Showing posts with label Florence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florence. Show all posts

Sunday, October 16, 2016

After the Book Festival: Time to Catch Up

I only managed to attend the Southern Festival once while living in North Carolina, so living here at the time of this annual celebration was just one more benefit of moving to Nashville.

I've been power-reading a lot lately, so I'm far behind in my book posts. This week, I plan to add posts about Ron Rash's latest novel The Risen, Jonathan Safron Foer's Here I Am, my most recent book club selection Truly, Madly, Guilty, Beth Revis' YA novel A World Without You, Emma Straub's Modern Lovers, and Anna Quindlen's Miller's Valley.

Today, though, I am processing all the great sessions I attended yesterday and the interactions with readers, authors, and booksellers.

Whenever I'm around events like this one, I can tell I'm with "my people." For years, when I attended the annual conference of the National Council of Teachers of English, I watched the way participants plotted out the sessions we would attend. People who arrived with colleagues played "divide and conquer," each attending a different session, being sure to pick up handouts, promising to share when the conference was over. We worked the exhibits, adding to our already over-the-top book collections and picking up posters, book marks, teaching tips.

This weekend, I saw some of the same behavior; in fact, I ran into a small group of teachers from Chattanooga I knew from a conference in Mississippi almost two years ago. They had their schedule mapped out. My own reading friends crossed paths frequently, but we each had our own priorities, and we promised to share once the festival ended.

I sat in on sessions with Curtis Sittenfeld, whose novel Eligible I had read this year. I learned that she had been approached by the British Austen Society about writing the book, a modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice, in the first place. She was on a panel with three other authors whose books I hadn't read (yet): Danielle Dutton, author of Margaret the First; Adam Hadley, whose book Imagine Me Gone was told in five first person points of view, and Yaa Gyasi's first novel Homegoing. I made a point to make it to Gyasi's reading later in the day as well and found myself sitting by her parents, who immigrated from Ghana to Alabama.

I also heard one of my Lemuria First Editions Club author Brad Watson read from Miss Jane. A special treat, though, was the session with Peter Furalnick, author of the book about Sam Philips: The Man Who Invented Rock and Roll moderated by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Hank Klibanoff from my hometown Florence, Alabama. Guralnick said that when he started interviewing Phillips, he told him that the story wasn't in Memphis; it was in Florence. I had the opportunity to visit the Sam Phillips exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame with members of Phillips' family earlier this year, so I felt as if I had a little inside look at this story already.

I also made a point to attend a session of poets reading from the anthology Hard Lines: Rough Southern Poetry. Poet William Wright had to cancel his appearance (and that's twice I've missed him at events where he was scheduled) but my colleague Jeff Hardin stepped in, along with Allison Adelle, Ed Madden, and Amy Wright. Each read on of his or her poems from the collection, along with a poem by another poet each admired.

As a festival volunteer, I was the host of the session with Beth Revis, YA author of A World Without You, a novel set in a school for troubled teens--a detail readers must infer as the story builds. Revis, who lives back in my old stomping grounds of Western North Carolina, had told me in our initial communication that this story had a particular person connection. In the session, she told a lot about the process from birthing a book idea, to pitching, writing, and then going through the grueling editing process. She had planned her presentation meticulously so she could control her emotions during the session, reading just enough from the book to make her points without spoiling the experience for anyone who hadn't read the book yet.

I left the festival site with a little heavier bag and a much longer list of "must-read" books. Like a person with a song stuck in my head, I can't wait to pass my list on to you.
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Saturday, May 23, 2015

A New Feature: Ask Mrs. Book Doctor

One of my favorite challenges comes in the form of "What can I read?" questions. They come from people I've known forever and from people I just met, who can tell that I love to talk books.  Since I've always obsessively chosen books aligned with destination when I travel, this first question from one of my favorite readers (a former student who turned into a friend) was right up my alley:

Amber Asks:
Any great reading suggestions for before and during my trip to Italy this summer? We will be topping in Venice, Florence and Rome, with a side trip to Pompeii. I plan to read some appropriate bible passages and biblical history, but you know I need some good fiction set in some of these places as well.


My answer:

Until you asked, I had not realized how few books I remember reading that were set in Italy. France, yes.  Great Britain, absolutely.  But not so many come to mind from Italy.  Does Pinocchio  count?

The first I thought of was Susan Vreeland’s The Passion of Artemisia.   I like her books because they always have a connection to art history.  I read her book The Girl in Hyacinth Blue first. I loved the way she traced a fictional Vermeer painting backward from its current owner back to Vermeer as he painted it.  This one is loosely based on Italian Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi, so you get some history with a strong female protagonist.

I may also have mentioned earlier the novel Us by David Nicholls, about a couple ready to take their son on a “Grand Tour” of Europe upon his graduation.  Not only is he reluctant to go (preferring a beach trip with his friends), but the protagonist’s wife catches him off guard, telling him shortly before their departure that she doesn’t know that their marriage is working. The story, which  bounces through Europe--all the important stops in Italy, is in turns hilarious and heart-breaking.

Though it isn’t necessarily set in the part of Italy where you are traveling, Amber, Gabrielle Hamilton’s memoir Blood, Bones, and Butter is a great read.  It’s really the story of how Hamilton, whose mother left her and her siblings with their rather inattentive father, ended up in the restaurant business. Although she has a long-running lesbian relationship, she ends up marrying an Italian man, who takes her each summer to his family’s summer home in Southern Italy.  Though Hamilton doesn't speak Italian, she and her mother-in-law communicate best in the kitchen.  She eventually opened the restaurant Prune in NYC. When we read this one in book club, we all said we didn't want it to end.  We decided if we couldn't make it to the Italian coast, we might make it to NYC to visit Prune.

I confess that I haven’t read Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes, though I found the movie just beautiful. After reading her latest memoir Under Magnolia, thought, I may have to go back and read the book. I loved her writing.  I wanted to underline things in pencil or to read passage aloud to someone.

I realize too that James Michener’s The Source is one of his I missed. (I went through a stage when I read everything of his, starting with Centennial  and Chesapeake.  The historical research he put into his novels made learning about history and geography absolutely fun.  He also had a knack for developing characters about whom I cared deeply. I know The Source goes back to the Holy Lands, but he may also move through these areas related to biblical history too.

At the site below, I found several suggestions of books set in Italy, but none I had read. The John Berendt book, though, was intriguing. Evidently, he uses the novel approach to nonfiction he used in Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.

http://historicaltapestry.blogspot.com/2012/04/kate-forsyth-on-her-favourite-books-set.html

I guess you know Dan Brown’s Angels and Demons could give you a little taste of Rome, particularly Vatican City. (No, I don’t think Nicholas Sparks has set any of his books there. Thank goodness.)

 Did your read Stacy Schiff's Cleopatra?  With that book, you get Egypt too, of course! And did you know Tennessee Williams’ second novel The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone is set in Rome after WWII?

I'm hoping someone else out there has some other good suggestions to pass along  Bon voyage!

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