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Lynda Reads

Bite size reflections on the plethora of stimuli that drift in through my (more or less) open mind: commentaries, ideas, book reviews, resonances struck and ire stirred. My way of exposing my side of the conversation with other minds encountered. I also blog about the Okal Rel Universe, my own fictional enterprise, at Reality Skimming.)

by Lynda: Sci-Fi Author, Educator, Technologist.


Sunday, August 29, 2004

Pickwick Papers to Paul's Poems

While my life bumps along through a rough patch on a couple of fronts, I've been rediscovering the world of books and the solace of meeting fresh perspectives through them. Took a stack of books out of the library, returned half no more than glanced at, but got through all of Royal Murders (sadly, returned, so I don't have the author's name on hand and renewed The Last Apocalypse: Europe at the Year 1000 A.D. / by James Reston, Jr. and By the Sword: a History of Gladiators, Musketeers, Samurai, Swashbucklers, and Olympic Champions / by Richard Cohen.


I would also like to recommend, from the PG Public Library, The Tale of One Bad Rat
/ by Bryan Talbot, published by Dark Horse Books. This one is a graphic novel, dealing with a rat-loving girl called Helen, breaking free from a victim's assumption of guilt and shame over childhood sexual abuse by her father, through bonds with a pet rat, new friends and a deep fascination with Beatrix Potter and the Lake District in England. Beautiful creation on many fronts.


The Pickwick Papers by Dickens is a joyful discovery. I am taking in a chapter a night before bed and finding the slow pace and elaborate language wonderfully alien to our hectic existence in the modern world.


And then, like a miracle, just as I find myself surprised that I gave up so much of my inner life to work long hours when it no longer seems clear that it was necessary ... I discover a resonance of doubt about the sanity of 21st century capitalist lifestyles in a friend's poems.


The friend is Paul Strickland, someone who has always cared about writing and reading and struggles, like so many of us, to find a place for both in his life. His poem "Work Liberates" is a ten line question about why we let our personalities become submerged in corporate profit motives. It ends, on a cynical note, with: "To work is to pray." His longer poem, "Lunacy", paints vignettes of moments in history where we took a wrong turn in chosing our icons, marching towards a starker, darker world of greed and aggression. Paul is a closet poet. I would like to see his work appear before the public some day.

3 Comments:

Blogger Leon said...

I read 'Great Expectations' and found it okay. I wanted to try something different. I am going to try more Dickens in the future.

I linked to you:
http://firemind2.blogspot.com/2004/08/good-reads.html
-cheers.

9:11 p.m., August 31, 2004  
Blogger Lynda said...

Hi Leon. I'd recommend "Tale of Two Cities". Very period, of course, but that's true of all Dickens. And it's optimistic, despite the tragic aspect. I've never read "Bleak House" because I don't know if I want to experience Dickens in depressing mode.

8:14 a.m., September 02, 2004  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jane, it's "solace".

12:20 a.m., June 21, 2005  

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