13/07/2010

REMARKABLE CREATURES BY TRACY CHEVALIER - AN AUSTENESQUE NOVEL

Mary Anning and Elizabeth Philpot were truly remarkable creatures, extraordinary 19th century women, and we must thank Tracy Chevalier for bringing them back to life.
Remarkable Creatures is an engaging  two-voice narration  based on an accurate reasearch on the historical and scientific background. An entertaining and very informative reading.
Mary Anning, from a working - class family,  was struck by lightning as a baby and, from that moment on, it is clear she is different. Her discovery of strange fossilized creatures on the cliffs of Lyme Regis sets the world alight. But Mary must face powerful prejudice from a male scientific establishment, not to mention vicious gossip and the heartbreak pf forbidden love. Then - in prickly, clever Elizabeth Philpot , a fossil-obsessed middle-class spinster - she finds a champion, and a rival. Despite their differences in class and age, Mary and Elizabeth's loyalty and passion for the truth wins out.

Their relationship strikes a delicate balance between fierce loyalty, mutual appreciation, and barely suppressed envy. Ultimately, in the struggle to be recognized in the wider world, Mary and Elizabeth discover that friendship is their greatest ally.
Remarkable Creatures is a stunning novel of how one woman's gift transcends class and social prejudice to lead to some of the most important discoveries of the nineteenth century. Above all, it is a revealing portrait of the intricate and resilient nature of female friendship, set at Jane Austen's time.
In fact, apart from its original scientific pattern, this novel can be considered quite Austenesque. And this was the aspect which caught my attention more than anything else.

For example, the novel starts as a surprising reminder of Sense and Sensibility. Three sisters have to leave London and their comfortable, mundane life there,  after their only brother's marriage. They have to choose a  less expensive residence in a small village by the sea, Lyme Regis, the same village Jane Austen herself chose as part  of  the setting in Persuasion and visited in her real life in September 1804. Their fear for their future, their disappointments on the market of marriage, their hopes at taking part in the balls and parties at the Assembly Rooms at Lyme or in London remind of that Austen's world we so much love.
Here is how T. Chevalier describes the three Philpot sisters' arrival at their new humble home in Lyme, Morley Cottage. Doesn't it remind you of the Dashwoods' arrival at  Barton cottage?
"Morley Cottage was a shock at first, with its small rooms, low ceilings, and uneven floors so different fron the London house we had grown up in. It was made of stone, with a slate roof, and had a parlour, dining room and kitchen on the ground floor, with two bedrooms above as well as a room in the eaves for our servant, Bessy. (...) There was not enough room in the cottage to fit our mother's piano or sofa or mahogany dining table. We had to leave them behind in London (...) The physical reduction of space and furnishings mirrored our own contraction, from a substantial family with several servants and plenty of visitors, to a reduced household with one servant to cook and clean, in a town with many fewer families whom we could socialise with". (pp. 23-24)
Jane Austen is only mentioned in the novel once by Elizabeth Philpot, who is jealous of Mary Anning's relationship with Colonel Birch and scolds her sister Margaret for keeping Mary's hope to marry the gentleman alive. Mary is just a poor woman from the working -class and, though an extraordinary fossil hunter, she could never hope to marry a gentleman:
"Your Miss Austen would never allow such a marriage to take place in her novels you so love. If it can't happen in fiction, surely it won't happen in life" (p. 210)
Tracy Chevalier admits there are no reasons why Jane Austen and Margaret Philpot could not have been in the Assembly Rooms at the same time. Indeed, Jane did meet Richard Anning (Mary's father), for she went to his shop to have him give her a quote on fixing the broken lid of a chest. According to a letter she wrote to her sister, he charged far too much, and she took her business elsewhere.
Remarkable Creatures is a work of fiction but most of its characters really existed and events such as Colonel Birch's auction and the Geological Society meeting where Conybear talked about the plesiosaur did take place. Historical figures have rarely been so cleverly used ,  it's said in a review of this stunning story in the Guardian.
In this clip Tracy Chevalier talks about her novel. It's very interesting to listen to how she came to writing such an original story ...


