White Fang by Jack London

200px-JackLondonwhitefang1I grabbed this book as I was about to go out of town with nothing to read.  My father had read Jack London and I tend to like wilderness adventure tales, so that’s all it took.  If  Mr. London does not have you hooked in the first 3 chapters, I’d be surprised~ I. The Trail of Meat; II. The She-Wolf; III. The Hunger Cry. Two men, and six dogs, sledding across the Arctic, transporting a corpse in a coffin, when daylight comes and goes in a brief 6 hours. Oh, and they only have 3 cartridges for the rifles.  A lot can go wrong quickly~

London then gently transitions into part anthropomorphic narrator and finds a way to bring us into the world of Kiche the she-wolf whom the native Indians had once tamed.  She bears White Fang,  her only offspring to survive that spring’s litter, and he takes us along on first hunts, first terrors, and many encounters with humans, or “man-gods” as London calls them.

You won’t look at your own sweet pup in the same way~

I’m going on a trip, and in my suitcase I need to pack a book. What should I bring?

Here we are finally in full summer and that means we are all hopefully digging into some good “summer reads”.  Time for a “What are you reading?” post to pull all sorts of good recommendations out of you epr followers.  

So? New? or not new but a favorite?  Or, just share your favorite summer reading memories! Mine might have to be reading a creepy book called The Other by Thomas Tyrone or maybe The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough.the other thorn birds

Stories from Shakespeare – or how to follow the Bard

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If you have watched a Shakespeare play and said to yourself, “What are they saying?” or “What’s going on?” or “Why don’t they speak English?”, you are not alone, and should not have high school flashbacks either. The play is the thing! Just prepare for it. I did my research back when we first subscribed to Chicago Shakespeare Theater all those years ago. The hands-down best resource to prep for the play is ‘Stories from Shakespeare’ by Marchette Chute. The title of Marchette’s work says it all in the word “Stories”. These are great stories and we want to hear the words, watch the action and learn to tell them again and again.

Most people can probably share a common High School English class experience of reading an assigned Shakespeare play. Mine was ‘The Merchant of Venice.’ I’ve since come to believe that these richly layered, intensely crafted plays were not meant to be read, and that is why the torturous memories of my first exposure to Shakespeare still linger. That said, I am thankful to have found that at 15 years old, I was able find real truth and a peak at the genius that Sir Will shared with the world in the eloquence and cunning of Portia v. Shylock.

After many years as subscribers to Chicago Shakespeare Theater, we are down to only one or two of the histories before we can say we’ve seen the entire canon. This is not like saying, “Shakespeare Bucket List – Check!” The guy’s works are enduring and wouldn’t still be staged all over the world every day and night if he was a one hit wonder. Seeing a Shakespeare play more than once is like looking at a bright object through a prism. It is every changing and beautifully fascinating. Proof of that can be found as the 450th anniversary of Shakespeare’s birth brings a celebration of Hamlet to be performed in every nation on earth within 2 years. http://www.shakespearesglobe.com/theatre/whats-on/globe-theatre/hamlet-globe-to-globe

But back to the plays, because, the play is the thing. Hamlet: “I’ll have grounds, more relative than this—the play’s the thing. Wherein I’ll catch the conscience of the King.”
Hamlet Act 2, scene 2, 603–605

Worshipping our Sun

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http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/paganism/holydays/summersolstice.shtml

Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer’s lease hath all too short a date:
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimm’d;
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature’s changing course untrimm’d;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander’st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest:
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this and this gives life to thee.
(Sonnet 18) Wm. Shakespeare

Robert Louis Stevenson State Park, Calistoga California

“I am told there are people who do not care for maps, and find it hard to believe. The names, the shapes…the courses of the roads and rivers…are an inexhaustible fund of interest for any…with eyes to see or two penceworth of imagination to understand with.”

Treasure Island, 1883

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Robert Louis Stevenson  and bride, Fanny Vandergrift Osbourne spent the summer of 1880 honeymooning  at in a cabin at an abandoned mining camp on Mt. St. Helena. Perhaps not surprisingly, no record of Fanny’s review of this romantic setting can be found. There is a small marker 1 mile up the forested, sometimes rocky trail. Hike 4 miles beyond that spot on mostly gravel forest road, up, up, up to 4337 feet to look out from North Peak, the highest peak in Sonoma County on a mountain shared with Napa County. The dogs were barking, but Mr. Stevenson was the inspiration for this adventurer!

 

 

Just finished…Treasure Island

Enjoyed reading my first Robert Lewis Stevenson novel, Treasure Island. What a bright, lively story! Nothing overworked or old-fashioned- which I confess I half expected. The classics are classics for a reason.  I was hooked immediately when old sea captain, Billy Bones mysteriously takes up residence in the seaside inn  Jim Hawkin’s family runs. He rants, he raves, he drinks rum, and he’s gripped with fear of The Black Spot! The pirating and adventures soon move out to sea! Long John Silver is alive – and both terrible and irresistible to young Jim Hawkins.  A fine, fantastic yarn, “And you may lay to that!”, as Long John would say!  Do I like it even more because it is a story with a map? Of course!

Always talk to a good bartender, like Corey at Hotel Yountville – a 10 year update!

The Hotel Yountville is comfortable, simple, classic. The stone, wood, and bright accents of turquoise fabric are fresh and inviting.  But it was our hotel bartender Corey, who shared his tips for a perfectly lovely way to enjoy the valley that only a local would know.  Here, I share an abbreviated version of his a simple afternoon plan for fun in the Napa sun. Drive North out of Yountville on the Silverado Trail to St. Helena.  Head for Napa Valley Olive Oil Company for their homemade pepperoni, olive oils, dry sausage, cheese and bread. Do you see where we’re going here?  **Caveat time! Orignial post was dated 2012 and the picnic spot at Rutherford Hill Winery now requires reservations and a $30 per person charge plus a bottle purchase. It is still a lovely hillside picnic spot – just not a freebie! After that, for us it was back to Yountville where we rode bicycles provided to hotel guests over to Domaine Chandon Tasting Bar . 11:00 am – 4 pm reservations required.  And finally, back to the hotel for a calm, relaxing swim. Cheers!

Cheers, Corey!