Diane Stresing reads YA, picture books, graphic novels, newspapers, magazines, cereal boxes & just about everything, except directions :D
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Do You Know WHAT You're Reading?
The lines are blurrier and blurrier, my reading friends. See this article about two new "independent" magazines on books and authors: Defending the Porous Wall, from January Magazine.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
A Moveable Feast -> The Paris Wife
I've tried to like Ernest Hemingway's writing at least once per decade for the last three. I'm 0-3 now, but at least this time I feel a sense of accomplishment.
I read A Moveable Feast to provide a backdrop for the highly recommended A Paris Wife; now I'm looking forward to hearing what Hadley might have had to say, according to Paula McLain. When she wrote A Paris Wife, McLain (who lives in Cleveland) re-imagined the Hemingways' 1920s-era summer in Paris. For what it's worth, McLain was honest enough to label her account "fiction."
Hemingway was coy about just what and how much of A Moveable Feast was real and how much imagined, but he put a nice spin on it:
I read A Moveable Feast to provide a backdrop for the highly recommended A Paris Wife; now I'm looking forward to hearing what Hadley might have had to say, according to Paula McLain. When she wrote A Paris Wife, McLain (who lives in Cleveland) re-imagined the Hemingways' 1920s-era summer in Paris. For what it's worth, McLain was honest enough to label her account "fiction."
Hemingway was coy about just what and how much of A Moveable Feast was real and how much imagined, but he put a nice spin on it:
For reasons sufficient to the writer, many places, people, observations and impressions have been left out of this book. Some were secrets and some were known by everyone... . ... If the reader prefers, this book may be regarded as fiction. But there is always the chance that such a book of fiction may throw some light on what has been written as fact.
----- from the preface of A Moveable Feast
Ernest Hemingway (c) 1964
Unfortunately, the preface was my favorite part of this work of probably-mostly- nonfiction. I'm hoping I enjoy what McLain's 'feast' offers...
Have you read The Paris Wife and/or A Moveable Feast? If so, please dish! (Groan)
Labels:
author debut,
author visits,
fiction,
Hemingway,
McLain,
nonfiction,
The Paris Wife,
writer
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