Archive | February 2008

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born February 4th

George Lillo, b. 1693, British playwright. He wrote what he called “domestic tragedies” about common people instead of heroes and kings.

Josiah Quincy, b. 1772, Congressman, judge of the Massachusetts municipal court, state representative, mayor of Boston and president of Harvard College.

Mark Hopkins, b. 1802, American educator and Christian apologist. He wrote a very popular nineteenth century text on apologetics called Evidences of Christianity.

William Harrison Ainsworth, b. 1805, English historical novelist. Several of his novels are available at Project Gutenberg.

Sheila Kaye-Smith, b. 1887. English novelist. She wrote many novels, mostly set in the English countryside of Sussex. Her novel, Joanna Godden, is available from Virago Press.

MacKinlay Kantor, b. 1904, American novelist and screenwriter who won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1956 for his novel Andersonville. It was a “grimly realistic” novel about the Confederate prisoner of war camp, Andersonville. Has anyone read it?

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, b. 1906, German Lutheran pastor, theologian, and member of the resistance movement against Hitler and the Nazis during World War II. Here’s a very interesting poem by W.H. Auden, dedicated to Dietrich Bonhoeffer, entitled Friday’s Child. I’m not sure I understand it, but it’s worth reading anyway.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born February 3rd

Horace Greeley, b. 1811, American journalist. “Fame is a vapor, popularity an accident, and riches take wings. Only one thing endures and that is character.”

Walter Bagehot, b. 1826, British essayist and journalist. “The reason why so few good books are written is that so few people who can write know anything.”

Sidney Lanier, b. 1842, American poet. “Music is Love in search of a word.”

Gertrude Stein, b. 1874, writer and patron of artists and writers. “All of you young people who served in the war. You are a lost generation… You have no respect for anything. You drink yourselves to death.” Quoted by Ernest Hemingway in A Moveable Feast.

James Michener, b. 1907, American novelist, author of Hawaii. “The really great writers are people like Emily Brontë who sit in a room and write out of their limited experience and unlimited imagination.”

Joan Lowery Nixon, b. 1927, Houston author of YA and children’s fiction. “My husband and I have four children, and when they were young I had only one day a week in which someone could watch the preschoolers and I could write. I discovered that you never find time to write. You make time.”

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born February 2nd

Hannah More, b. 1745. Evangelical philathropist connected with William Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect. In her youth she was also a friend of actor David Garrick, lexicographer Samuel Johnson, and politician and writer Horace Walpole. After her conversion to evangelical Christianity and her retreat from the high society of London, her friends were clergyman and hymn writer John Newton and anti-slavery activist William Wilberforce. She was active in the anti-slavery movement in England, and her character makes an appearance in the movie, Amazing Grace, a movie I highly recommend, by the way.

Here’s a snippet from her poem, Slavery, published in 1788 to coincide with the first parliamentary debate on the slave trade.

. . . the countless host
I mourn, by rapine dragg’d from Afric’s coast.
Perish th’illiberal thought which wou’d debase
The native genius of the sable race!

Perish the proud philosophy, which sought
To rob them of the pow’rs of equal thought!

James Joyce, b. 1882. “Bayard himself confesses to never having finished Ulysses, by James Joyce. Personally, I have a theory that there is a very good chance that Joyce himself didn’t even finish writing the book, since I have never actually met anyone who has read the thing cover to cover.” —Sarah Vine in a review of Comment Parler des Livres que l’on n’a pas Lus (How to Talk About Books that You Haven’t Read) by M. Bayard. Ms. Vine didn’t read Mr. Bayard’s book, either. Has anyone here actually read Ulysses, other than Madame MM-V, that is. I must say I’ve never felt the urge. It’s on my list of “Books That If I Had More Than One Life I Would Certainly Also Read But Unfortunately My Days Are Numbered.” What’s on your list of that name?

Under the Heaventree, an essay by Frederica Matthews-Green on the Christian life and Christian theology in the style of a chapter from James Joyce’s Ulysses. At least Ulysses is good for something.

James Stephens, b. 1882. Irish novelist and poet. He was a friend of James Joyce.

Ayn Rand, b. 1905. The Fountainhead is one of the books on the list for my LOST project, but I’m not about to spend my time on that massive tome either. I think that all I’d get for my time and energy is a very long expostion in fiction of Sawyer’s philosophy, “It’s every man for himself, Freckles.”


Judith Viorst, b. 1931. Author of Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day. Atheneum, 1972. We’ve all had them. Reading about Alexander’s bad day somehow helps me to laugh at my own bad days in a misery-loves-company sort of way.

