For National Library week.
Category Archives: Books
My book just received a wonderful review
Okay, normally boasting about a positive review is not good form, right? And this person is someone I know, so you could argue she’s biased. But…. she’s also a well-known, professional reviewer in the SF/F community and she wouldn’t risk her rep by saying she liked something if she didn’t.
Brief quote:
“All in all I thought this was a delightful read and I think kids of both sexes between eleven and fourteen would be immersed in it.”
Read more on her blog, which happens to be a great place to learn about books, stories, tv shows, and more importantly, the place to read her stories. That’s how I first met her — at a writing conference where I got to read a story she wrote that blew me away. She’s indefatigable.
My essay is up at “My Favorite Bit”
Mary Robinette Kowal is very kindly hosting my essay about my favorite bit in The Third Kind of Magic on her website. The essay is about how certain essays in Le Guin’s Cheek by Jowl helped me understand what I was trying to do, enabling me to finish it.
The only time I had a conversation with Ms. Le Guin, at a book signing, we coincidentally talked about dragons. It was after a panel at a Book Expo in SF and for reasons I can’t precisely remember, the audience was not best pleased by what she had said about dragons in other books. (I suspect she was implying Smaug had barely scratched the surface of what dragons could be, which would hardly be controversial nowadays, so it was probably just the idea of criticizing the Master…)
The full essay is here.
Let me know what you think.
“Things as it is”
So today is the official ebook birthday of my book, but one of the reasons I chose today for the launch was because it’s the birthday of my late Zen teacher, Katherine Thanas. She was one of those once-in-a-lifetime people who arrive in your life like a gift, a real teacher, and she transmitted the flavor of the Soto Zen tradition she received from her teachers with directness and compassion. I found her zendo in Monterey at a fairly difficult time in my life, and it changed me.
She has a book out now, too, posthumously, called The Truth of this Life. The title makes me uncomfortable, if I’m honest, because it sounds pretentious. And Katherine was never pretentious; her subtlety and insight deepened her students’ understanding of zen, buddhism, and life far beyond sweeping summations of “truth.” She offered her own experience, her own uncertainty and questioning that made it impossible for us to settle on too glib an answer, too facile an understanding. She modeled “don’t know” mind in a way that felt absolutely true to the spirit of the teachings.
She often used Suzuki Roshi’s phrase, “Things as it is,” which captures the flavor of that. Slightly off, poking at you grammatically, but there’s a message there, asking you to examine your assumptions about what you think you know, vs. experiencing reality.
The nature of things as it is, is that we don’t really know what that nature is. Or our own. We have to stop thinking and experience it. Or try.
Anyway, Happy Birthday, Katherine. We miss you. I am so grateful to have your book, but even more grateful that I was able to experience your dharma talks and let them percolate into my life.
It’s T-minus 11 hours and counting
The Crow book launches in about 11 hours, at least for the Pacific Coast. It will be earlier/later in other time zones, (I think Australia will actually go on sale later today) but this is the one I’ll track, because it’s all moonshine anyway until there’s a sale somewhere, and it’s all I can do to keep track of GMT with silly daylight savings putting us back on a war footing for no good reason.
All I can think about is all the stuff that was supposed to be done by now and isn’t, since I’ve had to scramble to find someone else to do my taxes this year after the first guy unexpectedly bowed out. But we shall perservere.
And that’s incentive to get everything done this weekend, right? The rain will help.
I will be doing a little bit of tweeting and FB posts, and will try to be as un-annoying as possible.
I know how that can boomerang – (“I don’t know you but I dislike you because you keep tweeting about your &^$# book!”)
We’ll see how tasteful I can be while saying “look at my book!”
Bay Area Book Festival
I went to the second annual Bay Area Book Festival last weekend, had a great time and acquired the nifty bookbag above from PapaLlama. A truly interesting mix of topics and speakers – if you read at all you would have found something to your taste. I most enjoyed hearing Susan Griffin and Starhawk speak on this present moment in our culture. I also just liked seeing the entire community of book folks turn out, along with clowns, music, bouncy houses, carousels, food trucks. Pretty much a downtown Berkeley street fair. Also, nifty bookbag.
If you didn’t hear about it and you’re local (I think publicity is the one thing they don’t do well) you might want to get on their mailing list to be sure to catch it next year. Food for the soul.