched it so many times! First of all because Lucas North in series 7 is one of the things I re-watch most willingly among Richard’s roles, then because I love his interaction with his ex-wife in the first episodes, finally because I’m fond of the Coldplay and, especially, of this song. Have you got one of your videos, which is special to you for any reason?
Well I try not to watch them if I’m honest once they go up, but I’m always interested in what the viewer draws from them. I’d say at the moment, and it does change, but Eternal Sleep Song is a favorite purely because it just came so easy. I like it when you find the right song and the clips just flow. It surprised me at just how much people did actually like it. I think a lot of it is about getting the song just right. So I like to spend a lot of time searching. Music speaks volumes about what you want to say on an unconscious level.

1. ETERNAL SLEEP SONG




 


2. TELL ME YOU LOVE ME?



 

Does a project of yours usually start from the song or from the images?
Oh it has to be a song that inspires me to get on the laptop and start gathering clips together. Lyrics are equally important so you can set the theme and mood…helps me to decide the direction I want to take. Also depends on what mood I’m in too! LOL
 How long does it usually take you to create a video?
It’s a good question but a tough one to answer, if it’s a fast one…then I could do it in a couple of days if it’s a romantic one it usually takes more time. Experimenting with effects and overlays etc. Sometimes you just have to walk away if it’s not flowing and come back to it another day. You have to be in the right frame of mind or inspired and I like to say.
 My blog is dedicated to my interests which, Richard Armitage included, are reading, period drama, movies, blogging, art, theatre and long walks. Do we share anything more ?
Well I have a few passions..aside from the lovely Mr A. One being I studied a lot about the Arthurian Legend and it’s something along with history that’s always interested me. I enjoy period drama, The Tudors being another favorite of mine. I’m more of a history girl in the sense that I like. Greek mythology. I love films especially horror. I’m not conventional in the sense that I like chick flicks. I’m more of an action movie, sci fi kind of girl. Aliens being amongst my favorites. Where the hero is a woman! I like anything to do with ghosts and the paranormal. Always fancied being a ghost buster! lol

What is you most recurrent dream? Your most recurrent nightmare?
OMG thinks…um where I’m being chased by a tornado? Make of that what you will? Laughs.  I have no idea what it means. I do know I dream a lot less than I used to. But I do dream in color and I do see myself, as in I actually see myself in my dreams. Nightmare…probably the most recent one was of my mum, who sadly passed away about 12 years ago being in the room with me. That was scary.

I’ve discovered you can speak Italian. Can you explain how that comes and tell me something in my language about … love, for example. Hold your tongue, please! I BEG YOU. I have already my personal troubles at keeping Red-Self quiet on Fridays!
Sure, my father whose parents were Italian was born in a small town Misilmeri Nr Palermo. He came over to England with his parents when he was in his early teens. They lived in London originally and then moved to just outside Bath. Where he met my late mother…. and so the upshot being I was always brought up with a sort of dual heritage. And I love this! I love the history of Italy…*Yes I love the Godfather film too* I love the culture and the people. I inherited some of my father’s and I’m told some of my grandfather’s temper and stubbornness. But I see it as a gift not a curse. I still have family over there and we keep in touch. Something about love? Okay see below. This is a beautiful Italian sonnet, and was one of my father’s favorites. I believe he gave a copy to my mum. How romantic is that? It tells of a man struck from the moment he lays eyes on his true love. It is a beautiful sonnet .

Francesco Petrarca,  Love Sonnets
Benedetto sia 'l giorno, et 'l mese, et l'anno,
et la stagione, e 'l tempo, et l'ora, e 'l punto,
e 'l bel paese, e 'l loco ov'io fui giunto
da'duo begli occhi che legato m'anno;
et benedetto il primo dolce affanno

ch'i' ebbi ad esser con Amor congiunto,

et l'arco, et le saette ond'i' fui punto,

et le piaghe che 'nfin al cor mi vanno.
Benedette le voci tante ch'io
chiamando
il nome de mia donna ò sparte,

e i sospiri, et le lagrime, e 'l desio;
et benedette sian tutte le carte
ov'io fama l'acquisto,
e 'l pensier mio,
ch'è sol di lei, sí ch'altra non v'à parte.

English Translation
Oh blessed be the day, the month, the year,
the season and the time, the hour, the instant,
the gracious countryside, the place where I was
struck by those two lovely eyes that bound me;
And blessed be the first sweet agony
I felt when I found myself bound to Love,
the bow and all the arrows that have pierced me, t
he wounds that reach the bottom of my heart.
And blessed be all of the poetry I scattered,
calling out my lady's name,
and all the sighs, and tears, and the desire;
Blessed be all the paper upon which I earn her fame,
and every thought of mine, only of her, and shared with no one else.

