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3+ Werken 82 Leden 4 Besprekingen

Werken van Lynell George

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Speculative Los Angeles (2021) — Medewerker — 40 exemplaren

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Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
20th century
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA

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This was a book I enjoyed very much as it was about Los Angeles as viewed by a native born city girl, now living in New York City. The book original premise was intended to document the local arts community and how it has evolved over time. Sadly, what happened instead is that there is no longer an arts community left to document. If anything, there are just random artists operating in isolation hoping to connect with someone. The book then translates for the reader the loss of sense of community with the eradication of space for actual communities to live as they had historically. Lastly the book crashes to a screeching halt with the predicable conclusion that Los Angeles cannot be “a place” any longer. Los Angeles is now the apocalyptic home of permanent physical erasure. It is only a memory in the recesses of those who once lived here but are now projected into a future “Angelinos” are not choosing nor creating. Outside forces are doing the choosing and creating.
The best part of this book is the attention to language use and desire to be as expressive as possible when most writers are satisfied to made broad brush condemnations of Los Angeles. The author is a photographer and her work is featured in this book as well. The pictures in this book are more contemporary, although the thoughts and reminiscences dive back to the 1960s and 1970s. This book was published by Angel City Press and is nicely constructed. Some book chapters were previously published elsewhere. Overall, this is a good book for your personal library to have especially if you collect on Southern California. I do. Other corresponding books to read along with it would be: (History) Coast of Dreams, by Kevin Starr; (Anti After/Image) Los Angeles on Instagram, by Dan Kurtman; (similar to After/Image) Los Angeles: Improbable City, by John Halpern.
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sacredheart25 | Apr 11, 2022 |
This book is based on George's time going over the Butler papers at the Huntington Library. It's not a biography or anything; it's meant to give you insight into Butler's working mind and thought process. How did she perceive herself as a writer? Unfortunately, I felt like there wasn't enough of Butler and there was too much George, who seemed to be getting in the way of her subject. Those papers will be the basis of a really good book someday, but this isn't it.
 
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Stevil2001 | 2 andere besprekingen | Sep 24, 2021 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3725489.html

It is beautifully produced, and conveys very well the sense of awe and reverence that anyone who has ever done archival research knows from dealing with original first-hand materials. But I learned very little from it about what Butler thought she was doing with her work, what her influences were, what external forces pushed her in one direction or the other. It is more of an extended meditation on how Lynelle George feels about Octavia E. Butler and her personal records, which is all very well, but not as interesting as I had hoped for. In case you are reading this after the 2021 Hugo ballot has closed, you can get it here. Of the Butleriana on the ballot this year, I much prefer the graphic novel adaptation of Parable of the Sower.… (meer)
 
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nwhyte | 2 andere besprekingen | Aug 27, 2021 |
This is an account of how Octavia E. Butler became Octavia E. Butler, the wonderful writer we loved, and lost too soon. Lynell George gives us Butler's life and development into a writer through Butler's own eyes and words as much as possible.

Butler's full name was Octavia Estelle Butler; her mother was Octavia Margaret Butler. In her younger years, she went by Estelle. Estelle was a quiet, shy girl--and the more she pursued her ambition to become a writer, the more she realized she needed to develop a more assertive, outward-facing personality.

That greater assertiveness was necessary because black girls growing up in the 1950s and 1960s weren't expected to become writers, or pursue any intellectual careers. Some of the obstacles she faced included her slight dyslexia, teachers who didn't have patience or understanding for helping her overcome it, classmates who bullied the big, seemingly slow, socially awkward girl. Others included those who loved and cared for her most, including her Aunt Hazel, who told her, at thirteen, that "Negroes can't be writers." They were trying to protect her from disappointment and heartbreak, and to steer her towards "safer" careers like being a secretary, but Butler didn't give up.

Some of the advantages she had were that Pasadena was a racially and ethnically diverse community, and in taking the public buses everywhere, she encountered a wide variety of people of different backgrounds, cultures, and occupations. Another advantage was the accessibility of the Pasadena Central Library, that gave her access to all the books her hoarded pennies couldn't buy. (I'm a decade younger; I remember when 75¢ was a bit expensive for a paperback, and 95¢ was just outrageous. Pennies.) When she was in her teens and starting to submit her first stories, that library became her access to the magazine The Writer, that gave her access to the knowledge of how to format a manuscript, how to submit a story, and other essential details of the business of being a writer.

Along the way, Butler was determined to support herself, and worked a wide variety of temporary and part-time jobs, and started developing and trying out her more assertive "Octavia" personality in order to do the things she needed to do..

This is the barest overview of just the early part of her career, and George tells us better and tells us more. In doing so, she combines her own research with Butler's words from her own journals, and gives us an inside look at what a writer's life, at least this great writer from a seemingly unpromising background, is like.

Highly recommended.

I bought this audiobook.
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LisCarey | 2 andere besprekingen | May 20, 2021 |

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3
Ook door
1
Leden
82
Populariteit
#220,761
Waardering
3.8
Besprekingen
4
ISBNs
6

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