Dec 3, 2007

Importing Traditions?

Well, I'm just now recovered from Thanksgiving. It was the first time I'd ever cooked a turkey (let alone all those appetizers and side dishes).

We had 19 people over, mostly French. I was thankful for friendship, love, food, and for having been welcomed to France. And I was thankful for our American friend Nicole Darnell, who thought it was at lunchtime and showed up with a whole afternoon to help me prepare ahead of time. If she'd not been there, not only would we have had no mashed potatoes, a hairy turkey, and no walnut pie (no pecans locally), but my kids would have been tugging at my cuffs all day. Nicole's kids Joseph and Ava know how to keep our boys busy and happy. We missed their Dad Tom, who was home getting ready for an art show.

Our turkey was the smallest bird for twenty people I've ever seen, and it was literally exactly enough (phew!). I think turkeys here, having not been bred and hybrided to death for generations to feed twenty people at once, are naturally smaller... the key word being "naturally". Our little bird was tasty, tender, and unfortunately still covered in black feathers before I cooked it. John spent an hour with a lighter and some tweezers, pulling those damn things out one by one (thanks John!) while I sweated over the timing of it all.

Importing holidays and traditions is a funny thing, especially to a country that really likes to know how to do things exactly right and really well. The French are easily thrown off by things like, say, Halloween or potluck dinners.

First example, Halloween. There I was with a grandma and five little kids dressed in simple costumes, just a hat or a tail here and there and they were transformed. We had a knight, a Mickey Mouse whose costume consisted entirely of black construction paper (Fionn), a "Spiderman" (I didn't have the heart to tell Seamus that he was actually dressed as Superman, not Spiderman, but no one here really knows the difference so it didn't matter), a Bob the Builder, and a fairy.

We traipsed through the village, shouting "Halloween!" at every door ("Trick or Treat" was too hard of a first English lesson for the French kids). A very surprised man or woman would answer the door and either look helplessly at me and say, "What do I do?", or they'd reach into the open bag of candy held out by the first kid in line and take a candy out saying, "Oh, a candy, thank you!" (The kids were great, they'd just say, "What'd you get?") About five people did know it was Halloween and did actually have candy in the house, so the kids had full, sugared-up bellies by the time we got home. (One refreshing thing about Halloween in a village of fifty or so inhabitants, all of whom you know by name: The kids could eat the candy as we went, rather than have to wait for the razor-blade inspection that always followed trick-or-treating when I was little in the states.)

As for Thanksgiving potlucks, a neighbor mentioned that they were once invited to a potluck, and was amazed that someone would actually invite people over for dinner and ask them cook something for the meal. As he put it, "It seemed strange to us, I mean, the hostess was a very wealthy woman."

Nov 27, 2007

John Clanchy: Writer

John Clanchy has written seven volumes of fiction (novels, novellas and short stories). His work has won awards in Europe, the US, New Zealand, and Australia. His novel The Hard Word (2002) was awarded the ACT Book of the Year and Vincenzo's Garden (2005), a collection of prize-winning short stories, have been published to wide critical acclaim. John's forthcoming collection of short stories was mainly written at La Muse. Born in Melbourne John has lived in Canberra since 1975.

What is, for you, the height of misery?
Visits from the Black Dog.

Where would you like to live?
Australia and France.

Your ideal of earthly happiness?
i. equality for all as a universal aspiration
ii. (personally) a dinner table, surrounded by family, with fine food, wine, laughter, story-telling and conversation.

For which fault do you have the greatest amount of indulgence?
Indulgence.

Who are the novelistic heroes whom you prefer?
Those involved in making complex moral decisions where the available options all look bad.

Who is your favorite historical character?
Alexander the Great, Buddha.

Your favorite heroines in real life?
Aung San Su Kyi, Brigid Ballard.

Your favorite painter?
Van Gogh.

Your favorite musician?
Bob Dylan, Roy Bailey, Pavarotti.

The virtue you most prefer in men?
Empathy, humour.

