Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
My daughter's song "Flooded to Black"
Gemma has written a song, "Flooded to Black," which was recorded for a documentary on tar sands oil:
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Autumn Seduction
Golden morning
Leads me into the woods
On pine needle footsteps,
Over tap-tapping bridges,
Past gurgling reflections,
Under rustled leafshine,
Where brazen maples
Shimmy, blush and wave,
Flirting with that cool sky.
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
From Farm to Cider Press
Last weekend we were invited to an apple cider pressing party, bring your own apples. Our favorite place to pick is Rocky Ridge Orchard in Bowdoin, as much for the pumpkin donuts as for the apples.
It's about a twenty minute drive from our house, unless you're riding in one of these classics!
Before harvesting our apples, we had roast chicken sandwiches on the patio overlooking the orchard. The maples were in peak color, and it was unusually warm, mid 60s. Autumn is my favorite time of year in Maine, but it's bittersweet, watching the leaves fall, knowing that winter is so long.
After years of practice, my daughter is an expert picker. We like Cortlands the best for eating, but any apple will work for cider, even fallen bruised ones.
photographer
herself,
my daughter
insisted
on
turning
the camera
on
me!
Later that day we biked to our friends' house
and learned how to press cider.
Two grocery bags of apples
make one gallon of cider.
The apples were dropped in the top
and cranked into the catch bucket
(the pulp was saved for the chickens.)
The juice dripped out the bottom
and was filtered before decanting.
It was the best cider ever. Cheers!
Blog Watch: Congratulations to Kristen Lindquist, this year's winner of Maine's Postmark Poetry award! You can sample her haiku poems and occasional nature photos on her blog, Book of Days.
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Euphoria by Lily King: review & interview
Euphoria by Lily King is the best book I've read this year, and I read a lot of books. This historical novel has brilliant insights on human nature, and the writing is as gorgeously lush as the tropical setting. The story was inspired by the life and work of Margaret Mead, an American anthropologist. Mead was controversial for her personal involvement with her research subjects and for her revolutionary theories on sexuality and adolescence. She was also one of the forerunners of feminism. Euphoria's Nell Stone embodies her spirit.
The narrative takes place in 1930's New Guinea on a tropical backwater isolated from the civilized world. The central characters are three anthropologists: American Nell, her Australian husband, Fen, and their British neighbor, Bankson. Although sexuality is part of their uneasy dynamic, the connection between these fascinating characters is more intellectual than erotic.
Nell's greatest passion is her work. Fen is jealous of his wife's fame, but Bankson finds her work ethic and ease with the natives inspiring. Nell nurtures the men in her life but resents her dependence on them for access to her male subjects. The three researchers have unique talents, and when they come together in an orgy of ideas, they create a new theory that rocks the world and has unintended consequences.
Nell describes the favorite part of her work, which gives the novel its title:
I'd enjoyed Lily's previous novels, but the subject of Euphoria holds more personal resonance for me. For years I've been fascinated by Margaret Mead and other women scientists who broke into fields dominated by men. At college, I studied Anthropology and considered a career in field biology. I spent summers doing field research in Kenya and on the Gulf of Mexico. Euphoria felt all the more real because I'd lived and worked in similar conditions, albeit with fewer luxuries. Then again, I had malaria medication. After reaching the last page, I had many questions.
Luckily I didn't have far to travel for answers. The author lives near me, and we'd met briefly once before through the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance. Lily suggested meeting at "Brakes and Shocks," a new coffee shop in the West End of Portland. The building used to be a garage and then a laundromat. The cafe's official name is Tandem Coffee + Bakery, but I'm still calling it Brakes & Shocks. It had a cool retro-modern vibe, gourmet coffee and fresh baked goods. The goat cheese, caramelized onion and apple scone sounded like an odd combo, but it was delicious. With its walls of glass, Brakes & Shocks was a wonderful place to chat on a sunny autumnal day.
Sarah: Your previous novels were contemporary fiction and well received. Why did you switch to historical fiction for your fourth book?
