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A Few of My Favorite Things: Anne of Green Gables

Anne of Green Gables by
Lucy Maud Montgomery

It is the late 1800s at Green Gables in the fictional town of Avonlea on Prince Edward Island. Geriatric Matthew and Matilda Cuthbert reached a point where they needed help on the farm. So they applied to an orphanage to take on a boy old enough for the job. Instead they get Anne Shirley, a loquacious, dreamy, eleven-year-old girl.

“Isn't it splendid to think of all the things there are to find out about? It just makes me feel glad to be alive--it's such an interesting world. It wouldn't be half so interesting if we know all about everything, would it? There'd be no scope for imagination then, would there? But am I talking too much? People are always telling me I do. Would you rather I didn't talk? If you say so I'll stop. I can STOP when I make up my mind to it, although it's difficult.”

She charms them in to letting her stay. As she struggles to adjust to life on the farm and school, she proves a challenge. Both grudgingly fall in love with her and decide to keep her.

“Because when you are imagining, you might as well imagine something worthwhile.”


The story is told by an omniscient narrator in third person. The pace is deliberately slow and the tone lighthearted.

“It's been my experience that you can nearly always enjoy things if you make up your mind firmly that you will.”

The protagonist is quirky and spunky. Her secret weapons are her imagination and resiliency.

"Nothing could rob her of her birthright of fancy or her ideal world of dreams." 

When her world disappoints, even cuts when Matthew Cuthbert dies, she embraces her fate with courage and determination.

“Anne always remembered the silvery, peaceful beauty and fragrant calm of that night. It was the last night before sorrow touched her life; and no life is ever quite the same again when once that cold, sanctifying touch has been laid upon it.”

The pull, of course, is the orphan finding a home through line. The Cuthberts are decent people, though somewhat set in their ways. There are disapproving neighbors and bullying children to fill in as antagonists, but no one is overtly evil.

“Life is worth living as long as there's a laugh in it.”

Montgomery's attention to detail brings the characters and setting to life.

“Look at that sea, girls--all silver and shadow and vision of things not seen. We couldn't enjoy its loveliness any more if we had millions of dollars and ropes of diamonds.”

“It was November--the month of crimson sunsets, parting birds, deep, sad hymns of the sea, passionate wind-songs in the pines. Anne roamed through the pineland alleys in the park and, as she said, let that great sweeping wind blow the fogs out of her soul.”


Anne finds allies in Diana, an opposites attract friendship, and a budding love interest Gilbert Blythe. Both appreciate Anne for her pluck and uniqueness.

“Miss Barry was a kindred spirit after all," Anne confided to Marilla, "You wouldn't think so to look at her, but she is. . . Kindred spirits are not so scarce as I used to think. It's splendid to find out there are so many of them in the world.”

The book series has remained popular since its publication in 1908 and has spawned multiple film and television versions and stage productions.

I loved this series for its warmhearted characters, the humor, the feisty protagonist, and the thematic struggle to find a home in a world where you've been abandoned.

The only plot hole would be that someone of her background would not have the vocabulary and sometimes mature thought processes Anne displays.


“People laugh at me because I use big words. But if you have big ideas, you have to use big words to express them, haven't you?”

If there is a weakness, it is perhaps the romanticizing of life on a farm. It is difficult work with little time for leisure. Irresponsible acts can prove devastating. People set in their ways are unlikely to melt so easily, especially when they need the manpower to run the farm.

“We pay a price for everything we get or take in this world; and although ambitions are well worth having, they are not to be cheaply won, but exact their dues of work and self-denial, anxiety and discouragement.”

Still, it is a story of hope and finding one's way and I need that from time to time: a little light in the darkness.

Forty years on, I still love Anne and enjoy the different iterations of her story. The most recent adaption is the three season Anne with an E series on Netflix. Sadly it is now over. 

I hope she continues to touch hearts for many generations to come.

"Dear old world", she murmured, "you are very lovely, and I am glad to be alive in you.”

You can pick up a copy of her story here. Or download a Gutenberg ebook or audio book for free.

