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Friday Fiction Fix: Anne of Green Gables

March 30, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

lovereading I’ve been looking forward to this month’s Books that Made me Love Reading Challenge instalment (hosted by Emlyn Chand). I’ve written elsewhere and said in author interviews that Anne of Green Gables was my inspiration for wanting to be a writer. I think it’s probably more accurate to say that the book made me love words and what they could do to a reader. I identified so much with the character of Anne–I still do. I remembered why as I listened to some of the things she says, “When you hear a name pronounced can’t you always see it in your mind, just as if it was printed out? I can.” So can I, Anne with an “e.” I’ve been obsessed with words since I was young. I spell them constantly in my head. And when Anne says (and Marilla smirks), “This is the most tragical thing that has happened to me,” I recall with a twinge of embarrassment telling someone that I was “stophisticated.” Yup. True story. The daydreaming and misunderstood imagination were part of my life too. Fortunately, my parents were supportive. In my case, it was teachers who misunderstood. Despite her drama (of which I had my share as well), Anne maintains her optimism, and things work out well for her in the end. And I think–I hope–I’ve been that way too. I don’t know how many times I’ve read Anne. Quite a number. But reading it this time, to my children so they could enjoy it with me, I was struck by how many things Montgomery did “wrong”–at least according to publishing standards today:

  • long monologues by a single speaker
  • omniscient point of view that flips from one person’s head to another
  • the overuse of other words besides “said” in speech attribution

And yet it was a classic. And still is.  And I’m pretty sure my children didn’t notice any of those “problems.” And really, neither did I. Anne is as entrancing today as she was when I was a child. Here are some of my favorite Anne-isms:

  • My life is a perfect graveyard of buried hopes. That’s a sentence I read once and I say it over to comfort myself in these times that try the soul.
  • This is the most tragical thing that has ever happened to me.
  • Anne Shirley: Don’t you ever imagine things differently from what they are? Marilla Cuthbert: No. Anne Shirley: Oh Marilla, how much you miss.
  • Tomorrow is always fresh, with no mistakes in it.
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Buy After the Snow Falls

Top Ten Reading Habits

March 2, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

Friday Fiction FixWhat are your reading idiosyncrasies? We all have them. There are rituals we have or particular things we do when looking for books or when reading them. Here are mine:

  1. I’m often lured in to reading a book based on its title. I love a good poetic-sounding title.
  2. I prefer literary fiction to any other genre. Books like that come closest to the kinds of books I fell in love with when I was younger.
  3. I can also be drawn in by a good cover image. But title and genre win out. Just think of the original covers of The Secret Life of Bees and The Help. Not much on the cover to lure me in there, yet some of the best books I’ve read.
  4. I can’t seem to get out of a bookstore without having to use their bathroom. As soon as I start browsing the shelves–generally when I’ve found something really interesting–I suddenly have the urge to pee. Happens every time. I know–TMI–but there it is. 100% true.
  5. While living in China, I fell in love with audiobooks. I couldn’t wait to get my hands on a copy of Leif Enger’s So Brave, So Young and So Handsome. I was teaching ESL at a university at the time. A student’s father was traveling to Singapore. She’d heard me mention how much I missed being able to read English books, and offered to have her father buy me something while he was there. So I ordered So Brave, but I found out it came out on audiobook, and I just couldn’t wait. The actor who read the book did different voices for each of the characters, and read so well, I was entranced. Plus I could “read” while doing the dishes!
  6. I NEVER skip to the end of a book or a chapter. Once or twice my eyes have flitted to the opposite page, and I see a detail too soon and I get really mad about it. I want the story to tantilize–to draw me along and make me wonder and guess. I detest spoiled endings.
  7. Now that I’ve been learning the craft of fiction writing, I find it hard not to critique a book while I read. A really great book is one that makes me forget about all that and just sink in and enjoy it.
  8. Until recently, a few books I read made me despair of ever being published. If the writing was good, I was tempted to compare all the way through.
  9. Once I start reading a book I like, I find it hard to put it down. I will forget about all my other responsibilities in the face of a good read.
  10. I don’t own a decent bookmark. I’ve been known to shove pieces of toilet paper between the pages to mark my place (not from the bookstore bathroom, though, just in case you wondered).

- Carey Clark

The Snow Queen

February 24, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

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It’s funny what happens when you begin to stroll down memory lane. More pathways spring up before you. Areas that seemed foggy and dim suddenly show signs of life and activity. When I sat down to consider the books that made me love reading for Emlyn Chand’s reading challenge, I realized there were many that I loved dearly and hadn’t thought of at all much since I was a child. The Snow Queen, by Hans Christian Anderson was one such story. This story is full of wonderful memories for me, since it was one I knew from a book at my grandmother’s house.