 What do you like most of your virtual life? What are the cons, instead, of your online activities?
I enjoy it. But my housework tends to suffer! LOL


My last questions are for … Lady Marian. Have you forgiven Guy for what he did to you?
He burned my house to the ground. Stood by when I was in danger….although okay he did get me down from the tree…Hmmmm the list appears to be endless…he tried to kill Robin…should I go on? lol
Well, I actually meant ... did you forgive him for killing you but ... OK, if you're answering ... hence .. you're alive! But,  anyhow, do you realize it was your fault? That you misbehaved, tricked and cheated the poor man all the time? (Sorry for being so blunt! ) LOL
Me? Laughs.  And I thought I gave as good as I got!...he was bad…very very naughty


Gosh!  I can't totally agree with you... But ... OK. Last question . If you could go back in time, would you say YES to his passionate marriage proposal?
He tried to kill the king and then tried to lie about it, I could never marry a man who’d do that! Lol But between you and me Are you kidding? Hell ... Yes! LOL

Thank you Juliet /Lady Marian D001! It's been a great pleasure to have you here and knowing you a bit better. See you on Twitter or on Utube!

01/08/2010

MY BLOGGER BUDDIES - MEET LUA FOWLES


Not long ago I found Lua’s comment on one of my posts, followed her avatar, got to  BOWL OF ORANGES and discovered a very sensitive and talented blogger. A friendly suggestion, after reading her answers to my questions, go to her blog to discover more about her and her writing. You'll be surprised.


 First of all Lua,  many thanks for being here with us today. As usual, before I start with my questions, I’ll let you introduce yourself to our readers...
Of course. I’m a twenty-something aspiring writer from Istanbul. I graduated from law school and practiced for a week before I realized that I wasn’t going to be able to practice law and write as a hobby. The desire to tell stories and become a published writer was too strong to resist and the fact-based world of law was not something I wanted to be a part of. So I quit my job to become a full-time writer. I wrote my first novel, ‘Closed Eyes, Change of Heart’ shortly after that and I’m currently revising it. In less than two months I’m moving to UK to get my MA degree in creative writing at the University of Kent.

 Wow! Kent is a wonderful region in  England. Fingers crossed for your degree, then! Back to our chat. I’ve always written and read much since I was a child. I dreamt of becoming a writer but left that dream back in the world of my childhood . It was not my life. But I find writing still so challenging, intriguing, relieving . To scribble has become a necessity. What is it so fascinating in writing to you?
I think that would have to be the sense of freedom it provides. I love writing, telling stories and creating worlds but there is something else which makes writing so vital for me. We live in a world where we’re bombarded with information all the time, and we constantly have to make choices about what’s right & wrong, good & evil, acceptable & inadmissible. We’re expected to choose, pick a side and stick to it.

A story is not the truth nor the lie but the point where those two lines intersect. It gives you the best of two worlds, and the freedom to be able to get out of your comfort zone, take risks and experience different perspectives.
Have you got any favourite topic /subject you love to write about? Your favourite genre? Do you usually write in English
I read widely, as widely as I possibly can because I believe that is necessary if you wish to become a writer. I write literary fiction. The main reason for that is because I find human nature fascinating. ‘Why people do what they do and why two people act differently when they face the same situation?’ These are some of the questions that inspire me to write.
I mostly write in English, this is partly because I want to get published in UK but also because I’m attending school there. But I still write short stories in my native language (Turkish) from time to time.

What about routines? I’ve heard many writers talk about their writing routines. It makes the whole thing so less charming or poetic. But I imagine you writing in front of your window looking at the sea, early in the morning, with a huge hot cup of coffee. Did I figure out the right scene?
Yes, you did!  I do have a routine because I can get distracted too easily, I have a very short attention span so keeping a routine is important for me to get some work done. That said, I do agree with you, it does kill the charm a bit and make the whole process a little less poetic.
I usually wake up around 6 am and have my breakfast, make a nice cup of Turkish coffee and sit down to write around 6.30. My goal is 2000 words everyday and it takes me three, sometimes four hours to complete my daily goal.

What is the best and the worst thing which has happened to you since you’ve decided to become a writer?
The best thing? I’ve never been happier in my life. That is probably because I haven’t started to query yet so if you ask me in about 4 to 5 months, the answer might change.
The worst thing? Many of my close ones, relatives and friends, didn’t like the idea of me quitting my job as a lawyer to become a writer. I had to listen to a lot of advice and preachment which I never asked for. They told me that writing is best done as a hobby. I disagree; I believe writing is best done as how you wish to do it. If you like to do it as a hobby, if that’s what makes you happy, then that is what you should be doing. But if you want to have a career as a writer, then you need to make some sacrifices and serious commitments.

I mentioned the sea because I imagine Turkey as a white and blue country. Something like the image I have of Greece. What is it like, instead, where you live? Would you like to live somewhere else? I live in the mountains and would love to live by the sea, for instance!
Istanbul is my muse. I was born here and grew up listening to the old tales of the Byzantine times and Ottoman Emperor. It’s the bridge, literally, that connects Europe to Asia and you can see the influence of both cultures here, it also proves that they can live together in piece and harmony. It is a true mosaic; many different cultures, ethnic roots and religious beliefs under one roof… It’s quite impossible to live here and not be inspired .
I’ve lived abroad before; 2 years in Switzerland and I am excited about living in the UK this year. I love to travel, discover new lands, hear new stories so I’m hoping this will be an exciting adventure!

