I've moved on to the biography of Dorothy Parker, What Fresh Hell is This?, which you think would be an upper after Sylvia Plath. It was at the beginning, but now I'm wading into the end of her life and it just isn't happy getting old, especially for Parker it seems. Then, eerily, I hit on the section of Margaret Atwood's thoughts about writing where she considers that all writing is an impulse to avoid a confrontation with death. Nigh simultaneously I'm drowning in death here.
Why, avoidance, do you suggest? And heartily I agree.
This means that the book I'm touting now is Swimming to Antarctica. What's it about? Why, swimming to Antarctica - and across the English Channel, the Cape of Good Hope, the Nile, the Bering Strait, and various other really cold, large bodies of water. If it all sounds a bit water-logged to you, take heart! It's actually a very engaging story that doesn't obsess over swimming terminology, water conditions, or minute descriptions of boats. Plus, there's very little death involved! It also makes one very, very glad to curl up with a sweater and several blankets with a cup of hot tea, while reading about someone else plunging into thirty-two degree water.
It's almost a pity I finished it, for my tax forms showed up. Why, avoidance, you suggest? And heartily I agree...
11 March 2008
Death and Swimming
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1 comment:
Can we have a moment for my enjoyment of the wit you leave on my blog? Because there is always enjoyment. I know when there is a comment from Sunny, it will not let me down in the wit department or otherwise.
Moment ended.
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