 
I must thank my blogger mate and friend, Antonella aka lunarossa,  for this beautiful read .

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!

10/07/2010

AT ROMA FICTION FEST

FRIDAY 9th JULY

1. MASTER CLASS : ANDY GARCIA


My weekend in Rome for the Fiction (TV drama in Italian) Festival has started with a master class by Andy Garcia. To my great surprise I didn't meet the glamorous star from Hollywood I expected , but an interesting person, an actor passionately in love with cinema and full of plans for the future after a long successful career. He has what I like to  call the humbleness of the great. He talked to a crowded theatre for 90 minutes in a blend of English and Spanish about the time he just dreamt of a career in the cinema working as a waiter and fondly studying( his words ) Italian neo-realism or Hollywood great movies such as The Godfather, Taxi Driver  or Harold and Maude.
He is shooting a film in Mexico, Cristiada, so he apologized for the "funny moustache" (his words again) needed by his character.

We learnt about his love for music, from the percussions to the piano (which he started playing while shooting The Godfather III in Rome and now plays wonderfully well  according to his interviewer) ; his Cuban origins and his siding with the Cuban community living in Miami; his supporting independent cinema because "you can be really free in it, you can make a movie exactly as you want to make it";  his disapproval of dubbing (I agree!) since any performance should be enjoyed in the original version; his being very reserved in his private life but opened up to his audience when playing a role, putting as much of himself in it as he can. "You know about me more than I know about me", he admitted.
As to his relationship with TV movies and series, he announced he is going to shoot and direct a long series, 10 episodes at least, no title yet. Finally,  he left but only after kindly answering many questions from the audience and  signing lots of autographs.

The event went on with the screening of FOR LOVE OR COUNTRY (2000) , a TV movie starring Andy Garcia and Gloria Estefan among others, about the real story of Arturo Sandoval, a Cuban musician who finally found asylum in the States. A deeply felt performance of a great actor which was so touching after listening to his memories!


2. STRIKE BACK SCREENING FOR THE CONCORSO INTERNAZIONALE



What a bore! She took me to an awful conference of a famous American actor. Yes, I know him, he's a very good and popular Hollywood star, but I was here to see Richard Armitage! Why didn't he come? I so wanted him to come... well, I was aware it was impossible... but hope is hard to die. She stayed there listening and taking pictures and notes while that Andy somewhat spoke and received applauses and praises and I longed for time passing by as quickly as possible! We stayed there till 3.30 in the afternoon, and black self  was even moved to tears while watching that TV movie about a Cuban jazz musician . *rolls eyes*.


Long before 8.30 we were already at the Adriano Theatre to see if we could assist to a miracolous materialization of the man himself. "Unexpect miracles denied",  despicable Collinson must have ordered . We sat in a quite empty theatre, sala 5. Wasn't STRIKE BACK targeted to a male audience? There were only women there! Were we all there for the same reason? I bet we were. The lights went off and I couldn't relax on that comfortable chair. It was cool because of the air conditioning system but I was suddenly sweating and breathing heavily. Can you imagine the gorgeous one on a huge theatre screen? And his voice coming out from a dolby-surround system at a very high volume? Try and you'll start sweating too!



It was great. Only I (we?) was disappointed ... At the same time in the other screens of the Adriano theatre, they were showing  Lost, Smallville, The Seawolf, Spartacus ... unfair and unjust they were!!! Most of the young people there wanted to watch those series. Blame on the organizers. They might have done much better at publicising the entire event. Lucky us, who could enjoy our giant blue-eyed handsome man in a quiet , quite intimate , environment.