While I was growing up, my grandparents lived next door. My parents built their house on an acre of what was once my grandfather’s hundred-acre apple orchard. There’s a Walmart and subdivision going up around those houses now, but they are still there: our old house and my grandparents’. My grandmother had two spare bedrooms: the peach bedroom and the blue bedroom. When I slept over at their house, I’d stay in the peach bedroom. My Nanny had all kinds of old toys and games, but my favorite treasures were the books. And if she asked me if I’d like a bedtime story, I often requested The Snow Queen.

I thought it was high time I shared this story with my own children. We read it this week. While my Nanny read to me from a compliation of stories, I found a picture book version of the story to make sure Sprout was engaged. The pictures in this edition were stunning, so after we finished the story, my youngest sat and simply looked through the pictures once again.

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It has been so long since those cozy nights snuggled in the peach bedroom that I had forgotten many of the details of the story. It’s much more a struggle of good and evil than I remembered, and there is much more detail about the story of Gerda, the little girl who looks for her captured friend Kay. What I remembered was the tragedy Kay endured. (I think I may have been more wired toward tragedy in my younger years–hence the tales of kidnapped insects.)

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The story of The Snow Queen concerns the evil consequences of the creation of a “wicked imp” who fashioned a magic mirror with a special power that shriveled everything good reflected in it to nothing, and everything evil and ugly reflected back larger and more hideously. When the mirror is shattered, little splinters of the magic glass lodge in people’s hearts and eyes, and some are made into windowpanes and spectacles. They all warp the lives of those who are unfortunate enough to be influenced by them.

“And, as we tell this story, little splinters of magic glass are still flying around in the air.”

The story centers around two young characters who were neighbors, but grew up like brother and sister, Gerda and Kay. They lived a quiet, simple, happy life until one day a splinter from the magic mirror enters the little boy’s eye and heart and his nature is transformed. Shortly thereafter, he is spirited away by the Snow Queen who keeps him prisoner in a castle near the Northern Lights.

Gerda misses her companion and goes out in search of him. In the end it is her goodness that heals him and restores him to the good child he was.

My children enjoyed this book, but I’m not sure if it will be as special to them as it was to me. After all, they weren’t in the peach bedroom, and two of them never even had the pleasure of meeting Nanny.

We all really enjoyed the stunning illustrations. And I enjoyed the stroll down memory lane.

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Beyond Molasses Creek: A Review

February 17, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

{Don’t forget to enter the Valentine’s week Passion and Prayer Giveaway!}

Friday Fiction Fix

Beyond Molasses Creek takes place in the South Carolina Lowcountry. It’s the story of Ally, 60 years old and still trying to find herself; Sunila, a young Dalit woman in Nepal who’s just been handed the secret that will unlock her destiny; and Vesey, Ally’s neighbour, the love of her life, its one constant, and forbidden fruit all wrapped into one.

I love good writing. And this was good writing. I really sank into the story and enjoyed it from the first page. Seitz’ use of language is beautiful. Not elaborate or flowery, just beautiful and poignant: “Then something like courage rolled onto his broad shoulders.”

The story begins when Ally returns to the Lowcountry to bury her father. It is the first time she has been in one place that long for years and years, and she’s only doing so now out of obligation to her father, and perhaps out of a curiosity about whether love can still bloom between her and Vesey.

Instead, she discovers truth–about herself, about Vesey, and about a woman living thousands of miles away she doesn’t even know is alive.

The story was written from the first-person present tense point of view for two of the characters. I have to confess that at first I found this jarring. I’ve read a couple of stories in which the use of present tense eventually signaled the untimely demise of the point of view character. But once I settled in and satisfied myself that nothing mortally awful was going to happen to Ally or Sunila, that became less distracting. By the final chapter, if I hadn’t checked for the purposes of writing this review, I couldn’t have said whether the writing was still in present tense or not.

Ally’s life is layered with complexity. There is no moment when she abandons her old ways and embraces an obvious Christian faith. Rather, she is on a spiritual journey. She has tried running away from her pain or filling her life with pleasure to dull it. She has pursued spiritual fulfillment–her lawn is littered with the statues of gods and goddesses to prove it. But as the story progresses, we see how as much as she has run from a life like Vesey’s–rooted in one place with one woman and a hope in God–the kind of life that satisfies in the end. It is Vesey, not Ally, who is self-aware, content and confident.

I am happy to have discovered Nicole Seitz’ writing for myself. I can’t wait to read one of her other books.

Note: I received Beyond Molasses Creek as a free ebook in exchange for my honest review. No other compensation has been given me.

- Carey Clark

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