Wednesday, November 30, 2011
The Pleasure of Letting Go
The Pleasure of Letting Go
After reading her work, I really feel that I need to go back, scrap my story about a hot Texas summer, and focus instead perhaps on the story of Sorrow, a tiny Guinea Pig which didn't make it to adult hood, but worked so hard to stay in the world. Maybe his story, like his namesake's in Tess of the D'Urbervilles, could convey the pains of class struggle - a far loftier idea than don't stand under a ladder while you throw a hammer up to an unfinished second floor.
Reading Response: The Pleasure of Letting Go
"The Pleasure of Letting Go"-Reading Response
Also, I always like it when I can read a story, relate to it, and get a life lesson out of it. The lesson is in the title itself, "The Pleasure of Letting Go". Most of us have trouble with letting things go, especially if we truly love it. We become attached and it's been in our lives for so long, we can't imagine parting from it. But for Kyoko Mori, letting go of something she loves is fine because, this is how it should be. Taking care of the songbirds can not last forever, and she knows this. Mori knows that there is a better life for them beyond the sanctuary, and finds pleasure in seeing them fly into the world, now able to take care of themselves.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Reading Response 13: "The Pleasure of Letting Go"
The way Mori compares saving lives and raising birds to writing was a brilliant analogy. While bird watching was poetry, raising the babies she considered prose, a job full of "effort" and "discipline". And that seems to resonate with Anne Lamott's "Bird by Bird" where she suggests writing a little bit each day, faithfully. If one doesn't sit down and make an effort, than neither bird nor book will ever get off the ground and thrive, and I think that is one of the most important things for any writer to remember. Writing takes work, but in the end when your books are out there, flying through others thoughts, "becom[ing] what they were always meant to be", then that is one of the most fulfilling experiences in the world, worth everything you've put into those little winged words (Mori 169).
Reading Response: The Pleasure of Letting Go
This was a delightfully written essay and a pleasure to read. The passion that Mori had while writing about her interaction with the birds she nurtured was heightened by her compassion for their well-being. She had a deep connection with these animals. The title of this essay is parallel to her experience as a bird care-taker. It shows how much she embedded herself in caring for these animals in teaching them from the basics. This essay was about more than just the birds and their actions; it was about her feeling of acceptance and accomplishment.
In the paragraphs towards the end of the essay, Mori talks about how vigorous it is to take care of birds. She explains in great detail throughout the essay all of the aspects that went into helping the birds develop basic skills that are easier developed in their natural environment. She talks about her feelings of competence when she successfully forces open a bird’s beak to feed them. In the end, she says how nothing has ever given her the pleasure of letting go as it did when she released the birds into the wild. To me this symbolizes her need to make a difference. Mori explains how it took “effort and optimism” to care for the birds so it took more than just the job title. This was something that truly made her happy and made her feel of importance. The fact that nothing else has made her feel the same way, means that she’d grew an attachment to working with birds. It was a healthy attachment and I feel that this essay her way of feeling complete.
Reading Response: Once More to the Lake
The repetition of “no years” was very powerful in this piece. It represented the similarities between the two occasions and how it seemed as if “no years” had passed. It felt the same, but it was different. He was his father and his son was him from previous years. His confusion of whose rod he was truly behind while fishing was surreal. He couldn’t believe that he was in the act of being his father; at times finding himself repeating the same actions and phrases. His examples of these incidents created a sense of parallelism between the two experiences. It was almost as if there were no differences between the past and present as he went on to explain what had and was occurring.
One thing in particular that reminded him things weren’t truly the same was when the camp received new boats. He spoke about the old boats making “a sleepy sound across the lake” while the new boats “made a petulant, irritable sound”. He talked about missing the purrs of the old two-cylinder boats and how they concocted the sounds of summer.
His descriptive language and use of parallelisms helped to create a feeling of nostalgia. He was very specific in describing his feelings about re-visiting the lake. He had no problem with expressing his confusion of which role he played at certain points in time. He explained things as if time stood still and he was recapping what he had seen. This reading was very refreshing in respect to the construction of short stories. It was an interesting piece.
Response to Steven Church's Essay
Monday, November 28, 2011
Response to "I'm Just Getting to the Disturbing Part"
Saturday, November 26, 2011
RR: I'm just getting to the disturbing part
I really enjoyed this essay. One thing I've personally noticed about nonfiction creative essays is that once I start reading one, it's hard for me to stop. Such is not the case with fiction, or other types of creative writing. In fact, I almost never find it difficult to stick through a creative nonfiction essay. But it wasn't the fact that it was a nonfiction essay that made this piece so good.
This essay was incredibly revealing on a personal level. What started out as a story about a hot summer day ended as remembrance to the author's late brother, with a traumatic, neurosis-inducing incident in between. The author masterfully weaved through layers of introspection and scene, allowing the reader to observe the effects of what happened on the author's psyche.
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Reading response, The Pleasure of Letting Go
I really liked this essay. One because it was written very well, and two because I’m a fan of just about anything that involves animals. I admire that the writer managed to write about something that would expectedly be unexciting and make it interesting and informative as well. While reading this piece I really felt the connection and fascination he had with the birds, and I think that was part of the reason it worked well.
