Proved on the Pulses: On the Essay and its Literary Cousins

Archive for the ‘Essays’ Category

On the 70th Anniversary of Virginia Woolf’s Death

Monday, March 28th, 2011

Thanks to Shawna Lemay for the link to this article, “Literary Haunts,” in The Independent, written by Woolf’s great-niece, Emma Woolf:

“In the end, perhaps it’s best to let the writer’s words speak for them. A century after she went “street-haunting” in London, you can still find Virginia out there. If I choose, I can put down my pen right now and walk to the Cock Tavern on Fleet Street. As newlyweds in 1912, Leonard and Virginia rented rooms at nearby Clifford’s Inn and took their daily meals at the Cock Tavern. The ideal place, then, for a 70th anniversary toast to Virginia Woolf.”

My essay, “Library Haunting,” is an homage of sorts to Woolf’s “Street Haunting.”

“Library Haunting” now online

Friday, March 25th, 2011

The Utne Reader has published my excerpted essay, “Library Haunting,” online. You can find it here.

Photo Credit: Stephanie Glaros

I confess I laughed at the subtitle. But maybe it takes a Canadian to defend a great American institution these days.

Interview at The New Quarterly: Confessions of a Library Book Thief

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

Hardworking Melissa Krone of The New Quarterly must have thought I was the rudest writer on their rosters; she kept sending emails asking to interview me and I kept “ignoring” her. The culprit was my spam filter. But at last we connected, and she’s posted an interview we did at The Literary Type and on The New Quarterly’s website. Thanks, Melissa, for your thought-provoking questions and for the opportunity to share my thoughts.

There’s still time to enter The New Quarterly’s annual contests: details on their site.

Vermont Studio Center

Saturday, March 5th, 2011

I’ve just come back from a month at the Vermont Studio Center. Founded by artists in 1984, the Studio Center is now the largest international artists’ and writers’ residency in the United States. Every month, around forty painters, sculptors, photographers, and other visual artists, along with a dozen or more writers set up for work in the Center’s light-filled studios and congregate in the Red Mill for delicious meals, conversation, and guest lectures from visiting artists.

Photo courtesy Lynn Nash

Photo courtesy Lynn Nash

One of the most fascinating and inspiring aspects of this residency, for me, was the opportunity to get to know a number of visual artists, to see them at work in their studios, and to listen to them talk about their process. On a snowshoe hike one afternoon we discussed artistic self-doubt. I had been writing an essay on the subject. Mostly, I thought of self-doubt as an obstacle or an enemy. Something to be beaten. And that is mostly the way we spoke about it. But somehow, as a result of our conversation, I began to wonder if there might be a hidden value in self-doubt. I spent the next few days exploring that idea. And the essay became a very different piece than it might have been, if not for their influence.

Photo courtesy Cheryl Suchors

Photo courtesy Cheryl Suchors

Here you see me with Carolyn Enz Hack, Lynn Nash, and Winston Lee Mascarenhas.

Famous Female Essayists

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

Thanks to Jill Margo and Andris Taskans for this list of women essayists. You can add names to the list.