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from here
Oh, hello.
Welcome to February, which I understand has been ongoing for quite some time now. Please forgive my absence here, but I do have good reasons--at least, I think I do--and I'll do my best to catch you up, chat you up, and otherwise engage you for a few minutes. Let's on, shall we?
1. My Part-Time Job: As you may remember, Jared, Jordan, and Theo moved last month. Jared had surgery on his broken foot and is not allowed to bear any weight on it at all. Theo is a Very Busy Toddler All The Time, so Rick and I have been going over to their house to help with child care/entertainment. Tomorrow, Jared sees the orthopedist again, and may be put in a walking boot. If so, we will be laid off or have our hours cut considerably. If not, our contract will be renewed.
2. My Streak: On 8 February my Wordle streak ended at 344 with the word EMBED. Am I still bitter? A little bit, yes. I guess it pales in comparison to other things that happened on that same day, however, which include a fatal Learjet crash in Philadelphia, a 7.6 magnitude earthquake near the Cayman Islands, and a deadly bus crash in Mexico. Additionally, Kendrick Lamar and Beyoncé won top Grammy honors, and the 49th Imam of Nizari Isma'ilism, Aga Khan IV, passed away. Still, though, kind of a big deal.
3. My Hypocrisy: I'm sure I have said this many times and in the Comments of so many of your blogs: I am not a puzzle person. I don't enjoy jigsaw puzzles. They feel too much like work to me. Sigh. Behold my latest lesson in Eating My Words:
4. My High Dudgeon: I just read a post over at maya's place in which she mentioned the latest film version of Wuthering Heights. Let me just say this: I WILL NOT BE SEEING THIS MOVIE. I've read several articles about it already, and no thank you. In this article from the NYT, the writer discusses the casting of Jacob Elordi, a white actor, as Heathcliff, who is described by author Emily Bronte as dark and gypsy, leading readers to believe he is not white. This casting is nothing new. Heathcliff has been played by white actors every time this novel has been committed to the big screen. Would it have been exciting had he been played by a man of colour? Absolutely. Is this why I'm eschewing this film? No. This review tells me all I need to know, and that is that the director has decided to Improve Upon Emily Bronte and, really, Tell Her Own Version Of Wuthering Heights, which she thinks is better somehow, yet still call it Wuthering Heights. Nope. I'm not going through THAT again. Been there, done that with the 1995 film version of The Scarlet Letter, a classic novel which I taught for decades. That movie, with Demi Moore as Hester Prynne, almost killed me. Not only did they change the ending--which changed the themes and Puritan ethos and criticism at the heart of the book--they added characters and scenes that were completely aside from the story. I almost walked out, but I felt compelled to stay so that I could one day give a lecture TO EVERYONE about exactly how horrible that movie was. Thankfully, someone else did it for me, but I'm still willing.
I was equally outraged once before, and that was at The Shaw Festival in Ontario, Canada. Rick and I had chosen to see a performance of The Crucible by Arthur Miller. I had taught this play for decades as well as part of my American Literature curriculum and was excited to see it live. It was a terrific production until Act III. You see, I had taught this play so many times, and remember, at least two or three times a day for years and years, that I had it memorized. Memorized so well, in fact, that I knew the very moment during the performance of Act III that the director added a line to the script. This man ADDED A LINE TO THE WORK OF AN AMERICAN DRAMA LEGEND LIKE ARTHUR MILLER. I was beyond aghast. I was personally affronted. How dare they? I could see why they may have added the line; it made a part of the scene a little clearer perhaps for people who were getting lost in all the chaos of the afflicted girls. Still, to me that's no excuse. As another great dramatist once said:
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5. My Musings: All this talk about The Classics has me thinking about them. About reading them again and wanting to talk about them. I do miss that about teaching. I recently met up with a former Creative Writing student and we talked about, oh, Everything, and we talked about poetry and contemporary poets and writing and it made me miss teaching that, too. I'm very committed to Retirement, however, and I'm not able to predict my energy/pain level enough to commit to anything else. Good heavens, I have a hard enough time committing to this blog on even a semi-regular basis, and that's nothing new. Still, I may have to add a few Old Timers to my Book Cellar* for comfort reads.
*I've decided to call my TBR pile my Book Cellar now. Like wines, my books are kept lovingly until the right time, the right occasion, or the right pairing for selection. I'd like to say I thought of this, but I read this term someplace else.