You are a wonderful versatile blogger. Your personal blog , BOWL OF ORANGES , has got lots of readers every day. Your blogposts are thought - provoking and so well written! What do you think of the blogosphere? In what way can blogging help a writer like you in search of a publisher and readers?
First of all, thank you so much!  To tell you the truth, Bowl of Oranges is a place where I write to express my thoughts & feelings all thorough this journey of becoming a published writer so most of the time, I don’t think about what I should be writing but I write about my experiences and how I feel about them.
I truly believe the blogosphere is a great opportunity to become a part of a community that is difficult to find elsewhere.
When I started blogging eight moths ago, I pretty much had no idea how to blog, I didn’t follow any blogs at that time and wasn’t sure what I was doing. Then I stated to meet with other aspiring and published writers, fellow bloggers and realized that we have something unique here. Where else would you have the opportunity to get to know so many wonderful people who share the same interests as you do from so many different parts of the world? The feedback, the support and the motivation is what makes blogging so great.
That said, like everything else in life, it does have some down sides. It takes quiet bit of time and if you don’t watch it, it can become a distraction.

What kind of reader are you? Does writing leave any time to read?
I am, by all means, a slow reader!  First and foremost, I read for pleasure. When I pick up a book, I read it like a reader and then like a writer, I like to get lost inside the world and enjoy the story before I start analyzing it in means of art & craft.
I think ‘I can’t find the time to read because I write’ is not a valid excuse. Reading is not optional if you want to write, so I make sure to make time to read everyday. Not just because I have to but also because I LOVE books and reading.

What are your favourite authors and books?
Oh boy- I don’t think I can answer this one! I have so many but let’s see…
I’m a big fan of John Fowles, Milan Kundera, Orhan Pamuk, Borges, Poe and Doris Lessing…
When it comes to Jane Austen, I think the word ‘obsessed’ is more accurate, I don’t know the number of the times I’ve read the ‘Persuasion’.

Oh! Persuasion is my favourite Austen novel, too! I also love its adaptations, both. As you know, I love period drama very much, but also movies in general. What about you? Have you got any favourite ones?
Yes, I know that and since I started to follow your blog a couple of months ago, I think my knowledge of period movies relatively increased, I have to thank you for that!
I love all forms of story telling and of course movies are a big part of that. I’m a huge fan of Tim Burton ever since I saw the ‘Beetlejuice’ when I was 12. One of his movies, ‘Big Fish’ is one of the best movies ever made about the art of storytelling.

Beside reading and writing which are “profession”, are there any hobbies you spend your free time doing?
I have two dogs; Chuck and Apple, so in my free time, I like to take long walks with them. I also love photography but I’ll be the first one to tell you that I’m really not that good at it…

What are you working on at the moment?
At the moment I’m revising and editing my novel, hopefully in four or five moths I’ll start querying (fingers crossed). I’m also writing short stories meanwhile I’m revising my novel to keep the creative energy flowing…

Well, Lua this is all for now. You are a very talented and sensitive young woman and it's been such a pleasure to read your answers! I wish the best for your future. Keep up the good work on your blog. Good luck with your degree and your writing. I hope to have you back as my guest to present your first published novel! Very soon!

The best of Sundays to you all!
MG

11/07/2010

MY BLOGGER BUDDIES - MEET CATHLEEN HOLST, WRITER



First of all , thanks Cathleen for being on Fly High today and accepting to answer my questions. What about introducing yourself briefly to our readers , before we start our conversation? I’m a thirty-something wife, mother of three amazing children, and writer of women’s fiction hell bent on conquering the world one book at a time. (kidding...kind of)

I’ve found you via twitter, I think, but it is so difficult to remember how and when one gets in contact in this wonderful crowded blogoworld … then I started following your site and reading your on line publication of Everleigh in NY. It’s such great fun to read her adventures. How did you get to create your heroine? Is she anything like you? Thank you. I’m so glad you’ve enjoyed reading ‘Everleigh in NYC’. It’s been such a blast to write. It’s good to know there are folks out there who enjoy reading it as much as I’ve enjoyed writing it. Honestly. When I first began writing ‘Everleigh’ she was nothing like she is now. It’s taken countless drafts to get her to where she is now. And I really love her. We do share a lot of the same traits. The biggest being we’re both clumsy as all get out. Ask my husband—he has countless stories of the number of times I ended up wearing more of my dinner instead of eating it. When I think back on it, it’s amazing he asked me out for second date. I still have a hard time leaving the dinner table without having gotten some part of my dinner on me.

