The author will be awarding a $10 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
Letting Go: An Anthology of Attempts
by M.E. Hughes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GENRE: nonfiction, personal transformation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
A
fascinating collection of life stories told by 30 authors from eight countries.
They write of their attempts to move beyond crippling grief, free themselves of
haunting memories, get out from under abusive relationships. They tell of their
struggles – often painful, sometimes funny - to let go of everything from a
fear of horses, to old family homes, and piles of books and papers
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCERPT:
Acadie
Julie
Strong
I
am standing in a muddy field, weeping into the mane of an Icelandic pony. It is
mid-April 2005 at a riding centre near where I live in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis
valley. Nova Scotia is the hour-glass-shaped land sticking out from Eastern
Canada.
I
am here for a women’s weekend with Icelandic ponies. It is for women who would
like to ride were they not afraid of regular-sized horses. I am fifty-six,
divorced and an MD with three grown children. I am afraid of horses; however, I
need to connect with one.
When
I was four, my mother died shortly after giving birth to my baby sister,
Gillian. The following summer I was playing on a beach when a cantering horse
kicked me in the head. It wasn’t a bad injury, but I have no memory of my
mother, and I reckoned if a horse took it away, then a horse might give it
back.
Most
likely my lack of memory is because our father threw away all our mother’s
belongings and never spoke her name again. How I yearned to remember something
about her. And bar being kicked in the head again, I felt I had nothing to
lose. In fact I did lose something, or rather was able to let go of something:
part of the heavy weight of mother-loss I have carried for many years.
As
a physician in general practise, I relate well to adults; however, when I have
to give a child an immunization, my insides freeze up. I hate injecting a
needle into her arm. Worse, I sometimes feel envious when her mother kisses and
soothes her afterwards. When I was little they could have chopped off my arm,
if only my mother had been there to comfort me. But then, with only one arm, I
wouldn’t be going to a riding weekend.
As
I drive into the centre I see two women in a field stroking a couple of ponies.
I park, lace up my hiking boots and fill my pockets with carrots. Olga, the
centre’s owner, leads me to the field and introduces me to Jarpi, an Icelandic
pony with a chestnut brown coat and long, shaggy, black mane with bangs that
wisp over his eyes. He radiates perfect serenity, as he nibbles on the new
blades of grass sprouting from the ground, his tail giving the occasional
swish. Perfectly content in the moment, Jarpi is the opposite of me with my
past roiling around inside like a can of barbed worms.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Julie Strong, “Acadie”
Julie Strong is a physician
and shamanic healer in Halifax, Nova Scotia and holds a medical degree from
Trinity College, Dublin; a BA in classics, Dalhousie University, Halifax; and
is trained in psychosynthesis, a transpersonal psychology fostering wholeness
and creativity.
Her “Athena in Love” won the
2012 Canadian Atlantic Fringe Festival’s new playwright award; she received the
2010 Atlantic Writers’ Federation Award for short story; The Medical Post of
Canada has published her articles. She has presented on madness and on the
“Shamanic Roots of Western Medicine” in
America and Europe, and teaches shamanic healing workshops, helping others
find their power animals and spirit teachers. Strong was born in England.
#2 Roz Kuehn, “Commencing Being Fearless”
Roz Kuehn received her
Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, D.C She is
the author of a novel, Various Stages of Undress (loosely based on six years as
an exotic dancer in Washington, D.C., which was runner-up for the
Faulkner-Wisdom Competition, and a finalist for both the Breadloaf Bakeless
Prize and Bellwether Prize. She has also received numerous Delaware State Arts
Council fellowships, including a $10,000 Master of Fiction fellowship, as well
as a Barbara Deming Memorial Award for feminist writing. Her memoir, Losing
Glynis, is about a coterie of well-meaning girlfriends who swoop in and make a
royal mess of a close friend’s dying days. She acted as fiction editor for The
Washington Review for four years and currently works as a legal secretary in a
New York City firm.