Lily: I didn’t mean to. Nine years ago, when I was just starting
my third novel, Father of the Rain, I
found Jane Howard’s 1984 biography of Margaret Mead in a used bookstore and I
got to this chapter all about this fieldtrip to Papua New Guinea she made with
her husband in 1933 where she met and fell in love with another anthropologist,
Gregory Bateson, with whom she connected both emotionally and intellectually,
and they had this really intense love triangle for five months. I couldn’t help
thinking that scenario would make an interesting novel. So that got me reading Mead’s
memoir, her academic work, and her letters. But for a long time I didn’t think
I could actually write that novel.
Your writing was very tight and focused. How did you hold onto your story?
Why did you change
Margaret Mead’s name to Nell Stone?
I think it’s a quote by E.L. Doctorow:
“Writing is like driving at night: you never see further than your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.”
That's one of my favorite quotations too, and it fits our location. Sometimes I wish for fog lights when I'm revising.
Thanks, Lily, for joining us at the book review club, and good luck with the next book!
The narrative takes place in 1930's New Guinea on a tropical backwater isolated from the civilized world. The central characters are three anthropologists: American Nell, her Australian husband, Fen, and their British neighbor, Bankson. Although sexuality is part of their uneasy dynamic, the connection between these fascinating characters is more intellectual than erotic.
Nell's greatest passion is her work. Fen is jealous of his wife's fame, but Bankson finds her work ethic and ease with the natives inspiring. Nell nurtures the men in her life but resents her dependence on them for access to her male subjects. The three researchers have unique talents, and when they come together in an orgy of ideas, they create a new theory that rocks the world and has unintended consequences.
Nell describes the favorite part of her work, which gives the novel its title:
"It's that moment about two months in, when you think you've finally got a handle on the place. Suddenly it feels within your grasp. It's a delusion - you've only been there eight weeks - and it's followed by the complete despair of ever understanding anything. But at that moment the place feels entirely yours. It's the briefest, purest euphoria."True to Margaret Mead, Euphoria portrays New Guinean tribal societies with respect:
"'They are human, with fully functioning human minds. If I didn't believe they shared my humanity entirely, I wouldn't be here.' She had real color in her cheeks now. 'I'm not interested in zoology.'"Euphoria has a marvelous sense of place. It's a book that's meant to be read slowly, with every sentence savored. It's worth buying the beautiful hardcover edition, featuring a Rainbow Gum Tree. The rough-cut pages seem to stick together with the humidity described in lush, tactile words. When the dry season comes, the plot pivots too in this tropical world of extremes:
"Because the rains were late, the road was a desiccated crust, hard as marble underfoot. Ripe fruit exploded when it hit the ground. Hot air blew down from the high trees, their dry fonds cracking against each other. Bugs aimed for her eyes and mouth, looking for moisture."Every page is brimming with luscious prose, and yet the pace never lags. The writing doesn't distract you from the story. Historical and anthropological details are informative but not didactic. The characters are vibrant. It's not easy balancing all these elements, and few authors manage to achieve such narrative harmony. Lily King's Euphoria could be shelved beside and Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible, Ann Patchett's State of Wonder and Isabel Allende's Eva Luna: beautiful stories about strong, intelligent women in wild, primitive places. Euphoria won the New England Book Award for 2014.
Flamingos at Lake Naivasha, Kenya |
I'd enjoyed Lily's previous novels, but the subject of Euphoria holds more personal resonance for me. For years I've been fascinated by Margaret Mead and other women scientists who broke into fields dominated by men. At college, I studied Anthropology and considered a career in field biology. I spent summers doing field research in Kenya and on the Gulf of Mexico. Euphoria felt all the more real because I'd lived and worked in similar conditions, albeit with fewer luxuries. Then again, I had malaria medication. After reaching the last page, I had many questions.
Luckily I didn't have far to travel for answers. The author lives near me, and we'd met briefly once before through the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance. Lily suggested meeting at "Brakes and Shocks," a new coffee shop in the West End of Portland. The building used to be a garage and then a laundromat. The cafe's official name is Tandem Coffee + Bakery, but I'm still calling it Brakes & Shocks. It had a cool retro-modern vibe, gourmet coffee and fresh baked goods. The goat cheese, caramelized onion and apple scone sounded like an odd combo, but it was delicious. With its walls of glass, Brakes & Shocks was a wonderful place to chat on a sunny autumnal day.
