From the category archives:

Books

An extensive interview on writing “San Miguel de Allende, Mexico”

by Rick Skwiot March 10, 2011 Books

Author, speaker and therapist Jerry Waxler recently interviewed me at length for his Memory Writers Network blog about my new book, “San Miguel de Allende, Mexico: Memoir of a Sensual Quest for Spiritual Healing.” In the interview I discuss the process and art of memoir writing, which I hope may be of interest to readers and writers alike. [...]

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Siberia, da; Ian Frazier, nyet.

by Rick Skwiot February 14, 2011 Books

In Ian Frazier’s hefty new Travels in Siberia, one comes to feel affection for the Russians struggling there, if not the author. But the real protagonist of this travel book/history/memoir is the land itself. As Frazier demonstrates, its vastness, riches, hard history, and potential future are hard to grasp. The people who inhabit Siberia, whom [...]

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“Sacred Ground & Holy Water:” an eccentric and amusing travel book

by Rick Skwiot January 21, 2011 Books

The title of travel writer Lyn Fuchs’ first book Sacred Ground & Holy Water: Travel Tales of Enlightenment misleads the reader somewhat. For despite some visits to holy sites, the collection of travel essays succeeds most by Fuchs’ humor, linguistic play and iconoclastic take on people, places and hot-button issues. At times hilarious and/or profound, [...]

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A new resource for serious writers: Key West Writers Lab

by Rick Skwiot January 10, 2011 Books

Many working writers (myself included) often have trouble finding good, professional feedback on their works-in-progress–their novels, creative nonfiction and poetry. To address that need, British novelist/poet Rosalind Brackenbury and I have just launched a nonprofit coaching service for committed creative writers, Key West Writers Lab. It works to help serious writers augment their craft and hone works-in-progress, filling [...]

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Jonathan Franzen’s “Freedom:” boring, juvenile and insignificant, or an American masterpiece?

by Rick Skwiot January 1, 2011 Books

Having just previously blogged about B.R. Myers’ A Reader’s Manifesto: An Attack on the Growing Pretentiousness in American Literary Prose, first penned some ten years ago, I was curious what he had to say about today’s novels. I found Myers’ scathing review of Jonathan Franzen’s Freedom in The Atlantic (October 18). Myers characterizes the novel as “a 576-page monument [...]

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“A Reader’s Manifesto:” Must-reading for readers and writers alike

by Rick Skwiot December 29, 2010 Books

  Even after ten years, B.R. Myers’ stirring treatise A Reader’s Manifesto: An Attack on the Growing Pretentiousness in American Literary Prose remains a joy to read and an inspiration to write clear, euphonic fiction. He supports his assertion that “most acclaimed contemporary prose is the product of mediocre writers availing themselves of trendy stylistic [...]

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The struggle for creative writers: two case histories with happy endings

by Rick Skwiot December 15, 2010 Books

A terminal degree and professorial praise from a noted university usually guarantee the recipient a running start at a successful career. Not so in at least one venue, where rejection and failure is the norm: creative writing. For fiction writers, particularly, noteworthy success redounds to few and then usually only after years of hard work, [...]

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An ignoble effort from the Nobel Laureate

by Rick Skwiot December 8, 2010 Books

I was a sympathetic reader going in. I have read and admired V.S. Naipaul’s fiction and nonfiction for decades. I anticipated his newest tome, The Masque of Africa: Glimpses of African Belief, enough to pre-order it. But I came away disappointed not only in the book but in the Nobel Prize-winning author as well. It [...]

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Christmas Day 1953 in St. Louis: an excerpt from “Christmas at Long Lake”

by Rick Skwiot December 2, 2010 Books

Back in 1953 there was no Black Friday, Cyber Monday, media hype or shopping mania surrounding Christmas and the holiday season—particularly for my stoic, working-class family. I share with you here a portion of my Christmas Day 1953, as recounted in my childhood memoir Christmas at Long Lake. This excerpt appeared previously as “The Grandmothers” in [...]

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St. Louis Magazine interview on sex, death and things Mexican

by Rick Skwiot November 27, 2010 Books

For the December 2010 edition of St. Louis Magazine, staff writer Jeanette Cooperman interviewed me about my new book, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico: Memoir of a Sensual Quest for Spiritual Healing, and how my life in Mexico affected me. Her thoughtful questions gave me a chance to talk about Mexico, sex, death, Puritanism and other things about which I [...]

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