Fierce and Funny Marti MacGibbon

One of my personal heroes is the amazing Marti MacGibbon. We met one day when she and her husband knocked on our door with a petition to keep a self-storage facility from being built next to the elementary school. We happily signed. They had moved in a few houses down and my husband and I were thrilled to find kindred spirits.

When I mentioned I wrote books, Marti told me about her self-published memoir Never Give In To Fear: Laughing All the Way Up from Rock Bottom. Memoir is not my usual jam, but I purchased it and loved it. With her gallows humor, Marti wrote about her move to California to work in comedy which soon turned into a nightmare of homelessness, addiction, and being sex trafficked to the Japanese Yakuza. 

Marti not only survived but thrived, using her experiences to help others. She gained professional certifications in ACRPS, (Advanced Certified Relapse Prevention Specialist, and the CAPMS (Certified Addiction-Free Pain Management Specialist) and became a public speaker on the issues of addiction and sex trafficking. She has traveled the globe and been invited to speak at the State Department, the Department of Health and Human Services, and the Office for Victims of Crime on mental health and policy advocacy. Returning to her love of standup, Marti was founder, producer, and emcee of Laff-Aholics Standup Comedy Benefit for Recovery, an annual charity fundraiser in Indianapolis that features nationally headlining comedians.

Never Give Into Fear became a national award-winning and critically acclaimed memoir. She followed it up with her award-winning Fierce, Funny, and Female in which Marti takes us to the oil fields in Texas where she was one of the first women to work as a laborer, setting off explosives and staking oil wells. The memoir is dotted with memorable characters: sleazy authority figures, wannabe Sixties musicians, crazed Corn Belt cult leaders, wild-eyed redneck coworkers who robbed banks on their lunch hour in the company truck, Texas oil billionaires and wildcatters.

We both left Indianapolis, moving to opposite coasts, but I have enjoyed watching her spread her wings and soar, giving back to a world that took so much from her. She is a bad-ass warrior woman and I can't wait to see what she does next.

You can learn more about Marti and connect with her on social media and view her inspirational talks and comedy on her YouTube channel.

https://martimacgibbon.com/

https://www.facebook.com/MartiMac

https://twitter.com/MartiMacG

https://www.linkedin.com/in/martimacgibbon

https://www.amazon.com/Never-Give-Fear-Laughing-Bottom/dp/098600670X/

https://www.amazon.com/Fierce-Funny-Female-Journey-Through/dp/0986006734/

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCt2x9-WrvFAuHrUc00GvjEQ

 

Afro-Futurism and Fantasy with Author Rita Woods

I have the good fortune to present the amazing writer and physician, and someone I call friend, Dr. Rita Woods. She is the author of two fantasy novels Remembrance which was released in January 2020 and The Last Dreamwalker in September 2022 by Forge Books.

The books are considered part of the Afro-Futurism movement which consists of books, movies, and other art forms with futuristic or science fiction elements incorporating black history and culture.  

Rita's first book Remembrance was picked up by Tor/Forge in 2018

Spanning three centuries, Remembrance is the story of four women connected both by their individual powers and tragedy. They are linked across the centuries through Mother Abigail, a voodoo priestess who uses her powers to create Remembrance, a parallel universe that is a stop on the Underground Railroad.

Remembrance was a long road to publication. Rita met Joanna Volpe at a conference in 2009. It would take many revisions and submission rounds before the story was sold. 

How did you handle the requests that you significantly change Remembrance?

“I struggled with their requests at first. Not all of the suggestions were problematic. Many of the questions surrounding the story regarding arc, character development, etc. required some deep diving into areas that initially had not seemed central to the story. In the back and forth (which was quite a bit) the story continued to evolve. There is also the element of being a debut author and not feeling confident to question some things. Early on, acquisition editors wanted to know more about the adult characters. Then they asked for a contemporary character. So the character Gaelle was added. The story went from young adult fantasy to Black & African American Historical Fiction and Black & African American Women's Fiction. I feel more confident now about standing up for a story and saying no if I think a change will hurt it.”

How did the acquisition process work and how does the advance payment work?