Have a great weekend!
Red self 

08/07/2010

GISBORNE NIGHT


ROBIN HOOD ON ITALIAN TV - Robin Hood series 2 is being repeated on one of our channels,  Rete 4. As much as I loved watching series 2 on DVD in the original version,  I simply hate watching it dubbed in Italian: unbearable, unnatural, even ridiculous at times. I know,  this  is something I have already discussed in one of my previous posts. Now, I'm sure you are wondering why  I can't simply resist rambling about it again or why I don't  just avoid turning the TV on  on Thursday night... well , ehm ... I 'm using my laptop to write blogposts and ... epp. 3 and 4 are on tonight. How can I ... Do you remember shirtless Guy and gasping Marian at Locksley Manor?  Moreover, you know, Robin Hood is the only  RA's work ever broadcast on Italian Tv... very little indeed, so ....
Only that to watch and listen to  RA's Guy speaking with a boysh voice - when speaking normally - or with a coarse voice - when shouting - is such a painful experience... where is that harsh-yeah-at-times-but-velvety voice? ...Better to play my DVDs!


2. GISBORNE FAN FICTION

Richard Armitage's Guy of Gisborne has inspired many Fan Fiction writers. You've met one  of them here on Fly High! a couple of weeks ago. Do you remember Charlotte Hawkins (Sarah Pawley) who talked with me about THE TEMPEST, her first published novel? (if you don't, check HERE)
Today, instead,  I've found a nice short  piece inspired by RA's Gisborne on line. Read it, it's a short  delightful one: THE SHERIFF'S COLLECTOR   by Prue Batten ( one of my lovely blogger mates who are also good writers) .
She starts:
With apologies to Guy of Gisborne, Cinderella and Richard Armitage.
(Prior to washing the kitchen floors today, I have had to get my tax-papers together and as with all mundane tasks, I tell myself a story whilst working. This is what eventuated.)

Read it on Mesmered's Blog.

07/07/2010

WHAT I HAVE BEEN WATCHING - AN EDUCATION: LESSONS OF LIFE

"I probably looked as wide-eyed, fresh, and artless as any other student...But I wasn't".

1. NICK HORNBY

I love Nick Hornby and his humorous but careful outlook on life so, as soon as this movie was released I wanted to see it , since I had heard he had adapted Lynn Barber ’s memoir for the screen . Nick Hornby created the screenplay based on an autobiographical essay by the British journalist about her schoolgirl affair with  Simon Prewalski, known to her as Simon Green, which was published in the literary magazine Granta. Barber's full memoir, An Education, was not published in book form until June 2009, when filming had already been completed. Hornby said that what appealed to him in the memoir was that "She's a suburban girl who's frightened that she's going to get cut out of everything good that happens in the city. That, to me, is a big story in popular culture. It's the story of pretty much every rock 'n' roll band." Although the screenplay involved Hornby writing about a young teenage girl, he did not feel it was more challenging than writing any other character: "I think the moment you're writing about somebody who's not exactly you, then the challenge is all equal. I was glad that everyone around me on this movie was a woman so that they could watch me carefully. But I don't remember anyone saying to me, 'That isn't how women think".


2. THE CAST OF FAMILIAR FACES

(Starring : Carey Mulligan, Peter Sarsgaard, Emma Thompson, Dominic Cooper, Olivia Williams, Alfred Molina, Rosamund Pike , Cara Seymour)
 
I had promised myself I wouldn’t miss it. So , I got the AN EDUCATION DVD and watched it. Also because I knew this film was crowded  of  familiar faces : Jane and Kitty  Bennet , aka Rosamunde Pike and Carey Mulligan (P&P 2005); Dominic Cooper ( Willoughby in S&S 2008 , The Duchess), Emma Thomson (unforgettable Elinor Dashwood 1995 & many more),  Sally Hawkins (Anne Elliot  in Persuasion 2007, Tipping the Velvet) , Olivia Williams (Jane Fairfax in Emma 1996, The Heart of me 2002, Jane Austen in Miss Austen Regrets)