My Interview of Lily King
Author Lily King at Tandem Coffee + Bakery, photo by Sarah Laurence |
Sarah: Your previous novels were contemporary fiction and well received. Why did you switch to historical fiction for your fourth book?
Why not?
It was just so far out of my comfort zone on every level.
These people would not live in houses but in the jungle of a country I’d never
been to. It would take place in 1933 and the three main characters would be
scientists. Plus it was historical and I don’t usually read historical fiction.
I don’t like feeling that I’m being fed a lot of research.
Your writing was very tight and focused. How did you hold onto your story?
Thanks. I really tried, even as I was doing the initial
reading for the novel, to keep my mind open to ideas and possibilities. And I limited
the amount of researched detail I used. I used a fraction of what I wrote down
in my research notebooks. It had to be essential to the action. Otherwise I
chucked it. The narrative had to drive the story, not the research.
Anthropologist Margaret Mead, photo from Wikipedia |
Nell is not Margaret Mead. I got the idea by reading a
biography of her and I definitely borrow many details from her life and the
lives of her husband Reo Fortune and Gregory Bateson, but in the end I tell a very
different story. I thought at first I would use their names but by the end of
the first chapter, as the characters took shape, I felt handcuffed by history
and I had to break away from it. Once I changed their names, my characters were
free to be different people. They became my characters. I didn’t land on their
names immediately. Nell was originally Polly, but she wasn’t a Polly. Andrew Bankson
started out as Geoff. Characters grow into their names.
Since Nell is the protagonist
of Euphoria, why didn’t you narrate
the book from her voice?
Initially, I tried to write it exclusively from her point of
view, then from all three of their perspectives. But Bankson’s voice was the one
that really felt right. Once I got his voice I realized it was his story. And
that really changed all my ideas for what would happen in the end. But I did
need her perspective, so I included her journal entries, which were initially
letters from her to Helen, her lover of many years.
I was surprised to
learn from other interviews that you wrote Euphoria
in your attic without ever visiting New Guinea. Your book has a marvelous sense
of place and vocation. Have you done fieldwork in developing countries?
No, I was an English major and never took an anthropology
class. The only experience I have had in the jungle was when I went up the
Amazon in Peru with my new boyfriend (now my husband). I definitely remembered the heat, the
oppression of the heat, and the things we did, but when I found a little
notebook I’d brought on that trip, I thought I would find all sorts of good
details, but all it had in it was the beginning of a letter to my sister all
about how he and I weren’t getting along in the oppressive heat. So I had to be
an armchair traveler for this novel. I read everything I could find about the
region and anthropology, ethnography and fieldwork.
I researched the book intermittently while I was writing Father of the Rain. When that was
finished, I spent a few more months reading about Mead and New Guinea, then started
in. I wrote the first draft of Euphoria in a year and a half, then spent about
six months revising on my own. After I’d written six or so drafts, I shared it
with my husband, my writers’ group, my agent and my editor. Then there were
more revisions.
Do you have an
editorial agent?
My agent, Julie Barer, is an editorial agent. She had me do
a good bit of revising before sending it to my editor, Elisabeth Schmitz, whom
I’ve had the great fortune of working with at Grove Atlantic for all my books.
Will your next book
be historical or contemporary fiction?
My next novel will be contemporary, I think, set in
somewhere between 2003 and now. I have six pages of notes and a page and a half
of the first chapter. I have a lot of research ahead of me. It’s going to be a
really challenging book to write.
Tandem Coffee + Bakery (Brakes & Shocks) 742 Congress St. Portland, Maine |
What is the best
writing advice you received?
I think it’s a quote by E.L. Doctorow:
“Writing is like driving at night: you never see further than your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.”
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@Barrie Summy
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@Barrie Summy
Reviewer's Disclosure: I was not compensated for this review, but I have a personal connection to the author. Lily's daughters attend the same school as my daughter. She agreed to the interview on my request and didn't ask me to review her book. I bought my copy of Euphoria at Longfellow Books and two more at Gulf of Maine Books to give as gifts. My mother enjoyed Euphoria too.
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