
WHAT DID VIRGINIA WOOLF THINK? or READING THE DIARIES OF VIRGINIA WOOLF "...I haven't often read writers' diaries, but I like the entries. I like knowing what Woolf was thinking about her books as she wrote them and their reception after they came out, and what she thinks of the other writers of her time. It is satisfying to be in her mind: "What is the right attitudev toward criticism? What I ought I to feel and say when Miss B. devotes an article in Scrutiny to attacking me? She is young, Cambridge, ardent. And she says I'm a very bad writer.'" Amina Cain. A Horse at Night: On Writing (St. Louis, MO, 2022) ** FROM AN INTERVIEW WITH A FAMOUS WRITER “’What do you read now?’ the hungry interviewer asked the famous writer, a woman of commercial success in the theater whose autobiography has defined a character of considerable literary sophistication. And the famous author answered: ‘I don’t read novels any more. I’m sorry to say. A writer should read novels. When I do, I go back to the ones I’ve read before. Dickens, Balzac…I find now when I go to get a book off the shelf. I pick something I read before, as if I didn’t dare try anything new.’” Richard Howard. “A Note on Roland Barthes’s S/Z” in Paper Trail: selected prose, 1965-2003 (New York. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004) ** ON VOICES, PLACES "...how are voices like places? They move through us as we move through them. The voices of great writers guide us without telling us where we are going -- except, of course, to the most obvious destinatiion of all. We are guided by ambiguity -- that's the way literature works. And the way travel works as well. We understand it only when we stop moving, sit still and begin to listen back." David Mason. Voices, Places (Philadelphia: Paul Dry Books, 2018) ** A BOOK MEL BROOKS COULD EASILY PUT DOWN In the New York Times Book Review “By the Book” (November 13, 2022) film director Mel Brooks was asked “Disappointing, overrated, just not good: What book did you feel as if you were supposed to like, and didn’t? Do you remember the last book you put down without finishing?” Mel Brooks replied: “If truth be told, for some reason I never did get around to finishing ‘Mein Kampf.’” ** ROBERT SOUTHEY & WILLIAM WORDSWORTH “The difference between the two men is well illustrated by their several attitudes to books: Southey loved them as objects, whereas Wordsworth had no feeling whatever for them, apart from their contents. De Quincy reports his own and Southey’s horror at the sight of Wordsworth cutting the leaves of De Quincey’s own copy of Burke with a knife that had just been used to butter bread. “ Edward Sackville West. A Flame in Sunlight: The Life & Work of Thomas De Quincey (London: The Bodley Head, 1974) ROBERT SOUTHEY AND HIS WIFE “…Southey ‘lived in his library, which Coleridge used to call his wife’… Edward Sackville West. A Flame in Sunlight: The Life & Work of Thomas De Quincey (London: The Bodley Head, 1974) ** TREVOR NOAH AS A YOUNG BOY GROWING UP UNDER APARTHEID IN SOUTH AFRICA “My books were my prized possessions. I had a bookshelf where I put them, and I was so proud of it, I loved my books and kept them in pristine condition. I read them over and over, but I did not bend the pages or the spines. I treasured every single one. As I grew older I started buying my own books. I loved fantasy,loved to get lost in worlds that didn’t exist.” Trevor Noah. Born a Crime. New York: One World, 2016) ** “He understands at a glance what he reads, reads only what he can understand at a glance.” Bergan Evans. The Spoor of Spooks and other nonsense (NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 1954). ** ON CHOOSING THE CORRECT PEN NAME The creator of Tarzan, Edgar Rice Burroughs sold his first story -- Under the Moon of Mars (1912) –under the name of Normal Bean. He chose the pseudonym Norman because he thought of himself at the time “the average mind in search of average readers.” ** IT IS NOT PEOPLE WHO DIE BUT WORLDS ON READING “There are no uninteresting people in the world, says Yevtushenko in one of his best lyrics; everyone carries around with him his first snow and his first kiss it is not people who die but worlds.” Edward Thomas. London Magazine (November 1967) I read those words over & over. They deliver me, If only for awhile, from myself, My thoughts, my feelings, The shifting ground of my being. I become someone else &, like some licensed physician, Hold out my hand To take the fragile pulse of the world. LJP
A great entry, Louis. I am proud to be part of it!
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Good morning, LP! Fascinating post. A few names popped out and wondering about connections; is Edward Sackville West related to Vita who was also paramour to Virginia Wolfe who is the first entry in this post? Your poem which concludes this post struck a chord; books have been my guide and solace since childhood often setting the pace for my mood and attitude as I ventured in the world. Thank you for today’s B&P. So much to consider.
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Dr. Phillips, please keep taking the pulse of the world & sharing your findings with your contented patients.
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