3. WATCHING THE MOVIE


I loved watching this movie. It is a coming –of – age story set in the 60s. A  fascinating time in which so many people dreamt that to change the world was possible and devoted themselves and their energies to that goal. I was just born in those years and envy those who could live then as the young rebellious generation. Jenny is a rather conformist teenagers, instead, she wants to read English at Oxford and studies hard. But is that her dream or her family’s? Then she discovers life can be pleasure and fun when she meets mesmerizing , much older than her, David. Thanks to his persuasive charm, Jenny silences her conscience to what she sees and understands. She is inexperienced but not so naive. Everything turns out adventurous and exciting. Jenny is totally caught under David’s spell just like her parents. No one can resist that man’s charm … Dinners at the restaurants, wonderful concerts, trips to Oxford and Paris, night club, romantic nights, smart clothes, nice friends … that was  incredibly glamorous for a prim, middle-class , 17-year-old girl. She is very young and very inexperienced.  That’s her only fault. And  her bombastic father and  naive mother  do not help her at all…
As Nick Hornby himself said in an interview: We become other things, too, as well as wise: more articulate, more cynical, less naive, more or less forgiving, depending on how things have turned out for us. I bet Jenny has become a brilliant Oxford student and a much wiser woman , and much more...
Just like her real self, Lynn Barber, has become a successful talented journalist and writer.

OFFICIAL SITE at  SONY FILMS AN EDUCATION


4. CURIOUS FACTS AND AWARDS

  • The character of Helen, who is uncultured, hasn't been to college and doesn't like classical music is played by Rosamund Pike. Ironically, beautiful Rosamund , in real life, is an accomplished cellist, read English Literature at Oxford and speaks multiple languages.

  • Although Jenny's family home and her school are supposed to be in the suburb of Twickenham, Middlesex, the residential scenes featured in the film were shot on location in the Gunnersbury area of Ealing, West London as well as Mattock Lane in West Ealing and The Japanese School in Acton which used to be a girls' school called Haberdashers' Aske's School for Girls.

  • An Education won the Audience Choice award and the Cinematography award at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. Carey Mulligan won a Hollywood Film Festival award for Best Hollywood Breakthrough Performance for a Female and  BAFTA for Best Actress in a Leading role among other prizes

  • The film was nominated for three Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Actress for Carey Mulligan and Best Adapted Screenplay

03/07/2010

TALKING JANE AUSTEN I + DOUBLE GIVEAWAY - LAURIE VIERA RIGLER ON MY JANE AUSTEN BOOK CLUB

Laurie Viera Rigler is the best- selling author of Confessions of a Jane Austen Addict and Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict but I discovered she 's an exceptionally kind and pleasant person as well as a talented writer and JA expert. She accepted to be my guest on My Jane Austen Book Club and to answer my (many!) questions. The result is a very interesting discussion of our beloved Austen matters. Today I'm going to post the first part of this quite long interview. I hope you'll enjoy reading it as much as I did.

Go to My Jane Austen Book Club, comment  part I of Talking Jane Austen, leave your e-mail address and you'll get the chance to win a signed copy of Confessions or Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict. Two lucky winners will get their copy directly from Laurie! One winner for Confessions and one for Rude Awakenings . Next week, Sunday 11th, the first two winners will be announced and I'll post the second part of this incredible interview + a new double giveaway!!!

02/07/2010

RA FRIDAY - MISS MARIE LLOYD

Just like last week, waiting for , longing for something new to happen (since I'm not so interested in hellish homes or adverts ... please, give us something more!) I went on watching the little I hadn't seen yet from RA's work. A  pleasant surprise was last week In Divine Proportion and even more pleasant was watching Miss Marie Lloyd (2007) this week.


This period  piece tells the true story of Matilda Alice Victoria Wood (12 February 1870 – 7 October 1922) , English music hall singer, best known as Marie Lloyd. Her ability to add lewdness to the most innocent of lyrics led to frequent clashes with the then guardians of morality. Her private life was also controversial. Her first marriage to Percy Courtenay was a stormy one and ended in divorce in 1905. She quickly married Alec Hurley the next year and in 1910 met Irish jockey Bernard Dillon.
Richard Armitage portrays Marie's first husband, Percy Charles Courtney. Percy is not a likeable character, one of the several rogues in Richard's career ( Lee Richards in Cold Feet 5, Paul Andrews in Between the Sheets,  Phillip Durrant in Miss Marple, John Mulligan in Moving On, Robert Lovelace in BBC4 radio drama, Clarissa).


