have changed the prayer a little and said,
'Thy will be done in art, as it is in heaven.'
How can it be done anywhere else as it is in heaven?"
~ Willa Cather ~
from her novel The Professor's House (p 57) Two views of
Harold Gilman's House at Letchworth, Hertfordshire (1912)
The house of artist Harold John Wilde Gilman (1876 – 1919)
Painted by Spencer Frederick Gore (1878 – 1914)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Recent Reading
1. The Professor's House
by Willa Cather
2. The Thursday Murder Club
by Richard Osman
3. Remarkably Brilliant Creatures
by Shelby Van Pelt
If you're a fan of SeaWorld and love a good coincidence, this is the novel for you! I kept thinking of George Saunders: "Now a coincidence is all right, life is full of them, but a reader's willingness to ingest one is inversely related to how badly the writer needs one . . . " ~from his essay "The United State of Huck" (201)
4. Hamnet
by Maggie O'Farrell
Anne Hathaway's first impressions of William Shakespeare:
"That you had more hidden away inside you than anyone else she'd ever met. . . . She is rarely wrong. About anything. It's a gift or a curse, depending on who you ask. So if she thinks that about you, there's a possibility it's true" (137).
[See Mary Rose, below.]
And Shakespeare loves Anne because "you see the world as no one else does" (115).
Thinking of deceased children: "How frail . . . is the veil between their world and hers" (108).
5. The Ten Thousand Doors of January
by Alix E. Harrow
judge a book by both its contents AND its cover!
by Elin Hilderbrand
7. In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson
by Bette Bao Lord
8. Oh William!
by Elizabeth Strout
9. The Time of Green Magic
by Hilary McKay
Another wacky lovable family (like the Cassons & the Conroys). Abi, Max, and Louis -- living in a big magical house, working together as sibs, dealing with family tensions, and facing their fears (remember Indigo?) real and imagined: "Iffen is real!" (182). From whence came the magic? "It came out of books" (229).
10. Mary Rose
J. M. Barrie
A gentle ghost story, time - travel and loss: ". . . being a ghost is worse than seeing them" (75).
9, 67: "The pictures on her walls in time take on a resemblance to her or hers though they may be meant to represent a waterfall, every present given to her assumes soome characteristic of the donor, and no doubt the necktie she is at present knitting will soon be able to pass as the person for whom it is being knit. It is only delightful ladies at the most agreeale age who have this personal way with their belongings. . . . I have been so occupied all my life with little things -- very pleasant."
32: "I know I'm not clever, but I'm always right."
[See Hamnet, above.]
56, 57: "I can see the twilight running across the fields. . . . happiness keeps breaking through."
65,70: "It is the years. . . . there are worse things than not finding what you are looking for; there is finding them so different from what you had hoped."
11. The House in the Pines
by Ana Reyes
Not to be confused with "Three Pines" or "Twin Peaks." Murder by hypnosis, mesmerism, levitation, and so forth. Somewhere in the woods.