Are you going to post the entire story on line? I’ve read on your site that your are going to publish it as a book . When will it be out?
No. I’m only posting the first four chapters, as a bit of a teaser. ‘Everleigh’ is scheduled for release Nov. 2010. So if you want to know how the rest of the story plays out, you’ll have to buy the book.


This story is so amusing …it reminds me of Bridget Jones’ s Diary. It’s beautiful when you can laugh out loud as well as get intrigued in a love story. What do you have in mind for Everleigh? A series?
It’d be nice! Wow! What a huge compliment, reminding you of Bridget Jones’s Diary. Helen Fielding is a master. Thank you so much. *sniffs, wiping tears from eyes*
I’ve never thought of turning ‘Everleigh’ into a series, but I suppose if my legion of fans *clears throat* demand more of her, then I will certainly give it to them. Who am I to deny my people? *wink and a cheesy smile*



(read chapter 1)

Is this your first novel or have you written others?
Yes and no. I’ve written three others, but this version is a complete rewrite of my first novel. So in a way, it’s really my fourth. Did that make sense?

 How does it feel being a published author? Did you always want to be a writer?

 Getting published is such an amazing feeling. It’s nice to know that all the sacrifices I’ve had to make while writing are actually going to result in something tangible. I know I’m going to blubber like a baby when I finally get to hold my book in my hands. There’ll be loads of mascara-laden tears smeared all over the pages. Hell, I think I might blubber now just thinking about it. Actually, I didn’t always know I wanted to be a writer. I’ve always known that I enjoyed it, but as far as writing for a living...never crossed my mind.

How many hours a day do you dedicate to your writing? Have you got a writing routine?
When I’m on a roll I can write for hours on end. Literally all day to the point where I forget to eat. (My waistline SO needs more of those days.) And then there’s those other days where I’d rather do anything BUT write because the words just aren’t there. I need a writing routine. I usually do my best work in the early morning hours. I’m not a night owl. I wish I was, I could get a lot more done. But I’m old, I need all the beauty sleep I can get. Really. You do NOT want to see me with less than 8 hours of sleep. It’s not pretty. I promise. It usually involves a lot of under my breath swearing, bags under my eyes that would rival a suitcase, and there’s not enough caffeine in the world that can bring me around. Trust me, I’ve tried.

What does it take to be a good writer and what, instead, to be a popular writer? What about being both? (I know this can be a hard one! )
This is a hard one. I think to be a good writer, or really just a writer in general, you have to read. Stephen King said in his book ‘On Writing’ that if you don’t have time to read, then you don’t have time to write. It’s so true. I find that when I don’t read regularly, I stall. You know, the whole ‘words in equal words out’ thing. Also, know your genre. Seriously. That would be like me trying to write a believeable sci-fi novel without ever reading a single sci-fi story. Sure, I could write one, but it’d be crap. As for being a popular writer, I think it’s just a matter of taping into something the vast majority can relate to. But usually when that happens, it’s just sheer luck. No one could possibly plan that. It just happens.

You stated somewhere in your blog that you don’t mind if your books are considered ChickLit. What is the reason of your choosing this genre ?
Oh, I SO did not choose this genre. It totally chose me. My passion was in historical fiction. That’s what I wanted to write. But Everleigh had other plans, clearly. I’ve read chick lit off and on for many years, but just devoured historicals so I was a bit surprised when ‘Everleigh in NYC’ not only came to life, but came from me. I love writing this genre, though. It’s really fun, and I get to live vicarously through my characters. They get to live the fabulous life while I’m stuck in the real world doing laundry. Totally unfair now that I think about it.

I know you also wrote/are writing historical fiction? Have you already published anything in that genre? What’s your favourite historical period?
I have two historicals that are works in progress. I haven’t published anything in that genre, and may never. And the middle ages are by far my favorite time period in history. I mean, what’s hotter than a knight mounted on his destrier, or jousting in tournaments? I love it. All of it.


 And what about reading? What are your favourite genres, authors? Have you got a very special book on your bed-side table you love re-reading from time to time?
I love reading. Reading is like breathing. I can’t NOT do it. I have quite a few fave authors. Lindsey Kelk, Sophie Kinsella, JK Rowling, Elizabeth Chadwick, Allison Weir, Stephen King, Ken Follett (Pillars of the earth and World Without End were just plain brilliant). Right now, I’m loving Lindsey Kelk’s ‘I Heart Hollywood’, the follow up to her debut ‘I Heart New York’. I love her work. Seriously. Keep an eye on that one. She’s going places.

My blog is dedicated to my several interests and , among them period movies/drama. Do you like watching films? What about costume films? Have you got any favourite ones?
Oh boy do I love movies. I totally adore period pieces. ‘Sense and Sensibility’ is one of my all-time favorites. I mean, it just doesn’t get any better than that. Another of my faves is ‘Under the Tuscan Sun’. That movie just makes me plain ol’ happy. By the end, I’m ready to pack up, move to Italy, buy a villa and have the muscular descendents of Roman gods help with all the lifting.