I couldn’t help but think that this might be about more than just birds. I have a tendency to overanalyze so this may be off base, but while reading I took some of the descriptions of bird as a sort of metaphor/ commentary on different types of peoples, and different societies on a broader level. I wonder if this was his intention, or if it was another meaning or entirely, or was this really just written to document the author’s experience with birds? If so, what was the purpose? Was it a self-reflective piece, or an article for a journal?
Regardless, it was still very enjoyable. I think that something like this would be easy to do from a writer’s perspective, because when you are passionate about something you generally have a lot to say.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Reading Response - Once More To The Lake
E.B.White weaves his observations throughout his narrative in such a manner that sometimes it's difficult to distinguish between the nostalgia he feels for his own experience and the nostalgia that he feels for American life altogether. He's very frank about tying these two things together. In fact, he spends an entire paragraph just on the American life celebration ("summertime, oh summertime..."). For my own taste, it was a little too prominent, but he does ease the reader into and out of the exuberance of the passage (in fact, the paragraph was about halfway through the piece).
Reading Response- "Once More to the Lake"
E.B. White’s essay “Once More to the Lake” is an excellent
example of creative non-fiction. Mr.
White captures the essence of his trip, but does so using strong diction,
connotation, and symbolism to not only give a depth of sensation about his
trip, but also a deeper meaning than a mere vacation. Instead, it is a perfect foiling of his own
trip as a boy to the lake, where he can connect to the role of the youngster
and the elder guardian, mimicking his father’s own behaviors during his trip
with his son. That being said, he also
touches upon the passage of time, as he often remarks about the changing
landscape. In doing so, Mr. White uses
excellent imagery and summary to capture the importance those memories had for
him and why the disappearance of a trail option matters, as opposed to saying, “There
used to be a horse trail here, but it’s no longer present”. By tying in past and present relationships into
his vacation location, Mr. White is able to create a connection between facts
and his emotions. Creating that
emotional connection is important to further draw the reader in, and make him
or her care about the story. I find
myself wanting to visit the lake now that I’ve read this story.
3-2-1 Response 2: Carolyn Parkhurst
For my second 3-2-1 response paper I chose to attend a reading by Carolyn Parkhurst on Thursday, November 8, 2011 at the Research Hall room (163) on George Mason Campus at 7:00pm. Ms. Parkhurst read from her most recent novel Nobodies Album. The novel centers on a writer, Octavia, who is trying to excise any personal passages from her original (successful) novels. She is also dealing with the arrest of her estranged son, who is charged with murder, and her own tragedy that has warped her from an idealist to an inveterate cynic. The novel, and by necessity the narrator, is very meta and deals with writing about writing, and what (if anything) is too personal to write about. This meta-cognitive aspect to the work is fascinating, and certainly a very unique thing to write about: writing about writing about writing, and so on.
In addition to the meta aspect of the novel, I felt that the narrator’s voice and the idea of writing as a living thing were two very important pieces of the novel. Octavia the narrator is wonderfully “prickly”, as Parkhurst describes her. She feels compelled to write stories that are bitter and linger in readers minds like the poisoned seeds of some terrible idea. Her own worldview has become warped by tragedy, and so she seems to pass on that way of viewing life through her own works. And that is where the final aspect of the novel comes into play, the idea that words, that writing, is a living thing. Once you put something down on paper that thought escapes to grow in the minds of others, who in turn cultivate it in still other people. There is no way to contain an idea or a thought, and so that is why what Olivia is trying to do is so unusual; if she re-writes her stories’ endings, can she in some way kill the original idea?
There were one or two ideas that I would have liked Ms. Parkhurst to expand on; for instance, what are her own views on what is too personal to write about? Does she feel that any experience is fair game, or does she prefer to limit what she writes about family and friends (unlike David Sedaris in his short story “Repeat After Me”). Additionally, does she view writing as a living thing? And if so, when does it become alive? Is it alive once the thought has entered her mind, or does writing only live when it is shared and allowed to plant ideas in the soil of others’ minds?
I suppose the best way to end this response would be to ask the same question Octavia’s publishers ask her as she sets out on her journey to correct her novel: who would want to read revised endings of successful stories? Would you, or would you, as readers, feel a proprietary interest in the story and reject any executive meddling after the fact—that is, after publishing?
Reading Response: Goodbye to All That
Reading Response 12
Reading Response 12: Joan Didion
Joan Didion, "Goodbye to All That"
Reading Respose
once more to the lake reading response
Once more to the lake was one of the most vivid short stories/essays that I have ever read. His use of imagery is breathtaking. The standard presentation of imagery is a collection of words that work well together to give the reader an idea of what the author is intending to create. This was different. His description was nearly as effective as a color picture. This story is the Mona Lisa of imagery.
Now that I’m done making corny comparisons, I would also like to express my appreciation of the intense metaphor in this piece. The symbols of the groin and the lake speak volumes about the father- son relationship, and also, on a broader level, inspects the general human experience of aging and paternity. One of the benefits of using literary devices effectively is that it delivers the intended point or message clearer than a simple, bland statement of them would, and adds plenty of style to boot.
This reading has inspired a new goal for me: write a short story with imagery this great. Since this goal is impossible, however, I am changing it right now to finding more stories to read that are on par with this one, and pretending that I’m going to actually do the first goal along the way.
Thanks for the assignment professor!