Marvelous, insightful informative posts, all. thank you.
Ginny, the poem is a
gem. Have copied it, must hang it where I can see it every minute.
And, to echo
Jane, it
IS US.
We've taken many literary journeys together, too many highlights to enumerate here. The variety, the breadth, the contrasts ...
Who could forget
Dante's Inferno;
The Yellow Wallpaper; Dostoyevsky's
The Brothers Karamazov;
A Thousand Splendid Suns ;
Paris 1919, Six Months That Changed the World ;
Don Quixote - just to name a few?
It's been a long road over strange landscapes, time periods and locales, literally and figuratively, and it is no exaggeration to say that it has been an
education all its own.
Bellamarie, thank you for the URLs. Indeed, the more information we glean, the better.
Incidentally, I have referred in a previous post to a
clipping I took from the Sunday Boston Globe Magazine of an interview with Russo, which took place at the first Boston Book Festival in mid
October.
Unfortunatgely, I can't put my hands on that clipping, but I do remember (and reported here) that one of the questions the Globe interviewer asked was w
hether the author himself is an only child. Russo answered that he is but his wife has siblings. I don't mean to be fussy, but whyis there disparate information out there?
Alf, yes, it's about
connections. And Griffin seems to have lost his. It's interesting too, isn't it, that he really would have liked Joy to make him change his mind and (offer to) wait for her. And there's a similar occasion. When Laura asks him to join her and Andy for dinner, he begs off -- only to be
disappointed,. It seems he had
expected Laura would insist. After all, he was not
that tired. But she did not. Joy's daughter, all right. Clearly she wondered why they had come in separate cars.
We must talk of how to decipher SCRIMT. And we had better not lose sight of the unnamed man and woman Griffin meets in the eatery. And we have aa new character to "chew" on, Sunny Kim!!
Of course,
Bellamarie, the names again! The names of the parents! It took Russo long enough to give Mother and Father a name. Can we assume that it was deliberate? Dare we ask why?
You are right on. William and Mary is one of the most prestigious liberal arts institutions of higher learning in the country, founded by Episcopalians, the
second oldest, after Harward. It is named for King William III of England and Quen Mary II, and located in the historic town of Williamsburg, Virginia. BTW to visit the town is a unique experience, not only in summer but also at Christmastime.
We lived in Virginia before my husband was transferred to Massachusetts, and became
very aware of the
eminence and
distinction of the university:
The son of neighbors across the street, a few years older than my son - and a
typical only child - had his heart set on William & Mary; so had his parents.
He was accepted. He set off, eagerly. He came home for Thanksgiving - and never went back to W&M. We remained close and never asked. The fall from the imagined heights was heart-breaking to watch; I've never forgotten the experience.
Jane, I feel the same way about an author's presence in a discussion, and always have. When an author is a participant (and , mind you, to have an author there is an
honor and a tremendous help), I personally would be much more cautious in what I say so as not to offend.
When I joined WREX years ago, it was extremely difficult for me to "critique" the other members' submissions on the structure, style and, yes, the spelling. Mal Freeman had to "lean on me" before I did. And when
Bubble (ET) and I took over, we changed the term "critique" to the much gentler
"comment".
"First do no harm" is a good motto, not only in medicine