I think we're all caught up. As usual, I do so want to hear from you in Comments about All Of This and so many other things. Thank you for being here, and I also want to thank so many of you who have kindly sent me helpful and supportive emails containing research articles and links. I am so grateful and awed that you have taken time out of your lives to do this for me. It means the world. I have always said that my Readers are Exceptional People, and you continue to prove just that. Again, thank you.


Hiiiiii. I am of the opinion that no one should ever apologize for not blogging because it's not a job and we are friends not employers, BUT I always feel the urge to apologize when I have been blog-absent as well, so I will just say nice to see you. As someone who went the first few years of having children with no family around, and experienced my parents' move here as better than winning the lottery, it is wonderful of you to help with Theo this way, and I know you love him and are obviously great grandparents and probably happy to do it, but not all grandparents are and I think it should be said.
ReplyDeleteI love puzzles to a nearly unhealthy degree, by which I mean I set them out and think I will spend an hour soothing my nervous system by reassembling that which is fragmented, and I set an alarm so I don't lose myself, and then I look up at two in the morning and have turned off the alarm and think 'oops it happened again' (especially bad when husband is on another continent and there is no one to poke me).Despite this, your gorgeous puzzle has prompted me to go find one because I don't have one going right now and even if I go bonkers it will be a distraction from pain and winter depression and *gestures broadly at everything*.
My daughter is reading Wuthering Heights and not loving it. I love Margot Robbie, but nothing I have seen regarding this movie makes me think it is going to be faithful or worthwhile, and (the whole whitewashing thing aside, although of course it should not be aside) although I've only seen Jacob Elordi in Saltburn, where he was perfectly fine as an actor, WHY IS HE EVERYWHERE RIGHT NOW and just no thank-you.
Goodness I have not just joined the fray but word-sprayed all over it. Angus got to play catch with Big League Players in Big League Camp yesterday!
I hope your son's foot is healing nicely, even though it means you'll be out of a job! I'm at the same stage of life, usually with my 4 YO granddaughter while her two older siblings are in school. But there were a number of days last month in which I had all three due to school never seeming to be in session because of extreme cold. I only go one day per week, as that's all I can handle by myself.
ReplyDeleteI love to do 1000–2000-piece puzzles in the winter. Yours turned out beautifully! My Middle Child (early 30's with autism and lives with us) does them with me. She's much better than I am, but it's a fun way for us to connect each day during the months we're stuck indoors.
I enjoyed your take on the classics, movies, etc. It's always disappointing to me to see a movie after I've read the book. I decided to read all of Jane Austen's oeuvre (besides the two I'd previously read years ago) this winter. I cannot stress how much I am loving these books!
I had to snicker at your, "I'm not a puzzle person" and then you got sucked in. I think that's the way it works for everyone who puzzles. The one I'm currently working on is giving me fits; but I am determined to finish it.
ReplyDeleteHello! When our children were young we did not have any family living nearby. It is marvelous of you to be caring for The Very Busy Toddler. That's a great gift to the parents.
ReplyDeleteI used to really enjoy doing jigsaw puzzles. But the problem for me now is that I need three different pairs of glasses to adequately see the pieces. That makes it Not Fun.
"Wuthering Heights" - what a fascinating and hard-to-love book! I don't know how the movie portrays it, but it is NOT a love story! I read it for book club several years ago, and found it deep but baffling. It is one of those books that I did not love reading but I think about often. I ended up concluding that it is an allegory for human existence, and can be interpreted multiple ways. I'll put a link in a separate comment to my analysis of it (not that my analysis is worth a lot). I never read it in school, so didn't have the benefit of a teacher to guide me through it.
We read "The Return of the Native" by Thomas Hardy in 11th grade. I don't know why, but I absolutely loved it. I would like to re-read it.
One of my two book clubs tries to pick a classic to read each year. This year we read "An Enemy of the People" - a play by Henrik Ibsen. It seems quite relevant to today. The club is going next week to the theater to see a modern adaptation of it. So, lines will be probably changed from the original! (Except if it's in translation to English, what is the original?)
My analysis of "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Bronte. My credentials: I hung out with a lot of English majors in college, 40+ years ago. In other words, no credentials. https://commonhousehold.blogspot.com/2021/12/the-heights-they-are-wuthering.html
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