I must admit I have a crush on a charming Brit actor who peeps up here and there on my blog. But I remember I noticed a handsome presence on your “about me “ page of your site . So… can you share your not-so-secret- passion with us? Does Robert , the hot guy Everleigh has just met , resemble him anyway?
*dreamy sigh* Hugh Jackman. I’ll talk about him all you want. My husband refers to him as my boyfriend. And he is, he just doesn’t know it. And yes, Hugh Jackman is the whole reason I made the character, Robert Gates, Australian. I must admit though, in the beginning Robert Gates was English, but after seeing the movie ‘Australia’, Hugh was everything I’d imagined Robert to be. So I changed him. And he’s all the better for it. So, if Hugh Jackman happens to read your blog he should know that I will accept no other actor to portray him in the big screen version of ‘Everleigh’.



 Have you got a question you’d like to ask our readers and commenters? I guess how many people would be interested in participating in a book giveaway? (does that sound stupid...I don’t know what to say, really.)

 Thanks Cathleen for being here and sharing with us! We’ll wait for you back when your book is published! Good luck with your writing!
Thanks so much, Maria. This was great fun. I loved your questions.

You can find Cathleen Holst at her site Cathleen's Fiction and ... other ramblings ( where you can read the first 4 chapters of her novel)  and on Twitter. Thanks for reading!

27/06/2010

MY BLOGGER BUDDIES - TALKING WITH BECKY

Becky lives and works in Utah but,  whenever she's on holidays,  she stays in Hawaii with her mother. She is a teacher of English literature, like me. She also loves reading, period movies and blogging  just like me. I couldn't resist from asking her to be one of My Blogger Buddies guests. Meet her.

 Let’s start with something about yourself and your life. And, please, don’t forget to tell us  what spending one's own holidays in such a wonderful exotic place like Hawaii is
During the school year, I actually live in Utah (on the mainland), but during the summer and Christmas, I stay in Hawaii with my mother. My mother lives in a small town on the island of Oahu, which is a beautiful place for a tired school teacher to escape to! I grew up in Idaho, very much a western farm girl, but was a weirdo (according to my dad and many in his family) because I liked to read so much. I went on to college and grad school, and would have kept going, but realized that I enjoyed teaching high school. When I’m not teaching, I like to read, cook, travel, and now blog!

We actually live in so different distant countries! But we share much, don’t we? What about teaching ? And teaching English literature? Do you like it or would you rather do something else?
Yes, we do share a lot. Teachers share a language that is universal! I think fatigue being the top of that list. (Ha, ha!) I really love teaching English, especially now that I get a chance to really dive into literature with my AP Literature students (AP stands for Advanced Placement), and I’m really looking forward to teaching a Popular Fiction class in the fall. To be honest, I had intended to go on and get my PhD in English, Cultural Studies, but only because I’m so crazy about what we read and study. I think that I’m well suited for high school though, and might reconsider the PhD somewhere down the road, but just not now.

What are best and worst moments in your (our) job?
My best moment was last year when I heard my students had a 74% pass rate on the AP exam. Becuase we had such a poor pass rate at my school, as low as 30%, I had taken on a huge challenge when I accepted to teach the AP Literature classes. I really just wanted the students to have confidence that they could pass, and a good track record is one big way of doing that. With one really good year under my belt, I have high hopes that this year that just concluded will have a great pass rate as well. We’ll see in July!

As for the worst moment? That’s tough. I can’t think of a truly “worst” as being one moment, but can say that during my first year of teaching, I had a burly young man cheat on a vocabulary quiz one time. When he saw that he got a zero because he cheated, he stood up in front of the class and said, “F--- you, Ms. R! F--- you.” The students in the class swung around to look at me with mouths wide open. In my characteristic, sarcastic nature, I simply shuddered and went, “No thank you. Ick.” The class immediately started saying things like, “Oh, snap!” “Dude, you got burned,” etc. He just looked at me confused, so I said, “See. You need to understand what words mean so you don’t make stupid mistakes like that one again. I guess you might just need English?” Now, I didn’t do it to be popular with them, but I did want to diffuse the tension immediately, and downplay what was happening so I could calm him down, and get back to business. The burly boy went down to the office, later apologized to me, and I seemed to have him and my other students with me from that point on. I’m not saying my response was textbook, by any means, but it was honest and in the moment.

You are an avid reader and you often reflect on reading on your blog. What kind of reader are you and what’s reading to you?
I think I’m such an eclectic reader! Although I love ethnic literature and contemporary fiction, I am usually so frazzled that I just want a fast, fun, and engaging escape read. I get bored VERY easily, so am not really one to sit down and read a book in one sitting. I love to read at night, or while soaking in a hot bath (which I absolutely can not do in Hawaii...so I substitute the bath with a beach).

