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ACTRESS EXTRAORDINAIRE

12/20/2024

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A WRITER'S WIT
I always tell people that I became a writer not because I went to school but because my mother took me to the library. I wanted to become a writer so I could see my name in the card catalog.
​Sandra Cisneros
Author of The House on Mango Street
Born December 20, 1954
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S. Cisneros

MY BOOK WORLD

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Rutherford, Margaret. Margaret Rutherford: An Autobiography as Told to Gwen Robyns. London: Wyndham, 1972.

Recently I caught a couple of Rutherford’s Murder films on Turner Classic Movies, in which she plays Agatha Christie’s detective, Ms. Marple. And I became fascinated with the actor, how intricately and honestly she played the part, though the stories are relatively simple. Like a lot of actors/artists she suffered in her personal life early on. At age three her mother died, and an Aunt Besse raised her. It is easy to imagine her life as she was born in 1892, just a few months before my maternal grandmother was born. I usually don’t care for “as told to” books because the prose does sound as if it has been dictated onto a recording and transcribed word for word. But Rutherford’s spoken prose apparently is so eloquent, it doesn’t seem to affect the quality of the written result. Besides, her accounts are terribly interesting.
 
Rutherford celebrated nearly fifty years in the acting business before, because of physical difficulties, she quit, just before her death in 1972—at age eighty. She seemed to make the most of her life no matter what. She went after and earned the career she desired. She traveled for both work and pleasure. She “adopted” adult children after she was married because she had none of her own. At age fifty-four she married fellow actor, Stringer Davis. He died a few months following her death. Perhaps some of her tips to actors are dated, but for the most part probably not. Kindness, consideration of fellow workers, and generosity never seem to go out of style. I paid entirely too much for this used copy, but I do think it has been worth it! If only it were signed!
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY 2025!
​Up Next:
​TUES JAN 7, 2025 : A Writer's Wit | Zora Neale Hurston

WEDS JAN 8, 2025: A Writer's Wit | Robert Littell
THURS JAN 9, 2025: A Writer's Wit | Simone de Beauvoir
FRI JAN 10, 2025: My Book World | Nic Stone, Dear Martin

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A WRITER'S WIT: RONAN FARROW

12/19/2024

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It's incumbent on good public servants to maintain their voices and originality of thinking.
​Ronan Farrow
American Journalist
Born December 19, 1987
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R. Farrow
Up Next:
FRI: My Book World | Margaret Rutherford
, 
Margaret Rutherford: An Autobiography as Told to Gwen Robyns
TUES: A Writer's Wit | Zora Neale Hurston
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Robert Littell
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Simone de Beauvoir
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A WRITER'S WIT: LUCY WORSLEY

12/18/2024

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Dorothy L. Sayers is absolutely my favorite. The reason she stands above Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, and Margery Allingham is because she was so subtly aware of the lot and trials of women of her decade.
​Lucy Worsley
Author of A Very British Murder: The Story of a National Obsession
​Born December 18, 1973
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L. Worsley
Up Next: 
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Roman Farrow
FRI: My Book World | 
Margaret Rutherford, Margaret Rutherford: An Autobiography as Told to Gwen Robyn
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FORD MADOX FORD

12/17/2024

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For the judging of contemporary literature the only test is one's personal taste. If you much like a new book, you must call it literature even though you find no other soul to agree with you, and if you dislike a book you must declare that it is not literature though a million voices should shout you that you are wrong. The ultimate decision will be made by Time.
​Ford Madox Ford
​Author of The Good Soldier
Born December 17, 1873 
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F. M. Ford
Up Next:
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Lucy Worsley
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Ronan Farrow
FRI: 
My Book World | Margaret Rutherford, Margaret Rutherford: An Autobiography as Told to Gwen Robyns
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'HIGH AND DRY' 2024

12/16/2024

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Each year the International Cultural Center at Texas Tech University—located in the campus's  museum district—hosts in its gallery a juried show of photographs taken in arid and semiarid locales throughout the world. I am pleased to say that of 50+ displayed photographs, I placed 10th as an honorable mention. You may view this photograph in several places:
1) By clicking here at my website www.richardjespers.com/photos.html
​2) Clicking here to view an online display of all the winners: www.depts.ttu.edu/international/events/2025/high_and_dry/
3) If you live in West Texas you can see these photos in person at the ICC.
Enjoy viewing! RJ
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ISHERWOOD COMPLEAT

12/13/2024

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A WRITER'S WIT
Healing is a constant state. You don’t have to be “fully healed” to give or receive love, to chase after that dream, or to get yourself to that next level.
Lucía González
Author of The Bossy Gallito
​Born December 13, 1957
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L. González

MY BOOK WORLD

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Bucknell, Katherine. Christopher Isherwood Inside Out. New York: Farrar, 2024.

In 2016, I Christopher Isherwood’s entire oeuvre. Why? I admired his work at every level: sophisticated and lyrical vocabulary; his sometimes quirky but lyrical syntax, the variety of genres he tackled, from fiction to nonfiction (history, biography), and play/screenplay writing. My reading included about 4,500 published pages of Isherwood’s journals, all edited by Bucknell. Now she has created an exquisite biography of the author.
 