"Remembrance went through several rounds of submissions before it found a home at Forge Books. The first half of the advance is paid upon delivery of finished manuscript. The second half is paid when final edits are completed and approved. You have to earn back your advance before you earn royalties, which Remembrance has done. I received my first royalty check with my first advance for the second book. I received a five figure advance, but still work as a full-time physician. After the book is submitted, the editor sends notes, usually one to five pages of suggestions and issues. My editor is all about motivation. Why does this happen? Why does the character do that? Then the pages are returned for thoughts. Next are extensive line edits.These are painful. Every character and locale is given a sheet to track continuity, arc, etc. In Remembrance, the level of detail included notations that streets have a period after them and avenues do not and discussions as to what exact year St. Louis Cathedral became a cathedral and stopped being referred to as a church and what the exact GPS coordinates of the Atchaflaya Basin were relative to Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Final copy edits and ARCs are then done and approved. The second advance check is cut. We are now in the process of interviewing voice actors for the audible version of Remembrance. Not all authors have this much input into the audible version and cover design but this was both contractual and a function of the collaborative team at Forge."

 What was it like once the book was released? What is expected of you as an author?

"I really enjoyed traveling around the country for live events. I thrived on hearing from readers about the way the book inspired them and what they took from it. Every reader is unique and comes to a story with a different viewpoint. I would fly to destinations once or twice a week, often fielding texts about the next book. I still attend events and interviews a couple of times a week, occasionally twice in a day. Speaker fees run $50 to $1000 for a first time author. When the shutdown happened, everything went to Zoom. Then Zoom conferences started getting hacked and we had to switch to Comcast. I miss the audiences. I have been interviewed by well-known writers such as Veronica Roth, TJ Klune, Hank Phillipi Ryan, and Joshilyn Jackson.You are expected to continually post on social media. There is also the expectation that you will write multiple essays (I think I ended up writing close to a dozen) for inclusion in different magazines and papers, blog posts, even a short story, prior to launch. So it has been really exciting, but also very busy."

Remembrance earned you an additional two book deal. How is that going?

"Before you finish the first book, they are asking for pages for the next book and the process starts all over again. The next book to be released is titled The Last Dreamwalkers and is due to be published in Spring of 2022. The first draft of the third book, which is still in the concept phase, is due May of 2022."

How did the pandemic affect you?

"There were days when I wondered, 'Why does this matter?' I know people are looking to art and literature for comfort and escape but when the whole world feels like it is on fire, you ask yourself, 'What is the point?' I have editors with goals for me to hit, though. So I persist."

Rita went on to release The Last Dreamwalker in September 2022. In the wake of her mother's passing, Layla Hurley unexpectedly reconnects with her mother's sisters, women she hasn't been allowed to speak to, or of, in years. Her aunts reveal to Layla that a Gullah-Geechee island off the shore of South Carolina now belongs to her. As Layla digs deeper into her mother’s past and the mysterious island’s history, she discovers that the terrifying nightmares that have plagued her throughout her life and tainted her relationship with her mother and all of her family, is actually a power passed down through generations of her Gullah ancestors. She is a Dreamwalker, able to inhabit the dreams of others—and to manipulate them. As Layla uncovers increasingly dark secrets about her family's past, she finds herself thrust into the center of a potentially deadly, decades-old feud fought in the dark corridor of dreams. The Last Dreamwalker is a gripping, contemporary read about power and agency; family and legacy; and the ways trauma, secrets, and magic take shape across generations.

Since the pandemic has waned, Rita is back on the road, promoting and attending writing panels and events. She is hard at work on her third book.

Any final words of wisdom for aspiring writers?

"I read somewhere recently: Writing is art. Publishing is a business. And I think that is the truest way to capture it. If you want to write then write. It is incredibly important to find a tribe. People who will give you support, honest feedback and keep you on task. Writers are some of the most generous people I have ever met. But writing is hard work."

Thank you for the gift of your work and a glimpse inside the life of a traditionally published author.

