December 31, 2006

There should be time to look back at 2006!

Today is the last day of 2006. Happy New Year!

As I sat the church today, I concluded that it would be a good time to reflect on this past year. Alas, I won't be able to do so comprehensively today. I'm under pressure to keep working on my book (that is, to keep looking forward) today. I will take next month (January 2007) as a transition time in which to look back and to look forward.

Posted by rdhyee at 03:57 PM

December 24, 2006

Bird by Bird

Serendipitiously, Laura had in her backpack my copy of Anne Lamott's Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. I remember it to be an entertaining and inspiring guide for writers the first time I read it over five years ago. Now I'm re-reading Bird by Bird as I embark on my time of joyful trial and write my first book. The most memorable phrase from the book is "shitty first drafts," one I use with relish to describe the first round of chapters that emerge from my computer. I'm not overly concerned with my dismal prose since I'm just trying to get all my thoughts down on paper. Now if I don't move quickly to fixing up the words into serviceable text as my first deadline approaches, the holiday relaxation will begin to wear thin!
Posted by rdhyee at 08:11 AM

December 03, 2006

Notelets for 2006.12.02

The East Is West: The Best Chinese Restaurants in Southern California - New York Times:

    THERE are probably more Chinese in Los Angeles than in any metropolitan area outside of China. (The same very likely could be said of Mexicans, Iranians, Koreans, Japanese and more, which is what makes Los Angeles the best international eating city in the world.) Fifty years ago, most Chinese immigrants were concentrated in a typical downtown Chinatown, which still exists, but more as a relic than a vibrant community.

100 Notable Books of the Year - The New York Times Book Review - New York Times.

Berkeley poet Lerner writes from heartland:

    It can be challenging to convince students that reading and writing are inextricable, that writing is just a very intense form of reading, as Wallace Stevens said.

Rebecca Loudon: Wallace Stevens once said that the act of writing poetry was actually a very intense form of reading.

What's the actual Wallace Stevens quote?

Posted by rdhyee at 08:21 AM