Isherwood worked on the boundary of fiction and nonfiction. He kept diaries most of his adult life and drew on them for his published writing, creating narratives more vivid, more revealing, more entertaining than what he documented. He altered the truth in order to make the truth more compelling, and his subtle and mysterious reworking accounts, more than anything else, for the lasting appeal of his writing (5).
 
At first, I thought I would run into a lot of repetition, but I soon discovered that Bucknell’s scholarly work had thoroughly investigated Isherwood’s life from beginning to end—as a biographer should. From Isherwood’s point of view, for example, he only knew his father until the man was killed in WWI, when Isherwood was little more than eleven. Bucknell fills in those blanks for readers: lets us know what a sensitive man the father was and how, as long as he could, he nurtured Christopher’s artistic personality. The hole left in Isherwood’s life was one that would never be filled.
 
Christopher Isherwood was as openly gay as a man could be in his era (b. 1904). By his own accounting he went to bed with over 400 men (from Germany to the UK to the USA). He loved his sexual life. Even when he had a lover/partner, he often had trysts with other men. Yet “[h]e saw from the outset of his career that he must make homosexuality attractive to mainstream audiences if he was to change their view of it, and he worked to do this in all his writing in different ways” (9). I believe he succeeded. Within the glory of the Gay Liberation days of the 1970s, the man was in his sixties, yet he still continued to grow, and he was admired far and wide by younger gay men (my generation) for his pioneering life and work. He was in constant demand for teaching and speaking gigs, which he labored to keep, not only for the remuneration but for the communication it afforded him with others.
 
This tome is one of the most eloquent pieces of literary biography I’ve ever read. If readers wish to learn about one of the finest twentieth-century writers working in English prose, this book is a fine place to begin. 

​Up Next:
​TUES: A Writer's Wit | Ford Madox Ford

WEDS: A Writer's Wit |Lucy Worsley
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Ronan Farrow
FRI: My Book World | Margaret Rutherford: An Autobiography as told to Gwen Robyns

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A WRITER'S WIT: GUSTAVE FLAUBERT

12/12/2024

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Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.
​Gustave Flaubert
Author of Sentimental Education
Born December 12, 1821
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G. Flaubert
Up Next:
FRI: My Book World | Katherine 
Bucknell, Christopher Isherwood Inside Out

TUES: A Writer's Wit | Ford Madox Ford
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Lucy Worsley
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Ronan Farrow
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A WRITER'S WIT: THOMAS MCGUANE

12/11/2024

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One of the reasons I'm reluctant to start a novel is it's such an obsessive activity. You get in there, you don't know anything else while you're in there. And that's quite a sacrifice to make, especially for us old guys where time is kind of short. You don't want to disappear for a year; you want to be outdoors.
​Thomas McGuane
Author of Gallatin Canyon
Born December 11, 1939
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T. McGuane
Up Next: 
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Gustave Flaubert
FRI: My Book World | Katherine Bucknell, Christopher Isherwood Inside Out 
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A WRITER'S WIT: HELEN OYEYEMI

12/10/2024

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The way I live now is that I only write, which means that I'm very poor but very happy. Everything in my life is the way I want it to be. 
Helen Oyeyemi
Author of Peaces
Born December 10, 1984
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H. Oyeyemi
Up Next:
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Thomas McGuane
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Gustave Flaubert
FRI: 
My Book World | Katherine Bucknell, ​Christopher Isherwood Inside Out 
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A WRITER'S WIT: JASON REYNOLDS

12/6/2024

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Be not afraid of discomfort. If you can't put yourself in a situation where you are uncomfortable, then you will never grow. You will never change. You'll never learn.
​Jason Reynolds
Author of Long Way Down
Born December 6, 1983
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J. Reynolds
Up Next:
​TUES: A Writer's Wit | Helen Oyeyemi

WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Thomas McGuane
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Gustave Flaubert
FRI: My Book World | Katherine Bucknell, ​Christopher Isherwood Inside Out
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A WRITER'S WIT: JOAN DIDION

12/5/2024

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 Writers are always selling somebody out.
​Joan Didion
Author of Slouching Towards Bethlehem
Born December 5, 1934
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J. Didion
Up Next:
FRI: A Writer's Wit | Jason Reynolds

TUES: A Writer's Wit | Helen Oyeyemi
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Thomas McGuane
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Gustave Flaubert
0 Comments

A WRITER'S WIT: BARBARA AMIEL

12/4/2024

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In a free world there is, alas, more common crime than in a dictatorial system.
​Barbara Amiel, Canadian Journalist
Author of Friends and Enemies: A Memoir
Born December 4, 1940
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B. Amiel
Up Next: 
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Joan Didion 
FRI: A Writer's Wit | Jason Reynolds
0 Comments

A WRITER'S WIT: MICHAEL MUSTO

12/3/2024

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It's a good thing that columnists don't make homosexuality their last taboo anymore. But I wish the columnists themselves would come out too.
​Michael Musto
Author of Fork on the Left, Knife in the Back
Born December 3, 1955
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M. Musto
Up Next:
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Barbara Amiel
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Joan Didion
FRI:
A Writer's Wit | Jason Reynolds
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