I thoroughly enjoyed Remembrance and highly recommend it. I loved The Last Dreamwalker more. I critiqued some of the first draft and was thrilled to see it realized in print. I cannot wait for her next book.

Rita is, in my humble opinion, one of the best wordsmiths of our age. Even her first drafts are magical. Members of the Ladyscribes are lucky to have found one another. Having a supportive and knowledgeable critique group is invaluable.

 You can follow Dr. Woods on:

https://ritawoodswrites.com/

https://www.facebook.com/rita.woods.14

https://twitter.com/RitaWoodsAuthor

https://www.instagram.com/ritawoods723/

The Cozy Mysteries of Andrea Penrose

I am always thrilled to discover a talented author with a series I haven't yet read. I buy the back list and settle down for hours of enjoyable reading.

This year, I discovered Andrea Penrose and her two cozy mystery series set in Regency London. If you are fans of Tasha Alexander's Lady Emily series, Deanna Raybourn's Lady Julia Grey series and Veronica Speedwell series, and Anna Lee Huber's Lady Darby series, you will love Andrea's books. I love the cast, the setting, and the plots. I forgive the few crutch words such as conundrum, dastard, and snick snick. Writers all have them. Mine changed with each book.


The first book I read was Murder on Black Swan Lane from Penrose's Wrexford and Sloane series. The cast is unique. The lady sleuth, artist Charlotte Sloane, secretly skewers popular society with her pointed lampoons. The Earl of Wrexford is a gentleman scientist. A creative crime-solving posse makes or breaks a cozy series in my opinion and this series has one of the most delightful. Charlotte has adopted two street rats, Hawk and Raven. Wrexford has worthy allies in his valet Tyler and housekeeper McClellan.Then there are Wrexford's friends Sheffield and Cordelia. Finally, there is Henning, the doctor who performs postmortems. Thanks to run-ins with a Bow Street Runner, Mr. Griffin, they are never short of mysteries to solve. There are currently seven titles in this series and I hope it continues long into the future.

The newest Wrexford & Sloan will be released  September 26, 2023 

When I finished the Wrexford and Sloane series, I embarked on the Lady Arianna Hadley series. Thanks to her disgraced aristocratic father, Arianna had quite the swashbuckling past. Removing them from the strictures of polite society makes her characters far more interesting. Arianna is a master of disguise with a talent for mathematics. She returns to England to get revenge. Her love of chocolate makes her a suspect in poisoning the Prince Regent which brings her into contact with the Earl of Saybrook, an expert on chocolate tasked to find the culprit. I love the extended cast in this series too. The couple becomes embroiled in many cases to save the fate of the country thanks to their spymaster frenemy, Lord Percival Grentham. Saybrook’s great aunt Constantina, the dowager Marchioness of Sterling, is a fun member of the sleuthing team too. They gather enemies and allies throughout the seven book (hopefully continuing) series. My only complaint is that it makes me crave chocolate.

Lady Ariana's seventh mystery was released on March 22, 2022:
https://www.amazon.com/Swirl-Shadows-Arianna-Regency-Mystery-ebook/dp/B09MY8P6MW

So grab a cup of your favorite hot beverage, be it tea or cocoa or coffee, and settle down for an enjoyable adventure in the story worlds of Andrea Penrose.

Hint: Books make great gifts.

Andrea Penrose Books on Amazon
Andrea Penrose on Facebook
Andrea Penrose on Twitter 

Andrea's Website http://andreapenrose.com/

Miss Fisher's Mysteries


If you haven't been introduced to Kerry Greenwood's twenty-two book cozy mystery series set in 1920s Melbourne, Australia, you are in for a treat. I streamed the entire series and read all the books in 2020. I can't wait for the latest release coming in November of this year.

Phrynne Fisher (pronounced fry-nee) is a delightful amateur sleuth. Her war experience and intelligence work make her capacity for finding trouble believable. Her rags to unexpected riches backstory means Phrynne is free to do as she pleases and does not care who she offends. She returns to Australia from England, after a brief post war detour as a bohemian in Paris, to set up shop as a detective. In the television series, the costumes and sets are a feast for the eyes.

