In addition, The Pastor’s Kids is getting an audio version! Susie Fehr, who lives in Manitoba, only four hours north of where the book takes place in North Dakota, is finishing up the reading as I write. We found each other through acx.com, an exchange set up by (you guessed it) Amazon to help authors and audio producers find each other. It will be available on Audible, iTunes and Amazon when she finishes. This is thrilling. I am by this time an audiobook devotee and I know many other people are as well. I will keep you posted on this!
as food to life,
Or as sweet-season'd showers are to the ground. (Shakespeare)
Line, Marty and Paul, out beyond their boundaries, explore what it takes to grow up in this family epic with the overarching title "So Are You To My Thoughts".
The Pastor's Kids
Friday, December 18, 2020
Recent Developments
A couple of interesting developments at the end of the year: For one thing, Luther College bookstore requested the remaining books in the series, when they learned that I had completed it. For a self-published author to get their books onto a bookstore shelf is not easy (though I am, of course, an alumna), so I requested a photo. Here it is, appropriate to the times.
Wednesday, August 26, 2020
Novels to Live In
Having completed my series So Are You to My Thoughts,
and just now having re-read the series from beginning to end, I have some
thoughts on the kind of work it is. First and foremost, I believe they are
novels to live in. It might not even matter if you begin in the middle of the
series, and later go back to the beginning. You are going to find the
characters consistent, like people you might meet and then wonder about. “How
did Line and Stephen meet?” you ask. “Why does Paul move to Alaska?” or “Why
does Marty make poor choices?” In this case, you would be rewarded. Their
stories are there for all to see.
In addition, the novels exemplify what I think of as my
manifesto “against brilliance.” I have nothing against erudition, except when
it is a masquerade, when there are no clothes under the king’s ermine robe. One
does not need to go to an ivy league or big eight university to get an
excellent education. Education is more in one’s own hands. Art doesn’t need to
be larded with obfuscation and prizes. It needs to be meaningful. One doesn’t
need to learn code, finance or go to law school to find good work. Work in the
service of humans is everywhere. Glitz, glamour and fame are not how we should
measure our success. But in simpler ways, by the trust others have in us and
our fidelity to the lives and natures we have been given. By our ability to be
happy. And our country does not need to be the biggest cheese in the world,
saving other countries from themselves. Rather, we need to get back to our own
basics, spending money on education, health care and justice rather than on
armaments at every level.
None of us are perfect. Certainly my characters are not. But
their stories leave space for the reader to live among them. They show the
characters finding practices that fill them with delight and wonder: Paul
finding a way to live with loss in the heart of the country he loves most;
Marty finally learning to appreciate the beauty within herself and making a
home for a family which expresses it; Line having to tame her fierce maternal
energy into a watchful tolerance.
And they are stars, each with an epic story of their own
movement from a fixed childhood firmament into an expanding universe. Their own
dinner table conversations are thrilling, their houses and gardens are
beautiful and they are proud of the lives they lead.
The great anthropologist and poet Frederick Turner, in Beauty,
The Value of Values, published in 1991 imagines that the mid- 21st
century will be surprising to us, should we arrive there all of a sudden: We
would be “most surprised not by the expected innovations but by the way that
all of human cultural and biological history will have become part of the
landscape; by how magically corny, how shamefully old-fashioned, how
primate-like and tribal we will be among the almost invisible and intangible
miracles of our technology; by how slow and quiet everything will be, how
improvised, how richly ornamented; how closely we will live with the animals
and plants, how much in the open air; how gorgeously and formally and
anachronistically clothed we will be, how morally earnest and at the same time
how lighthearted, how accepting of shame and tragedy; how much also as we lived in the great pedestrian cities of the civilized past.”
I loved this vision of the future, so quiet and peaceful.
But we have far to go in that direction! Like Turner, I have written books
which state my own values, as over against those around me. Technology assists
me to assert them, whether anyone agrees or not. But one thing I can assure
you. The writer is dressed plainly, in cotton t-shirt, ragged jeans and tevas
on a warm day near the center of Los Angeles.
Monday, July 6, 2020
New Book Network Podcast
I’ve been listening to a lot of podcasts lately. It is a
good way to find out what it happening in literary culture when bookstores are
closed and you can’t get out as much. So, I happened on the New Book Network
coming out of Chicago, and in particular, G.P. Gottlieb, who reports on new
literature. I contacted her and she charmingly agreed to interview me,
regarding So Are You to My Thoughts, for the network.
So, in the middle of last month, Don hauled out his best
Schoeps microphone and set up a little studio for me. Galit (Gottlieb) invited
me to the Zencastr software and we recorded the interview! She put it together, it was edited for sound levels and so on, and it is now out. You can listen
to the interview by clicking the link below.
So Are You to My Thoughts is the last of a series of
books, all of which I could not expect Galit to read! She did read this last
one, however, and asked penetrating, interesting question about it, which
allowed me to say things I wanted to and a few I didn’t need to reveal. You can
hear me flailing about for a thought. That kind of thing where your brain is
going in several directions and you are quickly trying to determine which!
Galit is a writer herself, writing mysteries with recipes in them, which she
invites us all to test! You can hear the life and interests we share in our
conversation. Minnesota, Illinois, California. Food and wine, politics and
spiritual practices.
I was deeply grateful for the pleasure of being on her show!
Saturday, March 21, 2020
An End and a Beginning
So Are You to My Thoughts, the seventh and final book
in my series about Line, Marty and Paul Mikkelson, is now published and will
soon be available as both a paperback and a Kindle file from Amazon.com. I am
very happy to have brought this project, which took more than ten years, to an
end!
As fiction, the story is framed through my own lens. This
can’t be helped, though my characters get equal attention, and, I hope, each
has their own perspective. All, however, live real lives. There are no
princesses or goddesses, dystopic futures or dark secrets which come back to
haunt everyone. In this blog I have elucidated my positions, though in the
fiction they are simply embodied.
The beginning means that I must now begin to talk about the
books more! At least I think I will. One never knows. The books have nothing to
say about our current crisis around COVID-19, a world-wide pause which has
caught us all unaware. But someday the period between 1950 and 2010, when the
fictive lives of my characters ends, may be interesting to people. Polio, which
Paul has in the mid 1950’s, was certainly a frightening epidemic at the time.
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