Gene Lee's Blog
November 5, 2018
Herman Wouk
      Am halfway through the second of the two books Wouk wrote about the beginnings of Israel after the end of WW2. The Hope is the first and The Glory is the second. Have to hand it to Work...he was a great storyteller. Doesn't mean he was a great writer per se..and that is just my opinion. But he damn sure could tell a story. The Israel books are almost as good as his WW2 books...The Winds of War followed by War and Remembrance. Those two are in the same class as Shaw's The Young Lions and James Jones From Here to Eternity... The Thin Red Line and Whistle. That last one is one of the saddest..yet funny..I have ever read about the war. Damn! All this literary talk reminds me I need to be setting my rear end down with pen and paper and doing some Work!
  
    
    
        Published on November 05, 2018 08:17
    
November 2, 2018
Thoughts on writing and other disparate realities
      Today is the Day of the Dead, an event celebrated annually in Mexico, whereby families gather around the family plot in the local cemetery and celebrate those of their family who have gone on to their great reward. it is not a somber occasion, but one filled with music, laughter, and spiritual reflection.
The Day of the Dead is also the background centerpiece of one of my all time favorite novels: Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry. The novel details the events of that day in 1938 as experienced by Geoffrey Firmin, a British consul tortured by his alcoholism and his unfaithful wife, Yvonne.
I first read this book when I was in my late twenties and deep into my own alcoholism. Due to that state of being the story resonated heavily with me. Fortunately, later in life, with a clearer head and body, I re-read the book and was able to relate even more to the tragedy of the Consul and his wife and the events of that day.
It is a great read, parts of it told in narrative, and parts of it in stream of consciousness, but all of it beautiful, disturbing, and in the end, a powerful record of a time and a place in the world before the maelstrom of World War Two engulfed the planet.
Check it out!
PS: All thanks to Literary Hub for reminding today of this great book!
    
    The Day of the Dead is also the background centerpiece of one of my all time favorite novels: Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry. The novel details the events of that day in 1938 as experienced by Geoffrey Firmin, a British consul tortured by his alcoholism and his unfaithful wife, Yvonne.
I first read this book when I was in my late twenties and deep into my own alcoholism. Due to that state of being the story resonated heavily with me. Fortunately, later in life, with a clearer head and body, I re-read the book and was able to relate even more to the tragedy of the Consul and his wife and the events of that day.
It is a great read, parts of it told in narrative, and parts of it in stream of consciousness, but all of it beautiful, disturbing, and in the end, a powerful record of a time and a place in the world before the maelstrom of World War Two engulfed the planet.
Check it out!
PS: All thanks to Literary Hub for reminding today of this great book!
        Published on November 02, 2018 09:21
    