#3 Emily Tsokos Purtill, The
Perfect Mother
Emily Tsokos Purtill has won
several Australian awards for young writers, including the prestigious Tim
Winton Award for Outstanding Achievement for Young Writers. Her winning story
was published in the anthology HATCHED (edited by Tim Winton, Fremantle Arts
Press, 2013). She holds a bachelor of laws and a master of laws from the
University of Western Australia and has recently returned to writing after
working as a lawyer for eight years in Australia and Paris. In 2014, Emily was
living in New York where she participated in an advanced fiction course at New
York University. She currently lives in Perth, Western Australia, with her
husband and children. She can be contacted at em_tsokos@hotmail.com.
#4 Joan Scott, “The Paper
Room”
Joan Scott was born in
England. At fifteen she wrote a prize-winning essay about a trip to Paris. The
newspaper prize paid for a baguette and a croissant. Years later when the
writing life paled and the rent was due, she honed her creative writing skills
with London advertising agencies, taught tango to VIPs, marketed wines and left
rainy England for a Californian drought, where she became ‘Nanny Joan’
resulting in a nonfiction proposal, We Don’t Just Go Places, We Experience
Them, for caregivers and grandparents to bolster children’s creativity.
Moving to Boston, she
promoted textiles, wrote poems and articles on beekeepers, burying beetles and
ballerinas, then joined corporate America to build a career in international
marketing communications. While being paid to travel, she continued writing on
sampans, helicopters and hi-speed Japanese trains. She has let go of paper with
her slice-of-life blogs: “When Life Gets in the Way of Writing the Great
British Novel,” and is becoming a fearless flyer, navigating social media with
her psychological suspense, debut novel, Who Is Maxine Ash? She can be contacted
on joanscott.uk1@gmail.com
#5 Martha Ellen Hughes,
“Isolation”
Martha Ellen Hughes founded
the non-profit Peripatetic Writing Workshop, Inc., in 1991. This intensive
writing workshop and retreat, lead by herself, Maureen Brady and other writers,
meets twice annually, currently in Florida and Italy. She has taught creative
writing at New York University for more than twenty-five years and is a
free-lance editor of novels and nonfiction books. She holds an MFA in creative
writing from Bennington College and is a native of Louisiana. For further
information, please visit www.peripateticwritingandart.org.
#6 George P. Farrell,
“Hoarding Memories”
George P. Farrell was born,
raised, housed, clothed and well-fed in the Bronx, NY. Generally puzzled and
baffled by life but always hopeful.
“In my early twenties I discovered writing as a cheaper
and better alternative to psychological counselling. Discovered the Catskills
was a good place to pursue a writing career and inspecting boats, a reasonable
way to put food on the table. I have written six novels and a bunch of short
stories, as I traveled along my learning curve, and so far have produced a
literary income of forty dollars plus numerous, very-appreciated
pats-on-the-back. I am looking forward, with some trepidation, to more of the
same.”
#7 Marione Malimba Namukuta,
“The Battle Within”
Marione Malimba Namukuta,
twenty-eight, single, lives in Kampala, Uganda. She works as a researcher
specializing increasingly in the fields of population and health, monitoring
and evaluating both national and international projects.
Namukuta has keen interests
in other cultures, a command of several languages and loves to write and
travel. She writes children’s short stories and is a member of the Uganda
Children’s Writers and Illustrators Association.
#8 Elizbeth Wohl, “Outside
In”
Elizabeth Wohl was a
journalist for many years, as an Associated Press reporter, a Ms. Magazine
contributing editor and during the Vietnam War, a freelance reporter for the
North American Newspaper Alliance. Her fiction has been published in The
Quarter, Fiction and other literary magazines. She lives in Brooklyn and is
hoping the wisdom in this anthology will help her stop revising and let go of
her novel.
#9 Nilo Alvarez, “Spoiled
Fruit Bears Bad Seeds”
Nilo Alvarez was born on
Negroes, one of many Pacific Ocean islands discovered in 1521 by the Portuguese
explorer, Ferdinand Magellan. Named the Philippines for Spain’s King Philip II,
eleven of the archipelago’s original 7,113 islands are under water, the victim
of global warming. In his fiction, Alvarez often uses his small, friendly town
of Talisa, where from the top of the water tower during his childhood all one
could see were waving green sugarcane fields, planted during American
colonization. Few people lived on Negroes; his aunt, a midwife, delivered all
the babies. His mother often took him to movies and told him stories about her
life. What he most enjoyed were her stories about World War II. Her colourful
stories plus the movies inspired him to become a writer.