Have you read something recently, you would warmly recommend?
Actually, I really loved Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follet. I read it over Christmas, and I’m still thinking about it! I also have to say, that as a Jane Austen fan, I really love Sharon Lathan’s Pride and Prejudice novels. I’m not always so thrilled with Austen knock offs, but fell in love with the romantic, honest, adult relationship portrayed. Everyone has their own opinion on the Jane Austen reprisal, and some are better than others, but I love the voice and style of Lathan’s books.

Which is, instead , among your past reads the one you most love re-leafing through from time to time?
Oh, I love rereading! In fact, I just wrote a post on this very thing. I have a group of books I’ll reread every year, or skim through. I recently reread A Hopeless Romantic, Gone With the Wind, scenes from God of Small Things, and of course, the Harry Potter novels, which I’m reading right now.

On my TBR list right now, I have Catching Fire (the second in the Hunger Games trilogy), more in the Sookie Stackhouse vampire series, The Dead Tossed Waves (follow up to The Forest of Hands and Teeth), the final book in the Luxe series, and the Harry Potter novels. As you can see, most of what I have to read are books I couldn’t fit in during the school year!


We mentioned your blog and blogging is what made us meet. When and why did you start and what did it change in your real life?
I stated One Literature Nut as a place for a couple of friends and I to read and discuss books that would help me prepare to take the GRE Subject Test in English. When I realized I liked teaching high school, I kept posting, sharing books with friends who wanted suggestions, and soon found a community of book bloggers in Utah that really helped me realize that what I was doing was writing a book blog. How was I to know? It sounds silly, but I was oblivious of readers, reviewing for publishers, etc.


As for changing in my real life, am I bad if I say it hasn’t much? I was constantly asked for book recommendations, and I still get those questions but have a place to lead people to for ideas. In a more realisitc sense, in my real life my blog allowed me to read and discuss books that I wouldn’t at school. I share the books I read with my students, but the blog allows me to talk about them.

 What are the pros and cons of blogging according to you?

The pros are the community of great people you meet, as well as their suggestions. I love that friendship, and I’ve come to trust the taste of so many, such as yourself!

I have to say that the cons come from getting too “involved” in everything. That sounds the opposite of what you would say to someone, but it’s been my experience that the more you care about other bloggers popularity, giveaways, etc., the more you move away from what you really wanted to do in your blog in the first place.

From your experience, what do you think the good recipe for a good blogger should be?
Wow. I don’t even know if I’m qualified to answer this! Honestly, the best bloggers are those who love what they are writing about, and have something uniquely their own that shines through on their blog. That unique thing could simply be their writing style and voice, their genre choices, or their creativity in pulling the community together. I love the blogs where the writer comes shining through and I feel like I know what they like and care about.

Apart from reading , teaching and blogging we also share a certain interest for period films. Have you got any very special ones? What’s on your TBS list, instead?


Well North and South is top of my list! I also love all the Jane Austen films, with a special love for Pride and Prejudice, followed very closely by Persuasion. I loved the newest film, Young Victoria, and the newest Tess of the D’Urbervilles put out by the BBC. One last bunch of films I could watch a million times, crazy enough, are the house series put out by BBC and PBS. If you haven’t seen Manor House or Regency House Party, then you really must. Yes, they are reality television programs, but they are so fascinating to watch.

Let’s play at … dreaming! If you might live anywhere else in the world, where would you like to be? And if you had the chance to choose another job, what would you do instead of teaching?
This is SO easy! I would live in Greece, preferably on a Greek island (Santorini or Rhodes would be delightful). I’ve yet to visit Italy though, so I might want to hold off on the final judgment on that though, right?
As for another job, that is hard. I think that being a professional book reviewer/critic would be great. You would still get to read great books, and also publish reviews in print journalism. I’d also like to try out being a college English professor. I’m not sure it’s the type of job that you just “try out” though!

 Before we say goodbye and go back to our summer duties, Becky, is there any question you would like to ask our readers? Any discussion you’d like to propose to commenters?
Well, as you can see, I’m a bit of a wordy girl. How much does a long review or blog post detract from a person reading them? I don’t know that I can change my style, and I really respect the other bloggers who also write fairly chunky posts, and find their posts thoughtful and provoking, but I am curious to know other people’s opinions on this. Do you steer away from reading long posts?

I usually read a post, long or short as it is, if I'm interested in its subject matter, if I'm intrigued by its title or by the pictures in it. So, I'm not steered away from reading long ones.  Thanks, Becky,  for being my guest. Enjoy your holidays and your summer reads. Till very soon on my or your blog!

12/06/2010

MY BLOGGER BUDDIES - MEET KATHLEEN


This week I'm proud to introduce another of my special talented buddies. Kathleen is an Art historian, lives and works in New York City,  practises  fencing ,  writes three different blogs, is in search of a rich husband and has a crush on Mrs Gaskell's John Thornton (which is also how I happened to find her in the blogosphere) . Enjoy our chat.

Please, Kathleen, could you briefly tell us something about yourself?


