Stories & Soliloquies

Stories & Soliloquies
    • Category: The Waste Book

      • Inspiring Me Today

        Posted at 8:10 am by michellejoelle, on October 23, 2013

        Neil Gaiman is well known to be wonderful in so many ways, something about which I’m sure no one needs convincing.  This article in The Guardian proves it once again, nevertheless.  It’s a bit long, and retreads some familiar ground on the importance of fiction and libraries and literacy, and some vague politics, but it’s got some fantastic gems:

        We writers – and especially writers for children, but all writers – have an obligation to our readers: it’s the obligation to write true things, especially important when we are creating tales of people who do not exist in places that never were – to understand that truth is not in what happens but what it tells us about who we are. Fiction is the lie that tells the truth, after all.

        Fiction is the lie that tells the truth, after all.  This has been bouncing around my head like a game of PONG.

        We all – adults and children, writers and readers – have an obligation to daydream. We have an obligation to imagine. It is easy to pretend that nobody can change anything, that we are in a world in which society is huge and the individual is less than nothing: an atom in a wall, a grain of rice in a rice field. But the truth is, individuals change their world over and over, individuals make the future, and they do it by imagining that things can be different.

        Go read it, then visit your local library!

        Posted in The Waste Book | 0 Comments | Tagged dreams, gaiman, libraries, links
      • Food for Thought

        Posted at 10:00 am by michellejoelle, on October 21, 2013

        I just came across this lovely short essay by Jamie Wallace, called “The World is Made of Stories”.  I found it as a link from this blog.  Some of my favorite quotes:

        These narratives slip into our subconscious. We take them for granted, but they are – like it or not – the very foundations of who we are.

        I love the idea that our thoughts, our reactions, and our very identities are built by stories.

        These bits and pieces of family legend, shared experiences, and local folklore give this place we call home its history and identity. From blue collar to bluebloods, each of us brings our own stories, adding to the depth and personality of this little town.

        I also love how she says that these stories don’t just come into us and shape us, but that the relationship is reciprocal – we use what we’ve become to shape the world around us and create new stories in a communal way.

        The stories don’t even have to be entirely true.

        To a certain extent, I don’t think stories actually can be true. Then again, I wonder if the story might be truer in some ways than the “truth” – since the story version is what sticks with us while the “real” version is never fully recorded in its context, but only retained as it is ripped from its place in reality and kept as a fragment. I feel like Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project would be relevant here, but that’s an essay for another time.

        Posted in The Waste Book | 4 Comments | Tagged jamie wallace, links, stories
      • The Art of Hygge

        Posted at 12:36 am by michellejoelle, on October 18, 2013

        Hygge sounds like my kind of thing.  It sounds like big breakfasts, and getting snowed in, and the warm glow of Christmas lights.  It sounds like the feeling I continuously try to cultivate in my writing and in my life.

        From Fathomaway.com,

        A love of or need for hygge is an important part of the Danish psyche. Hygge is usually inadequately translated as “coziness.” This is too simplistic: coziness relates to physical surroundings — a jersey can be cozy, or a warm bed — whereas hygge has more to do with people’s behavior towards each other. It is the art of creating intimacy: a sense of comradeship, conviviality, and contentment rolled into one.

        It’s the perfect description.

        Posted in The Waste Book | 1 Comment | Tagged favorite words, hygge
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