Saturday Review of Books: February 2, 2008

The unread story is not a story; it is little black marks on wood pulp. The reader, reading it, makes it live: a live thing, a story.”
Ursula LeGuin

Welcome to this week’s Saturday Review of Books. Here’s how it works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime this week of a book you’re reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Now post a link here to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

1. Carrie K. (What Jane Austen Ate…)
2. Maw Books (What is the What by Dave Eggers) wrong link above,sorry
3. Breeni Books (The Power of Yin)
4. SuziQoregon (The Monkey\’s Raincoat)
5. SuziQoregon (The House at Riverton)
6. Carrie, Reading to Know (A Long, Fatal Love Chase)
7. Carrie, Reading to Know/Bookfest (Holes)
8. Bonnie (Barchester Towers)
9. Laura (The Mix-It-Up Cookbook)
10. Carol (Jayber Crow)
11. DeputyHeadmistress (Ray Bradbury)
12. Why Homeschool (A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War)
13. gautami tripathy (Silken Web)
14. gautami tripathy (French Silk)
15. pussreboots (Tom Sawyer, Detective)
16. pussreboots (Teach Like Your Hair\’s On Fire)
17. pussreboots (Nine Stories)
18. e-Mom @ Chrysalis (Mosiac by Amy Grant)
19. Stephen (Mister Pip)
20. Laura (The Leopard)
21. Laura (Astrid and Veronika)
22. Julius (A Confederacy of Dunces)
23. SFP (January Recap)
24. writer2b (Mrs. Dalloway)
25. Sage (Looking for Longleaf)
26. Joy (A Thousand Bones)
27. Krakovianka (January list)
28. The Well-Read Child (Alphabet of Insects)
29. The Well-Read Child (Eliza and the Dragonfly)
30. The Well-Read Child (Don\’t Squash That Bug)
31. 3M (Curious Incident of the Dog…)
32. 3M (Silence)
33. 3M (After Dark)
34. Just One More Book! Podcast (Spotty & Eddie Learn to Compromise)
35. Maria (The Star Machine)
36. Framed (Salamander)
37. Shelf Elf (A Thousand Splendid Suns)
38. Mo (The Gods Themselves)
39. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Rules by Cynthia Lord)
40. SmallWorld (Broken for You)
41. Abiding (Jan. list)
42. Nicola (True History of the Kelly Gang)
43. Nicola (Best American Short Stories 2007)
44. Nicola (High Spirits: A Collection of Ghost Stories)
45. Nicola (The Iron Staircase)
46. Nicola (Strange Events: Incredible Canadian Monsters, Cures, Ghosts and Other Tales)
47. Nicola (Faithless)
48. Nicola (The Apple and the Arrow)
49. gautami tripathy (Thirteen Reasons Why)
50. Kara A. (Pioneer Women, Secret Six, Little House on the Prairie)
51. Dominionfamily (How Does a Poem Mean?)
52. Dominionfamily (Sentinel: City of Destiny)
53. Wendy (Ghostwritten)
54. Heidi @ Mt Hope (Children\’s Lit)
55. Sandy D. (The Witch of Blackbird Pond)
56. Amy(The Winter Rose)
57. Amy(Firefly Lane)
58. Amy(The Secret Between Us)
59. Melanie (The Educated Imagination)
60. Melanie (The House in Paris)
61. Becky (Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder)
62. Becky (Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder)
63. Becky (Henry\’s Freedom Box)
64. Becky (Fablehaven: Rise of the Evening Star)
65. Becky (Yellow Umbrella)
66. Becky (Just Jane)
67. Becky (What\’s Eating You)
68. Becky (Midnight Falcon)
69. Andi (Great Expectations)
70. sweetpotato (Charlotte\’s Web)
71. Lisa (Great Expectations)
72. Dawn (The Dark Sisters)
73. Chris (Arabian Nights and Days)
74. Jill (Two Brothers)
75. BookGal (Swann)
76. The Reading Zone (Peak by Roland Smith)
77. Darla D (Little (Grrl) LOST)
78. Darla D (Fruits Basket, Vol. 3)
79. Darla D (Ghosthunters & the Gruesome Invincible Lightning Ghost)
80. Darla D (For a Few Demons More)
81. Darla D (Witch Way to Murder)
82. Chrisbookarama (The Good Liar)
83. Chrisbookarama (The Scarlet Letter)
84. Tim (The Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis, Vol. III)
85. Carrie (Light from Heaven)
86. Amira (History of the Ancient World)
87. Jen Robinson (Doctor Ted)
88. Scribbler (The Fox Went out on a Chilly NIght)
89. Scribbler (Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening)
90. Scribbler (I Have a Horse of My Own)
91. Wonderer (Gardens Of Water)
92. Wonderer (The UnValentine)
93. Josette (Maggie Again)

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To This Great Stage of Fools: Born February 1st

Arthur Henry Hallam, b. 1811, the subject, upon his death in 1833 at the age of 22, of Tennyson’s famous poem In Memoriam. Hallam was engaged to Tennyson’s sister, Emilia, and he was Tennyson’s close friend. He died suddenly while travelling in Vienna of a brain hemorrhage. The poem wasn’t actually published until 1850; I guess it took Tennyson that long to work through his grief in poetic form over Hallam’s untimely death.

Charles Nordhoff, b. 1887, was the co-author, along with his friend James Norman Hall, of one of my favorite books, Mutiny on the Bounty, the fictionalized story of Captain Bligh, Fletcher Christian, and the mutiny that took place on HMAV Bounty (His Majesty’s Armed Vessel) in 1789. It is Nordhoff’s and Hall’s book that is the basis for most of the movie versions of the mutiny story.

Langston Hughes, American poet, b. 1902.

The Dream Keeper

Bring me all of your dreams,
You dreamer,
Bring me all your
Heart melodies
That I may wrap them
In a blue cloud-cloth
Away from the too-rough fingers
Of the world.”

Jerry Spinelli, b. 1941, won the Newbery Award for his book, Maniac Magee.