Arietty, Hunger Games, Missing AWP…
- At March 02, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Arietty, AWP, Hunger Games
- 3
Just got home from seeing The Secret World of Arietty, Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli’s new film, based on the English novel that I loved as a child, The Borrowers. This version has an extra touch of heart provided by the threat of Borrower extinction and the illness of the main human character of the film. A surprising dialogue on death and dying at the center of the film provides depth to what is essentially a light adventure children’s film, along the lines of My Neighbor Totoro and Kiki’s Delivery Service (for those of you familiar with Miyazaki’s other films for children.) The animation was, of course, beautiful and bucolic, a speciality of Ghibli studios.
Contrasting this is the drumbeat of promotions for The Hunger Games, the new movie based on the hyperviolent trilogy about a killer teen heroine and her futuristic dystopia scarier than anything Atwood’s come up with. Katniss Everdeen is like Buffy without the quips and fashion sense, an action hero for the Millenial generation. There’s nothing calm, soothing, or sweet about this trilogy of movies or books; I found them disturbing as an adult, including scenes of dismemberment, torture, brainwashing… and they must be super disturbing for the younger readers they’re meant for. I’m torn because part of me cheers for the female teen heroine Katniss, who is tough, unconcerned about the young men falling in love with her as she tries to save herself, her family and eventually, her political cause. She’s too busy trying to survive to worry about boys; her moral sense comes more as a contrast to the evil, corrupt adults around her than any specific goodness. As a metaphor for young people navigating a kill-or-be-killed adult world with a kind of horror and disorientation, it works pretty well. However, I’d much rather my imaginary children watch Arietty, at least into their midteens, than the Hunger Games.
Missing AWP this week has been tough, especially as my heroine Margaret Atwood was the keynote, and hearing on Facebook all week about the parties, readings, etc, made it hard not to be there. But this year I’m tightening my belt to afford my first house in twelve years, and a house in this area, even after years of house prices dropping, still isn’t cheap. This means I’m relying on you bloggers lucky enough to go to post your impressions, anything great, etc! And pics!
Published Book Prizes, Grant Writing Tips, and more helpful links
Happy birthday to my little brother, born in the dragon year of 1976, so it’s doubly lucky for him! (I’m pretty sure that solar storm yesterday was just the dragon acting up!)
If you’ve been reading my blog you know I’ve been wrestling with grant applications; here’s Susan Rich’s terrifically helpful tips for applying to grants:
http://thealchemistskitchen.blogspot.com/2012/01/grant-proposals-some-random-thoughts.html?showComment=1327471180104#c5106411319332706938
I’m finally done; now all I have to do is bite my nails while waiting for results!
And, in case you, like me, just had a book come out last year, Jessica Goodfellow supplies a great list of post-publication prizes here (some of which I had never heard of:)
http://jessicagoodfellow.blogspot.com/2011/04/post-publication-book-contests.html
I’m not going to go to this year’s AWP, so I’m relying on you guys to report back with all the news, gossip, how awesome Margaret Atwood’s keynote might be, etc. Sorry to miss you! Can’t wait til AWP is in my backyard…
Having a harder time locating a house here that I was hoping; I guess one-story homes on the East side of Seattle are sort of rare, and it seems no one wants to sell their houses now that prices are so low, so there’s very little inventory of any sort. Because we’re going FHA, we have to avoid most condos, so that eliminates those possibilities. Tough stuff!
I found out from my publisher that I’ve sold about eleven times as many paper copies of She Returns to the Floating World as e-book copies. So I’m providing a link here and reminding you this great-looking (if I do say so myself – but seriously, Kitsune Books did a great job of formatting the poems) e-book is only $3.50, people! If you haven’t picked up a copy of my book yet, or you were wavering, this is your chance – go go go!
Yes, while everyone else is talking about where they’ll be at AWP, I’m putting the finishing touches on my presentation “From Buffy to Xena: Female Comic Book Superheroes in Women’s Poetry” for Sunday at WonderCon in San Francisco. (Sunday, 12:30-1:30, in the Moscone Center, room 204/206, in case you’re wondering!) It’s not traditionally a poetry venue, perhaps, but I’m hoping it will be fun and some people in the audience will find out that poetry can be, well, something different than love songs and nature odes. Right? And I’ll be wearing my Wonder Woman costume. Just kidding. April Fools!
Anyway, I hope you poets at AWP keep us all up on the gossip going on it the poetry world on your blogs – and I’ll be sure to post if I accidentally run into Kevin Smith or something.
In other news, The Beastly Bride is available today from Amazon and other fine booksellers. This is the anthology that Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling edited on tales of transforming women – one of my favorite subjects – and it happens to have three poems of mine on the old French fairy tale, The White Doe, in it – three poems you can’t find anywhere else! It’s a great gift for any daughters, sisters, or friends who are even remotely interested in mermaids, selkies, or women who change into any manner of trees or animals. It’s mostly fiction, not poetry, and did I mention it’s a really fun collection?