I’ll steal a little bit from my blog bio pages (and Henry James) here: “Her ideas of enjoyment were very simple; she enjoyed putting on her new hat, with its redundancy of feather, and twenty cents appeared to her a very large sum.”
I’m an economist turned art historian and am thus your quintessential over-educated and underpaid recent grad school graduate. I was born and raised in a suburb of Manhattan, and as I bounce back and forth between gritty NYC and landscaped Westchester, I try to lead a life that balances my country-gal ways with my big-city personality. I enjoy hiking and kayaking excursions followed by lazy afternoons on the porch as much as I enjoy exploring the fast-paced Avenues and Cross Streets of my beloved New York City.

I finished my masters in art history last year and since then have split my time between the art world (I worked at the Museum of Modern Art for several months) and the sport of fencing. I have big aspirations – maybe an Olympic team, maybe a book, definitely a PhD, and absolutely a career in a museum. Of course, while I’m working on all those plans, I’m just another blogger waiting to be discovered.

(The Columbia Fencing media guide with Kathleen  on the cover)


 New York City! What is it like to live in such an iconic metropolis? What are the pros and cons according to you?
I pronounce water “waatah” and cheer for the Yankees like it’s a second job. When I go abroad and people ask me if I’m American, I say “No, I’m a New Yorker.” Paris has its boulevards; Rome has its ruins; Toronto has its endearing Canadianess, but I can’t imagine calling any city other than New York my home. It’s inhabitant friendly (great public transport, fantastic restaurants,etc.) and culturally rich (Museum Mile, Carnegi Hall, and so on). But perhaps what I love most about my city is that it allows for individuality. Sure, as home to Wall Street and as the financial capital of North America, there is an expectation that you’ll join the corporate machine. But in truth, it is a city filled with people pursuing their own dreams – whether it’s to own a bakeshop in Tribeca or photograph models on a runway. Go out for a drink and you’ll meet the lawyers and investments bankers you’d expect to knock elbows with, but you’ll also meet writers, artists, athletes, bohemians, and intellects. Does it have cons? Of course. It has its grubby side streets, its overpriced rents, its tourist hotbeds. But all in all, when you’re in New York, you really do believe you can be whatever you want to be when you grow-up.

 (Kathleen in her second job, cheering for the Yankees!)

 Art is your work and it is apparently also something you love very much. You often blog about works of art on Meet me in the drawing room. Can you tell us more about it?
I’m an only child who learned early how to amuse myself – mostly through coloring books. When I was a wee thing, my motto was “you can never have enough crayons.” I always knew that I wanted to puruse some sort of career in the arts – originally as a fashion designer, then as a critique, finally as a curator/academic. I enjoy looking at art but perhaps more than that, I love learning the backstory behind a work. When I’m researching something, I feel like Sherlock Holmes – digging my way through dusty archives, looking for clues in the seemingly mundane, stockpiling hundreds of relevant sources, uncovering a seemingly endless chain of possible leads. If you’re ever looking for me at the Museum of Modern Art, or the Metropolitan, I’m that nerd standing in front of a painting you’ve never heard of taking copious notes with a gleam in her eye.

Have you seen my favourite painting in my sidebar on the right? It was love at first sight wit Friederich’s Wanderer and I just can’t say exactly why. Then I’ve got Monet and the Impressionists as well as Caravaggio among the artists I love. What about you? Have you got a painting which is really special to you? Any artist or movement?

The Wanderer is also one of my favorite paintings! Talk about the sublime!


There are two works that are very important to me. The first is Rodin’s “The Burghers of Calais.” I saw it for the first time when I was 13 and it was the first artwork that ever made me really think about art as something more significant than a decorative flourish. I try to make a pilgrimage to one of the castings every few months (the Met has a complete set of the figures) because it still sends shivers down my spine.



The second work is an 1885 self-portrait by American painter Ellen Day Hale (above). The portrait hung in the 2006 “Americans in Paris: 1860-1900” exhibition at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and I was immediately transfixed by the sitter’s lofty but knowing gaze and the mastery with which she was painted. I was intrigued. What began as an interest in one artist and one painting quickly turned into a fascination with an entire period of artistic production – I’m crazy about art from the 1860s to the end of the 1930s. Thanks to an undergraduate paper I wrote on the portrait, I was accepted back into Columbia for my MA, where I wrote my thesis on Hale.

These days, I’m very much into the German Expressionists – hence my recent attempt at learning German.

German is a very difficult language, but you're tenacious Kathleen and you'll make it!  Now, from languages to ... reading. What kind of reader are you? Where and when do you usually read? Do you prefer to buy or borrow books? What about e-books? Have you got favourite genres and authors?
I’m actually a terrible reader. I love to read, but I’m slow and plodding. I like to underline and highlight and savor chapters. It takes me ages to get through books. Of course, just like you, I love Austen. I just finished Mansfield Park – the only one I hadn’t read. I also adore W. Somerset Maugham, Steinbeck, Vonnegut, and Camus. I’ll read anything, though I tend to avoid fantasy, sci-fi, and contemporary novels (I have too many classics to catch up on). I like to read about people, real or fabricated.

