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Sunday 10 May 2015

Top Ten Reasons to Write

#10 You get plenty of quiet alone time!

#9 You now have a good reason not to go running.

#8 You can't dance so at least you have something.

#7 You become better at a particular craft.

#6 You set a great example for your kids of working hard to achieve something.

#5 It may be finally fulfilling a lifelong dream.

#4 You can take what you've learned all these years about reading people and put it to good use.

#3 You may just get to see your name in print one day.

#2 It makes you a better person. You're accomplishing great things and learning so much.

#1 Because it feeds something you can't quite explain. Your soul, your spirit, your heart, your mind. All of them somehow.

Thursday 7 May 2015

Station Eleven

According to Emily St. John Mandel's website, Karen Valby in Entertainment Weekly said, Station Eleven is "A novel that miraculously reads like equal parts page-turner and poem. One of her great feats is that the story feels spun..."

I love that. Mandel's story is spun so beautifully--it's like a carpet of a book! An expensive Iranian carpet that might just be 100 years old but could be brand new and you really don't know which is true. There's something so magical about this book. Maybe it's the intricacy of the characters and timeline, where past melds with present for the reader so the two seem linked in a way I may never have felt before reading a book. Considering how strangely bleak the post-apocalyptic world in the future (or is it present?) is, it's amazing how strongly connected we feel to it as well as to the characters' previous lives.

The use of present tense must be partially what bridges the past and future, as it makes the various time frames feel equally poignant and devastating. The character development is more evocative than most science fiction I've read--although I must admit that's not terribly much. The Road by McCarthy might be the most similar book to this I've ever read although I don't know if it's really all that similar at all.

FIVE stars. Really. It's that good. 2014 was the most awesome year for books. Now I have to go read the book that actually won the National Book Award last year (Station Eleven and All the Light were finalists). My expectations are now soaring in the heavens.

Saturday 2 May 2015

Fire Cakes

I got very interested in Revolutionary war-era cooking when I was researching for my HF book (set in the same time period--obviously.) When I read that the soldiers ate mostly fire cakes, I thought, "Wow, that sounds quite good. Cake made over an open fire. It must taste a little sweet, a little smoky. Yum!"

But no, naive girl, it is not tasty actually. I looked for the recipe and found that fire cakes are exactly this:

flour
water
salt if you're luckier than most

Cook this over an open fire. Ever had pancakes that were so hard and disgusting not even the dog would eat them? Yep, that's fire cakes!

Amazing what we take for granted. First of all, salt. Then, sugar. Then, a real stove, not an open flame. Can you imagine how badly they'd stick, if nothing else?!