Sunday, January 08, 2006

North of Hope by Jon Hassler



Jon Hassler!!! - Link to his official "Writing Room"
North of Hope is being re-released in paperback!

January, 2006
I just happened to re-read North of Hope over the last few days because I felt like it, and then was really happy to see at Keplers that he has written a new book The Good Woman which I will also write about when I have finished it.

I have been reading and enjoying Hassler's books for at least 15 years. In 1990 around the time that North of Hope came out (and after reading A Green Journey) I also started writing letters to many people quite frequently. Uncles, aunts, cousins, pen pals, and also Jon Hassler. Perhaps I was inspired by all the letter writing in A Green Journey, I think I was.

Most people that I knew responded, and to my surprise, so did Mr. Hassler. The initial letter was on two pages of white note paper, which I still have at home in Valley City, and then I also got several other postcards in response to my chatty letters telling him what was going on with me and asking him what he was writing. The postcards of course I have also saved too.
On the first letter he had responded to one of my questions about being a writer, and he said something like "You needn't decide whether to become a writer or not. " and said something about how the voice would become too insistent to ignore, but I'm not remembering exactly how he worded the last part.
I'm not sure, maybe my voice is getting more insistent but it's certainly not loud enough yet to keep me from ignoring it (although I almost did the "write a novel during November" challenge this year.)

Rookery Blues was written during the time of the postcards, and I know from the postcards that he was thinking of calling it The Icejam Quintet. It felt like I was on the inside track when it came to what he was planning to write, which was fun.
We met once at least at a book signing, he remembered one of my letters from one of the teacher descriptions I wrote. ("that crazy teacher!")

His books are really well drawn from life in the Midwest, specifically in small towns in Minnesota -- about teachers and priests, old ladies and teenagers. And most of them are Catholic, which I am not but I found fascinating then and also now as well.
I was just reading his new intro to the North of Hope paperback where he was talking about being a "priest-watcher" all his life - I think perhaps I have been a bit of a "teacher-watcher" as well.

His first book, Staggerford, came out in 1977 when Hassler was 44. Staggerford, and the other books set in and around that town, including A Green Journey, The Love Hunter, and Simon's Night, all have their dark moments but they have much more of a cozy humor to them.

North of Hope is probably the darkest of all his books but it may also be one of the best. You want things to work out better for the characters but if they did it would just be a pretty sappy love story just like anything else.

(His book A Green Journey was made into a TV movie starring Angela Lansbury and Denholm Elliot. This was a bit cheesy - the movie, not the book, which I loved. The biggest problem I remember was Denholm Elliot, who was not believable to me as James O'Hannon because I had just seen him as a bumbling fool in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. We (my sisters and I) had our own casting for James O'Hannon but I can't remember now who it was. Definitely better than Denholm. It was someone tall, white hair, piercing blue eyes, but not Paul Newman as he wasn't old enough at the time I think).

When I got to Stanford I took a class from John L'Heureux, who writes even darker novels about priests, teachers, and professors. L'Heureux is almost like the other side of Hassler it seemed to me. I wrote to Hassler about L'Heureux and told L'Heureux about Hassler but neither seemed to know anything about the other.

The Birth of the Chess Queen, by Marilyn Yalom


I saw this book over the holidays when shopping for gifts for other people and had to pick it up for myself (and for my boyfriend if he wants to read it).

It is a really fascinating history of how and why we have such a powerful female piece on the chess board (the queen) who was not even present for several centuries of the game's history... (originally in the Middle East this piece was a male vizier who was much weaker, only moving one space diagonally).

She's a senior scholar at Stanford's Institute for Women and Gender who has written extensively on women's history, and she did a great job of telling her own story of first becoming intrigued by this question and then going through her own research to get closer to the answer.
The book also talks a lot about how chess was played over the years -- it was a metaphor for courtship and love at some points - so that a couple shown playing chess in a medieval tapestry were not seen to "just" be playing chess...

Who Let the Dogs In? by Molly Ivins



This was hilarious! I think I bought it in one of the many frenzies of book buying at Keplers recently.
She covers almost my entire living memory of American politics, from Carter up to the present Shrub. It was fun to read her recent essays, but even better to read her take on the past as well.
Even better, the stories on Bush senior, who I do not remember as being as entertaining as his son. Make sure you read her recollection of when Bush regaled listeners by telling the thrilling tale of the gladiator who bit a lion in the balls!

Narnia media mania! Chronicles,Movie, Companion, Game!




Bought the movie companion collectors' book at Keplers the week before the movie came out because I could not resist. Also bought the Nintendo DS game a couple weeks earlier as well (partly for work research :-)





Reread Chronicles of Narnia right after seeing the movie (starting Dec 9)

Read new edition of Companion to Narnia after getting it for Christmas from my lovely sister...

The Chronicles of Narnia, by C.S. Lewis
I'm so happy to see so much about Narnia all over the place, it is now actually somewhat "trendy" to know about Narnia.
I always felt when I was a kid just like the Pevensies felt when being teased by their pre-dragon cousin Eustace - "Kids who talk and talk about Narnia tend to get barmier and barmier..."
It seemed as if no one knew what I was talking about and now people can come out of the woodwork and talk more about having liked Narnia in the past and the present.
It was quite fun to revisit the whole series again after having seen the movie, but of course we always read them in the original order (not the new post 1994 order) - the true order beginning with "The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe" not with "The Magician's Nephew".

I also really enjoyed reading the "Companion to Narnia" by Paul Ford as it is a new edition from the one I read a while ago, with new maps and new essays, plus a whole discourse that underscores how much better it is to read them in the original order!
Very hypertextual to read as it is in encyclopedia form and you are led from entry to entry either by whim or because you suddenly remember a character or idea and want to hear more about it.

Urgent Message from Mother: Gather the Women, Save the World


Actual date read (early December)
This is a book by Jean Shinoda Bolen, M.D. - my sister gave it to me at Thanksgiving.
She read out a couple of the poems in the book at Thanksgiving and they were very moving.
It really made me wish that the world's women can continue to try to gather, lead, work for change, although I have really being doing none of this myself of course.
What would be the world be like if more of its leaders were women who might be more likely to talk to each other to resolve more of the problems?