At the beginning Percy is really intrigued by Matilda, whom he himself re-names  Marie. As Richard stated in one of his interviews: "When Percy and Marie meet there’s an instant attraction and I think that’s because he recognises himself in her and admires her feistiness and her drive. There’s a balance of him seeing her as an investment he wants to develop but he also recognises something special in her, a real spark, like an untamed wild animal."


Richard's performance shows Percy quite involved in the relationship, enthusiastically supporting Marie, tenderly loving and romantically courting her. Only when he sees himself neglected by her, who is completely devoted to her audience and her successful career, he starts revealing his true nature, he lets his mask slip : he is an inveterate gambler and when he's drunk he's even aggressive and violent.

As usual RA's detailed performance makes Percy incredibly believable: each smile, look, nuance of the voice convey his temper both in his positive romantic initial pursuing and in his descent into betrayal , lasciviousness, violence.
Though his look as Percy is not the hottest we've seen, the Richard we admire is definitely there: you can recognize Guy's smirks, Mr Thornton's domineering smile, John Mulligan's deceiving charm, Harry J. Kennedy's sweet tones. Try to recognize them in this mini-film, about 30 minutes, containing all RA's scenes (apart from one with a naked prostitute on his knees. Forgive my prudery) . Marie & Percy's story is all in this montage . Enjoy it when you find some spare time  ... if you haven's seen Miss Marie Lloyd yet, you can't miss it!



 
The pictures in this post are my caps from the DVD
The news about Marie Lloyd are from Wikipedia and www.richardarmitageonline.com
 

Ssshhh!!! Is she gone? It sounds like she's gone. Do you remember me? The red-naughty-self? I too watched "Miss Marie Lloyd" with black-self. Just wanted to say ... watch the video she made and ... take notes ... pay special attention at 12:18 (hot stuff!) , at 13:16 (shirtless Percy!) , at 17:00 (sweet naughty boy!), at 23:28 ( very, very naughty boy!)
LOL!!! Let's hope she doesn't come back! Black-self, I mean! 'Cause I desperately want to reveal one of her secrets. Can you keep a secret? I can't! Well, I don't want to...Next Friday night, July 9th, black -self will be engaged and won't be writing her RA Friday as usual! Guess why?

She'll be at Roma Fiction Fest to see Strike Back screened in the Concorso Internazionale. John Porter on a huge theatre screen!!! Fingers crossed she takes me there too! Fingers crossed nothing happens to change her plans! She's such a dutiful bore! Always working...Will her husband let her go? LOL!!! We are not in the 19th century but she's so old-fashioned! I MUST GO THERE so... She must do her best not to miss it. Meanwhile,  she got a pass for the Festival, being a teacher she could have one! Good God, boring teachers have got a reason to exist! Shhhh..She's coming back.

 Must leave you and kiss you good night. Till next week!


     Maybe black-self will succeed in her Strike Back mission and write an RA  Satuday!

01/07/2010

NEW CHALLENGES


DH Lawrence is one of the British writers I studied and read the least in my life so it is time to catch up with his work. Thanks to Traxy at The Squeee for this opportunity! DH Lawrence Challenge 2010 starts today , July 1st and ends on December 31st.  You must choose at least 4 items from this long list .
Read, watch or listen to anything DH Lawrence-related (original works, letters, literary criticism, etc.) during this time. You can re-read, re-watch and re-listen all you like. The goal is to have read/watched/listened to at least four items during the challenge's duration.



I want to read  1. Lady Chatterley's  Lover since I've never done it and 2. watch the BBC series  Lady Chatterley starring Joely Richardson , Sean Bean, James Wilby (1993). Then I'll re-read one of the novel I had to study at the uni so long ago, 3. Sons and Lovers and watch an adaptation as well: 4. Sons and Lovers (2003), starring Rupert Evans as the protagonist, Paul Morel.

There is a new Challenge I'm involved in from today till the end of the year. I've posted about it , including my list of tasks, on My Jane Austen Book Club since it is Everything Austen II! Have a look !