Thursday, June 30, 2011

Book Review: The Housekeeper and the Professor

Title: The Housekeeper and the Professor
Author: Yoko Ogawa (translated by Stephen Snyder)
Published: 2003 in Japan, 2009 in America, Picador Publishing
Rating: 5/5


Ogawa created a world of nameless characters, except for the nickname of the housekeeper's son, "Root". Although, the story is told in first person through the intimate thoughts of the housekeeper, Ogawa keeps her readers at bay outside of the intimate circle of characters. The effect is successful as the reader is unable to completely inhabit the three main characters' sphere of life. Ogawa's ability to create deep, dimensional characters allows her readers to accept their nameless identities. The story itself is episodic and bittersweet about how friendship and loyalty can come in unexpected ways. The deep impressions such events have on humans is captured in the spirit of Ogawa's story. Ogawa's subtle writing style will leave her readers reflecting on human psychology as her characters strike a chord in each reader’s view of humanity.  





Sunday, June 26, 2011

Book Review: The Bad Queen

Title: The Bad Queen: Rules and Instructions for Marie-Antoinette
Author: Carolyn Meyer
Published: 2010, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Rating: 5/5

Carolyn Meyer set out on a mission to tell the story of Marie Antoinette, whom history has painted as a selfish and shallow woman. Combining her in-depth research and her historical fiction writing talent, Meyer presents a stellar narrative of a young princess who is expected to be perfect. Masterfully written in first person, readers are allowed into the private thoughts and feelings of the Queen who history has horribly misunderstood. Meyer leaves her audience with a much different opinion about the character and psyche of the last queen of France. Readers will find themselves contemplating what they would have done if they were put in the position that Marie Antoinette found herself in.

Check out the other novels in the Young Royals series:
Cleopatra Confesses (Just Released!)
Mary, Blood Mary
Beware, Princess Elizabeth
Patience, Princess Catherine
Doomed Queen Anne
Duchessina: A Novel of Catherine de' Medici



Friday, June 17, 2011

SNHU MFA Summer Residency

On June 18, 2011 several of my classmates will  be graduating from the MFA program, and all of them have become an important part of my life and have been very supportive. That is why I love this program. We all supportive of each other's goals and aspirations. Our goals to become better writers and eventually to become published and share "human truths" through our stories, essays and poems. We are all writers, and in each of us we have seen our ability to express our view of the world through the beauty of words.

Today, Melanie Cecka who works for Bloomsbury told me that I had better write about horses next. She said my whole face lit up when I talked about writing about horses in Japan. That is all I want to do now; that is is now an obsession. I have started applying to companies to teach English in Japan and many of my friends here are encouraging me to go for it. Several people have asked me when I am leaving, and I told them as soon as I can secure a teaching position and get a work visa I will be going.

I am ready to be a teacher. I am not merely going to Japan just for my own writing purposes. I love knowledge  and teaching is a way for me to make use of my knowledge of the written language. Of course, I will learn more human truths from living in Japan. I will learn about the culture, their traditions, the people, their wildlife and their language. I know I will be a good teacher because of everything horses have taught me. I will be a good teacher because of what the people in my MFA program have taught me, both the mentors and the other students. 

On Sunday we leave for Star Island for a week. Last year I did not want to go. Just the thought of being trapped on a small island made my heart skip a beat. This year though, it is different. By going there part of my soul is freed from everyday society. All of us while we are there, can reflect on humanity and its relationship to the rest of the world. We are forced to look at ourselves as writers and all that we wish to convey.

I am grateful to everybody that has helped me. I am grateful to all the mentors and students. I am grateful to my friends at home. I am grateful for Skye, because I did not start to truly live until the moment she came into my life.  I am grateful to someone who made me realize I can't be afraid to live, even though he will no longer talk to me. 

 "Water in the river flows without cease, besides there isn't original water" - From the Hojoki