All Consuming


Items ContraryestGoddess consumed in…

March, 2008



  1. Saturday 1
    B0009ml2ug

    Finished consuming…
    One Last Dance — 3 people

    Worth consuming!


  2. Tuesday 11
    0345383990

    Finished consuming…
    Fair and Tender Ladies (Ballantine Reader's Circle) — 6 people

    Worth consuming!


  3. Monday 17
    01dc41n2nkl

    Finished consuming…
    Plain Secrets — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  4. Sunday 23
    01vtdq3tifl

    Finished consuming…
    The Mermaid Chair — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  5. Monday 31
    0807856568

    Finished consuming…
    Cornbread Nation 3 — 2 people



Entries about these items

    0807856568

    Disappointing — 16 weeks ago

    Really poorly written. We can do without regional writing like this, thank you.

    01vtdq3tifl

    A story about "The Mermaid Chair: A Novel" — 17 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Good story. Terrific descriptions of the lowlands that made me want to go smell them. And eat seafood. And good characters (although they could be better developed—I didn’t feel like I really knew who they were, ever). Mostly it made some good points about we women “of a certain age” and some of the self-discovery, or rediscovery, or something, that we have to go through.

    01dc41n2nkl

    A story about "Plain Secrets: An Outsider Among the Amish" — 17 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Delivers what it promises—an outsider’s view but an intimate portrait nonetheless. Too bad the author is so abysmally stupid about some things that aren’t “Amish”—like he doesn’t know you can use corn cobs for kindlin’. So sometimes he’s in awe of things that are just common country stuff and not “Amish” at all. But he has a very balanced and I think realistic view of both the advantages and disadvantages of very “Amish” things like community: Sure, if you are Amish you have a strong community that will help you if you need something, but on the other side of that, you have a community that keeps an eye on you and judges you and tells you what to do (and may well do things that we English would consider horrible, like keep women in abusive relationships and very circumscribed circumstances).

    But the thing I was most curious about was what sorts of repercussions his “Samuel” and his family, who were who the book was really about—a book that the “community”, the “church”, would not approve or appreciate.

    0345383990

    On my must read list — 18 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    I read “Oral History” by Lee Smith ages ago and didn’t much like it and had never read this. Then a nearby county school system was asked to take this book out of their library, and the paperback version showed up in my library’s new books section, and I read it.

    Wow. It is an absolutely fantastic book.

    Ivy Rowe and I share a culture. She would be of my grandparents’ generation. While the circumstances of my life and of her life are very different, somehow I feel that in our souls we are the same.

    If you want to find out about Southern Appalachian Culture, read this book, The Doll Maker by Arnow, and Night Comes to the Cumberland by Caudill. I should make an “I recommend” list.

    Read this book.

    B0009ml2ug

    A story about "One Last Dance" — 20 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    this movie is simply one of the best I’ve ever seen. And then I question that conclusion. ??? Is it? I don’t know. But it captures a lot and says a lot in a way I understand and relate to. I saw it twice while we had it and I would own it and I want to repeatedly see and own very few films. It was made in 2004, starring Patrick Swayze and his real life wife (who also wrote and directed) Lisa Neimi and another man who must be friends with them (George de la Pena). Of course they are all real life dancers. I knew this about Patrick Swayze, and also that he’d had some knee injuries, etc. And so this movie sort of takes those things and of course some fictional things and makes them into the best doggone movie I’ve ever seen? It captures a lot anyway.

    Called, One Last Dance.

    See it. Really.

    Now, in my privileged past, I did dance, seriously. But my experience of dance was not complicated by my having ever had any dreams about it. I was good enough at it, I had fun with it, I hated toe shoes and couldn’t tumble worth a hoot but by gawd I could perform, it was what it was, and when it was over it was done.

    But their dancing in the film is, well, excellent, superb, everything. It is very classical with modern thrown in, rather Joffrey maybe? The film is rather like a musical where they start singing but you don’t really notice because you are into the story except they start dancing and it is part of the dialog but without words. Which is a play on words because the dance they are working on is called without words.

    And the story just really touches me, especially now. About dreams, delayed and abandoned and haunting, and how they can sometimes be, well, not re-lived, but danced again, in their own way in their own time. I especially love the ending where they show it is so NOT about external validation but about the dance itself. I mean, I think that ending captures at least some of what I mean by a lot of the things I say about that.

    And did I mention that Lisa is beautiful but not Hollywood? Wow, so refreshing, that. I love what real people really look like and I hate how Hollywood and ubiquitous braces and tooth veneers make everyone look exactly the same. Same teeth, same nose, same boobs or pecs. Boring. I have always liked people who look like they can do something. No, who look like they DO do something.

    There is so much to love in the movie! There is this speech by the yoda-like elder dance master about not working so hard, about finding the heart and that until you do that you can do all the steps and still have nothing, about how you have to DANCE it so that the mirror disappears. There is this wonderful speech by Lisa/Chrissa about how she undertook this project to be like everyone else and she learned how to be but that the Max character had asked her to dance had helped her to remember the truth she knew at 14. That’s my single most favorite moment, the moment that speaks to me most clearly.

    And then there is love. Capital LOVE. And even a nod to family actually being the single most important thing.

    And you know what? I want no less. I mean, this movie sort of puts into film format, not exactly my desires or expectations but something like those, an openness to the magic that the universe might bring me despite how many times I mess up. An openness to be the real me, who I universally am, despite me getting in my way. Etc.

    ok, there ya go.

    And now there’s news of Patrick Swayze’s pancreatic cancer. Patrick, thank you for this film. And for the Pecos Bill in Tall Tales, another excellent film. Thank you thank you thank you.


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