Thoughts, tales, and travels

December 8, 2019

Let the Wild Rumpus Start

Review of Black Light: stories by Kimberly King ParsonsNew York: Vintage, Penguin Random House, 2019, 211 pages. Parsons has created a searing collection of characters driven by an id-dominated, desperate pleasure just a slight change-of-expression away from deep realms of pain. Her characters are ravenous, capable of sucking the last...

Read More
November 30, 2019

Double Run: First Chapter

On Saturday, November 23, I went to Portland to attend the awards ceremony for the Oregon Writers Colony’s annual writing contest. I received an honorable mention for the the first chapter of my novel in progress, Double Run. My first recognition for fiction writing! 

Read More
September 28, 2019

The Guest House: Review

The Guest House By Sarah Blake. New York: Flatiron Books, 2019. 484 pages. It began with a distinctive landscape, the island in Maine that Sarah Blake’s grandparents fell in love with and bought immediately on impulse during the Great Depression. From that familiar family ground, Blake conjured an entirely different...

Read More
August 6, 2019

Road Trip: Park City, Utah

We decided to stop in Park City, famous for Robert Redford’s Sundance Film Festival, so that I could adjust to some altitude before visiting Bill’s son John in Leadville, Colorado,. Leadville is above 10,000 ft. The last time we were there, we spent a glorious golden day of autumn hiking....

Read More
August 3, 2019

Road Trip Day 1

We are on the road! Maybe for the last time driving–we’ll see.First day was very fine. We left Eugene in the morning and arrived in Boise Idaho just in time to check in, have dinner, and take a quick look around Boise. First stop was the familiar Sahalie Falls. Lots...

Read More
March 10, 2019

Asymmetry by Lisa Halliday

Lisa Halliday’s debut novel Asymmetry is the best I’ve read this year, but I’m not going to go around recommending it. It’s just not for everybody. It’s not going to entertain you, unless you have a demented taste for the boring details of caring for a very old lover or...

Read More
January 17, 2019

Best of the Midwest

Our stories this week represent two of the most acclaimed writers of the midwestern United States, Willa Cather (1873-1947) and Sherwood Anderson (1876-1941). Willa Cather is one of a kind, combining a strong artistic interest and sensibility with a deep love of the landscapes and people of the mid-western United...

Read More
January 2, 2019

Stephen Crane: “The Little Regiment”

I’ve read Stephen Crane’s more famous story, “The Open Boat,” as well as his novel The Red Badge of Courage, but I’ve never read this story before. I’ll be very interested to hear what other readers think. One thing that makes this tale challenging is the Civil War era military...

Read More
January 1, 2019

Edith Wharton: “A Journey”

January 3, 2019: Short Story Discussion Group Reading Happy New Year!This week features Edith Wharton, who writes some of the saddest, most heart-wrenching and searingly honest stories in the English language.  One of her more upbeat characters made this comment: There are lots of ways of being miserable, but there’s only...

Read More