I have a Kindle, which was a MA graudation gift, and I generally have mixed feelings about it. It’s absolutely easier to travel with the sleek digital version of War and Peace. But at the end of the day, I’m a book lover who wants to turn and dog-ear pages while she marks up margins. My bookshelves are my pride and joy.

What is the best book you’ve recently read? And the one you often re-read or leaf through?
I’m currently reading “The Razor’s Edge” and I think it’s destined to become my all-time favourite. It’s highly quotable, so I feel like it will join “Pride and Prejudice” as a book I thumb through almost weekly. The Grapes of Wrath is also one I turn to frequently for one reason or another.

Somerset Maugham, then. Let us know why it was so special to you. Maybe on one of your blogs. I mentioned one of them , Meet me in the Drawing Room, but you’ve recently started writing a second one, They Told Me to Find a Rich Husband. Can you explain what do you love to blog about and what are the differences between them?
My first blog was actually “AlleyKat’s Corner Cafe” – a recipe blog I update rarely, but am still very loyal to. Meet Me in the Drawing Room is a venue for me to express my passions for art, literature, and travel. It was originally conceived of as “Voyages in a Discovery” (referring to the Land Rover Discovery that takes me all around the country), but it inevitably expanded to reflex my diverse but constant interests. My catch-phrase for the blog is “It’s where the ladies entertain and the gentlemen retire” – a reference to the old-time role of the drawing room as a domestic meeting place.

As for They Told me to Find a Rich Husband, that was my attempt at becoming the next Carrie Bradshaw. The content and title are inspired by the #1 piece of advice people give me after they ask what I plan to do with my master’s degree: “Find yourself a nice, rich husband.” It’s a place to make fun of social expectations and male-female relationships. It’s also a place to address what it means to fall in (and out of) love. And sometimes I use it as a place to gush about Richard Armitage... you know, it just can’t be helped.

:o Really? I thought you just had a literary crush on John Thornton and ...I find out now you are instead another victim of Mr RA's blue eyes spell! Welcome on board, K.! But we'll talk about this later. First let's finish talking about blogging.  When and Why did you start ? What has blogging  added to your real lifeI started blogging in the fall of 2008, when I in the early phases of writing my master’s thesis. It was a much needed alternative to the heavy academic research/writing I was doing in grad school. I have always kept a journal and a notebook of “essay ideas,” but the practice of blogging forced me to turn those little jots into something more substantial, even if informal.
My friends keep up with my blogs, which is very nice of them (they must be bored at work!). Often one of my posts will be a jumping-off point for a dinner/night-out discussion, or someone will suggest that I blog about this topic or that event. I started blogging as a way to engage with the public at large. Turns out, generating post topics has been a great excuse for a wine night with my wingmen and women.

I also read about your journeys on your blog. Do you like travelling? What are the places you love travelling to ?
Travel is very important to me, and practically every month I spend a few nights in a hotel room. Thanks to fencing, I’ve been all over Europe and the US for competitions. But of all the places I’ve been, France and Italy are my favorite European destinations – everything about them is captivating. The food, the locales, the people – I just can’t get enough. I also love traveling through Canada. I have family there, but everytime I get to cross the border, I get to pack my hiking boots and kayaking gear. I may be a city girl, but I’m very much a wilderness junkie, and Canada is very much a “Big Wild.”



Here we are now. I perfectly remember how I found you online about a year ago. I was writing a post, Mr Darcy vs Mr Thornton while re-reading both Pride and Prejudice and North and South. Surfing the Net for materials and information I found your letter to Mr Darcy confessing your love for another man to him… It was a brilliant post and I linked it to mine. Can you explain what this letter was about? I just love it! (And I agree with you, as you know!)
I remember how excited I was when you posted on that – you were my first “unknown” comment! I felt like I’d been discovered.
I had just watched the Richard Armitage North & South adaptation when I started penning that letter. As a Victorian-phile (and a modern woman who likes a self-made man), I was totally smitten with Mr. Thornton (and Mr. Armitage). I had been very devoted to Darcy, defending him when my male friends mocked him, but I had to tell him that my heart now belonged to another. It was the right thing to do... I mean, wouldn’t he have done the same for Lizzy?

Do you still love Mr Thornton or are you preparing a letter to him to confess you’ve got a new literary crush?
Hahaha! I think Mr. Thornton is safe. Larry Darrell is appealing, but just isn’t my type.

Finally, period drama and films are something I like watching and writing about on my blog. What about you? What kind of films do you like? Do you like going to the cinema?
I’m also a big fan of period films, and probably most of the movies I list as my favorites are set in the past. I try to keep pace with the current cinema, but as in most things, I prefer the classics.



Glad to discover more about you, Kathleen. Thanks a lot for your kindness and good luck with all the great things you do. See you in the blogosphere!