Friday, June 3, 2011

A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN

Virginia Woolf once said that a woman needs a room of her own to write.  She needs a place of refuge from the hectic nature of the world---the babies crying, the dirty dishes, the waiting bills, and perhaps even---perhaps especially---the judgment and contempt of those of the opposite sex who deem themselves far too erudite to stoop to read her work.  Woolf is just one of the many great female writers the world has seen thus far.  Why is it important that women in the past took up their pens and put ink to paper, why it is crucial that women today put fingers to keys?  Why do the achievements of such great women as Jane Austen, George Eliot, and Charlotte Bronte remain so pivotal over a century after they first sought publication?  Why must women continue to be women of letters, whether those strung together letters become words and whole thoughts on blogs, in essays, newspapers, e-mails, letters, magazines, memoirs, biographies, autobiographies, poems, and novels?  Because of misguided and delusional men like V. S. Naipaul.  Have you heard of him?  I tend to doubt it.  Have you heard of Jane Austen or Charlotte Bronte? I would certainly think so.  Perhaps there is a good reason for this.



What can you do to combat the misogynistic, backward, ignorant views aired by the Trinidadian Nobel laureate?  Pick up one of the masterpieces of these great authors.  They are literary greats who just happen to be women.  They wrote about issues close to women's (and men's) hearts---love, death, social mores, family, ambition, greed, honor, religion, and forgiveness.  Open their books and let their words come pouring out, letting each woman live through her words long after she was buried in the churchyard.  Lose yourself in the majesty of these great works.  When you close their covers, I guarantee that not only will you have been moved, but that you will also be amazed by what you have discovered about yourself and your world.

HOT TIMES, SUMMER IN THE CITY

The thermostat will not go below 79 degrees.  This is actually an improvement compared to the 80 degrees a few hours earlier.  My poor air conditioning is running non-stop.  I even broke down and dusted so that I could put on the ceiling fan.  It helps recirculate the air but doesn't bring down the temperature.  Let's hope the new drapes I just purchased help.  They are blackout/thermal lined.  This is going to be a long summer!!!

Here's the fabric.  I ironed the first two panels for the living room window but still need to do the other two for the dining room.  I love it because it combines robin's egg blue (LOVE) and terra cotta (WARM).  My walls are cream, so I wanted something with a pattern to liven up the room.  It's Brittany Rose by Pottery Barn.



Reading To-Do List

I have a BA in English literature.  Before I acquired that, I had an unofficial degree in voracious reading.  I was the child with the flashlight and a novel under the sheets.  Or kneeling on the ground, book open, close up to the night light.  Most of my life has been dedicated to American literature.  Now I have fallen in love with the British.  I love British literature and have certain life goals when it comes to my reading.  I want to read the greats of British literature, the classics, the masterpieces!  Here is how far I have come and how far I have yet to go.  Don't you think it's pretty ambitious?  Thank goodness I have the rest of my life to accomplish this feat.

CHARLES DICKENS   

A Christmas Carol  ---  read it


A Tale of Two Cities  ---  read it


Barnaby Rudge


Bleak House  ---  read it


David Copperfield  ---  read it


Dombey and Sons


Great Expectations  ---  read it


Hard Times  ---  read it


Little Dorrit


Martin Chuzzlewit


Nicholas Nickleby


Oliver Twist  ---  read it


Our Mutual Friend


The Old Curiosity Shop


Pictures from Italy


American Notes


The Uncommon Traveller


Sketches by Boz


A Child's History of England


The Mystery of Edwin Drood


Christmas Stories

JANE AUSTEN


Northanger Abbey


Pride and Prejudice  --- read it


Sense and Sensibility  --- read it


Mansfield Park  ---  half way read it, must re-read in full


Emma  --- read it


Persuasion  ---  read it


CHARLOTTE BRONTE


Jane Eyre  ---  read it


Shirley


Villette


The Professor


ANNE BRONTE


Agnes Grey  ---  read it


The Tenant of Wildfell Hall  ---read it


EMILY BRONTE


Wuthering Heights ---  read it


ELIZABETH GASKELL


Mary Barton


Cranford  --- read it


Ruth


North and South


My Lady Ludlow  --- read it


Sylvia's Lovers


Wives and Daughters


GEORGE ELIOT


Middlemarch


Daniel Deronda


Adam Bede


The Mill on the Floss


Silas Marner --- read it


THOMAS HARDY


Far From the Madding Crowd


The Return of the Native  ---  read it


The Mayor of Casterbridge


Tess of the d'Urbervilles


Jude the Obscure


MARY SHELLEY


Frankenstein


KAZUO ISHIGURO


The Remains of the Day


E. M. FORSTER


Howards End


A Passage to India


A Room with a View


WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY


Vanity Fair


STELLA GIBBONS


Cold Comfort Farm


ANTHONY TROLLOPE


Barchester Towers


The Way We Live Now