For this month's blog I decided to re-post a blog from several years ago, with a few updates. I feel confident that since we can re-read the same book over and over and still receive something from it, my past blog can pass also.😉
I’m a serious reader. By that, I don’t mean that I devour books weekly and have an entire stack by my bed. In fact, truth be told, it’s been quite a while since I’ve read my way through an entire book. I’ve been guilty of dropping quite a few of them smack dab in the middle and not finishing them, for reasons I’m not sure, other than they didn’t entirely hold my interest. This is not to say that they weren’t well written however. I feel it is more likely due to some chronic stress that has been a part of my life for awhile now. That being said though, a book for me, or most anything I read, needs to be deep, usually spiritual, although not directly, and purposeful.
I like to read historical fiction, and so have read many of Brock and Bodie Thoene’s books, and others who write in that genre. I also am drawn to memoirs. The saying that ‘the truth is stranger than fiction,’ is intriguing and often true. I myself have had some of my own truth questioned, in parts of my memoir. Memoir writing is perhaps one of the most vulnerable genres one can write in, and even though I shrink from it at times, at the same time I am fascinated and drawn in by it.
With this month’s theme being about our reading, I can’t help but think, what a fitting choice; to read about a young woman who wasn’t given the opportunity to read. It makes me realize that I take reading for granted. Reading came easy to me in school and was my most loved subject. From my early years of reading Curious George to Charlotte’s Webb to Little Women to The Hobbit (plus many more) and on to Shakespeare and the classics in high school; I wished that, that was all there was to school! It was the only subject that I was always at the head of the class for; reading and literature.
Next on my list is another memoir, called From The Ashes by Jesse Thistle. It chronicles his life in foster care as a young Metis-Cree from Prince Albert and the abuse he went through, and also the healing. Now living in Toronto, he has climbed through it all to become an assistant professor in Metis Studies at York University.
Gloria reads and writes from the prairie town of Pangman, SK. She is a past reporter with many published articles and columns in various newspapers and a prolific reader of world and current events. She also especially enjoys reading memoirs and devotionals. She has taken editing classes online from Simon Fraser University, Creative Writing classes from the U of T and has published fiction in two anthologies. She continues to dabble at writing her own memoir, along with having other writings in the works.