#10 Sue Parman, “The Holy
Ghost Bird”
Sue Parman, a retired
professor of anthropology, is the author of numerous academic books (including
Scottish Crofters, now in its second edition). She has also won numerous awards
for poetry, plays, essays, short stories and art. Her most recent book combines
poetry and art (The Carnivorous Gaze, Turnstone Press, 2014). Her most recent
article is a memoir based on her correspondence with Tolkien (“A Song for
J.R.R. Tolkien,” The Antioch Review, 2015). She is currently completing, The
Death Flower, a biomedical mystery set in the Amazon. For further information
please visit www.sueparman.com or www.anthro.fullerton.edu/sparman. She lives
in Oregon.
#11 Joe Levine, Finis
Farewell to a Novel Too Long
in Progress
Joe Levine lives with his
wife and daughters in New York City, where he toils in the spin trade. He wrote
“Finis” about his unpublished novel, A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea, in 2007.
After subsequently sending the book to scores of agents without success, he has
indeed let it go, although the characters live on in his mind. Recent events in
his life have made him realize writing autobiographical fiction requires
research, too—and the quest can be as perilous as any other.
#12 Evalyn Lee, “Throwing
Out the Trash”
Evalyn Lee attended graduate
studies at Oxford University, where she studied with the Joyce Scholar, Richard
Ellman, and the literary critic, John Bayley. A former CBS producer, she has
written on a wide range of topics, including the Gulf Wars and many
investigative pieces for the likes of Dan Rather, Mike Wallace and Lesley
Stahl. Her television broadcast work won an Emmy and numerous Writers Guild
Awards. Her short stories have appeared or are forthcoming in Amarillo Bay,
Diverse Arts Project and Willow Review. She is working on her first novel,
living in London with two kids, one husband and Hugo the dog and writes: “This
is my first personal essay. I mean every word I have written—if depression
strikes, try to let go of shame and blame. Aristotle got it right: ‘It is
during our darkest moments that we must focus to see the light.’ You are the
light of your own life. If you can't see it, reach out and find others who
can.”
Buy Links:
Bacon Press Books: http://www.baconpressbooks.com/letting-go/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY INFORMATION and RAFFLECOPTER CODE
The author will be awarding a $10 Amazon or B/N GC to
a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/28e4345f1624
Thanks for kicking off this great tour.
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteWhat made you decide to sit down and actually start something?
ReplyDeleteHi Mai,
DeleteJulie is traveling so I'm responding instead. I believe she told me she wrote the story of conquering her fear of horses soon after her meeting with the pony, Acadie. She wanted to publish it but did not know where, until I came along and asked her to submit it for Letting Go: An Anthology of Attempts. We both thought it perfect for our anthology.
Welcome to the Angel's blog. I hope you have a great tour. Allana Angel
ReplyDeleteWhere is your favorite place to read?
DeleteHi Becky,
DeleteMy favorite place to read is in bed propped up on pillows with a cup of coffee beside me. I'd love a screened porch or a hammock, too, but I dont have these.
This sounds absolutely amazing! Thanks for sharing and introducing me to what sounds like a magnificent book :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Rogue's Angels for doing this. it is a lovely introduction, for me, to the world of literary techno-culture. best wishes, Julie Strong
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great read.
ReplyDeletesounds like a great book! Thanks for the giveaway.
ReplyDeleterounder9834 @yahoo.com
Thanks for the giveaway! I like the excerpt. :)
ReplyDeleteOh sounds like a great read! I love that their are 30 authors from different countries!
ReplyDeleteI agree with LauraJJ--intriguing that this anthology includes so many authors from different countries. Hope your tour is successful!
ReplyDelete--Amber Angel
Happy to be a part of this tour, thank you for sharing!
ReplyDelete