I was amused recently to read the story of Phryne (meaning toad) of Greek mythology fame. Phryne was an ancient Greek courtesan. Born in Thespiae in Boeotia, she became a muse for artists and was one of the wealthiest women in Greece. Free-spirited mystery-solving Phrynne is the perfect namesake. Both women do as they please and are loved for it. I am certain a series about the Greek Phryne would be equally entertaining.

The first television series follows the books fairly closely, with two exceptions I will discuss later. The writers were successful in maintaining the characters and feel of the books in the subsequent cases.

Relationships in the books are slightly different than in the series. In the books, Phrynne's butler, Mr. Butler, is married and his wife is the cook and housekeeper. I assume they cut her to limit the cast and make more work for Phrynne's maid Dot Williams. Dot and her beau, officer Hugh Collins, play a significant part in both books and TV.

The second departure from the books is more interesting. In the books, Inspector John "call me Jack" Robinson is a happily married orchid grower. In the television series, Jack is unhappily married then divorced and free to declare his love for Phrynne. There was no romantic entanglement in the books.

The adopted daughters, Jane and Ruth, and cabbies/war veterans Bert and Cec are part of the crime solving gang in both books and TV.

The television series invented a sister, Janey, that was kidnapped and murdered when Phrynne was young and sets up a motive for Phrynne's determination to seek justice. In the books, Phrynne had a younger sister that died of diphtheria which may have been the inspiration for the fictional Janey. 

Phrynne's mother and father were very much alive in the books. In The Castlemaine Murders, Phrynne's younger sister Eliza/Beth is introduced and a brother Thomas, who is studying at Eton, is mentioned. Eliza moved to Melbourne to escape her parents and chooses to live with a lesbian partner and the two work together on feminist issues.

Phrynne is devoted to free love and does not hesitate to have carnal relations with any man she sets her sights on. She deplores the loss of so many "beautiful boys" during the war. She has an affair with Lin Chung in the books and series, even after he is married.

Phrynne's sexual exploits lead to two of the book plots that were changed for the television series. In book #16 Murder in the Dark, Phrynne attends an orgy called The Last Best Party. The series kept the idea of the costume party, but omitted the prominent sex and drugs.

In book #5 The Green Mill Murder, Phrynne flies her Gypsy Moth Rigel into the Autralian Alps to see Vic, a veteran with PTSD. There is a dog called Lucky and a wombat living under his bunk. Phrynne stays for quite a while, enjoying the solitude and the sex 
before returning to real life. The television episode with the title focused on the murder at a Jazz club. There is a brief flight to meet up with Vic, portrayed as former love interest and heir to an estate, to ask him to return. Longing glances are the only thing exchanged in the episode.

A spinoff, Ms Fisher's Modern Murder Mysteries, was broadcast in 2019 and 2020. The two-season series features Peregrine Fisher, explained as the daughter of  a half- sister, Annabelle, who was the result of an affair by Phrynne’s father. I am not sure why the series creators ignored Phrynne's existing fictional family, all of whom would have made more sense as heirs. At the very least, if the rest of the family had died, it could have been Thomas's daughter. Ah, well, ours is not to reason why.

Peregrine inherits Phrynne's estate when Phrynne goes missing. With the help of the Adventuress's Club, Peregrine, played by Geraldine Hakewill, continues her aunt's penchant for investigation.

I highly recommend the books and the television series. The wonderful Australian actress Essie Davis portrays Phrynne to perfection. After the third series, Essie's move to London made filming complicated. She agreed to a movie, The Crypt of Tears, released in 2020. Will there be another movie? Status unknown, but I hope so. 

Greenwood published a new book in the series #21 Death in Daylesford in 2021. She is publishing a new book in November 2023:#22 Murder in Williamstown. You can pre-order a copy today and there is still plenty of time to binge or reread the entire series.

Follow her on Amazon for news about her new releases: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Kerry-Greenwood/author/B004MLDPYQ?.

Phryne Fisher Books In Order 

Phryne Fisher Television Series 

Miss Fisher's Modern Murder Mysteries