The virtue you most prefer in women?
Empathy, humour, womanliness.

The virtue you prefer?
Compassion.

Your preferred occupation?
Punning.

Whom would you have liked to be?
Anton Chekhov, without the TB.

The principal trait of my character?
The persistent desire to be a better person in the face of manifestly inadequate resources to achieve it.

What I appreciate the most in my friends?
"Tenderness - provided they possess a physical charm which makes their tenderness worth having" (Marcel Proust)

My principle fault?
Pedantry (for example knowing the difference between 'principle faults' and 'principal' ones. Excessive criticality.

What is your favorite occupation?
Punning.

What might my greatest misfortune be?
To lose a child.

The color I prefer?
Blues, royal and cobalt.

The flower I like?
Iris.

The bird I prefer?
Kookaburra.

My favorite prose authors?
Chekhov, Tolstoy, Patrick White, Marquez.

My preferred poets?
Shakespeare, Marvell, Keats, Tennyson.

My favorite hero of fiction?
Voss.

My favorite heroines of fiction?
Anna Karenina, Madame Bovary.

My favorite composers?
Bach, Beethoven, Verdi.

My favorite painters?
Van Gogh, Vermeer, Sisley, Hopper.

My heroes in real life?
Mandela, Rabin.

My favorite historical heroines?
Mary Magdalene, Elizabeth 1.

My favorite names?
Brigid, Anna, David, Ben, Edward, Tessa, Sebastian.

What is it you most dislike?
The 3Ps: pomposity, pretentiousness, and preening self-regard.

Historical figures whom I scorn the most?
The occupants of the Vatican, George Bush.

The military feat that I admire the most?
Gallipoli, the Western Front, the Pacific war - all the great disasters.

The reform that I admire the most?
Emancipation (from slavery, childhood labour).

The gift of nature I would like to possess?
A good singing voice.

How I would like to die?
Reconciled and in my sleep.

The present state of my mind?
Gradual acceptance (of age, limits of possibility).

What is your slogan?
Le temps se passe, la peine s'oublie, l'oeuvre reste.

Nov 15, 2007

Ophelia Redpath: Artist, Writer


Ophelia Redpath is a painter and writer. She was born in Cambridge, England, where she still lives. Her career as a painter spans over 20 years with exhibitions in over 100 shows in Britain and overseas. Clive James says she "is the most brilliant artist of her type currently working in Britain.". She is presently at work on her second novel, as well as a very funny collection of memoir styled essays and a new series of paintings.

What is, for you, the height of misery?
When things don't seem to change and efforts appear to be in vain.

Where would you like to live?

In a village near a nature reserve where all my friends happen to be my neighbours.

Your ideal of earthly happiness?
Being alert to the intricacies of everyday life and drinking heavenly soup. (In a village near a nature reserve, where all my friends happen to be my neighbours!)

For which faults do you have the greatest amount of indulgence?
Not facing official-looking envelopes..But I'm hitting this on the head with a sledge-hammer.

Who are the novelistic heroes whom you prefer?
Oliver, Ralph Touchett, Doc in "Cannery Row", Harry in "Bliss".

Who is your favorite historical character?
King John (in "1066 And All That")

Your favorite heroines in real life?

Dian Fossey, Shami Chakrabarti, Alice Millar. All women who value living things, can encompass human complexities without reacting violently, and can perceive and face threats while remaining independently apolitical.

Your favorite painter?

At the moment, and for many years, Paulo Uccello.

Your favorite musician?
Joni Mitchell.

The virtue you most prefer in men?
Contentedness.

The virtue you most prefer in women?

Directness.

The virtue you prefer?

A mixture of the two.

Your preferred occupation?
Reading material about wildlife and ecosystems and thinking about how human beings fit in as another species.

Whom would you have liked to be?
David Attenborough's research assistant (with the brain of a naturalist).

The principal trait of my character?

A propensity to fear the worst, which affects my understanding of reality and other people.

The quality you most like in a man?
The ability to enjoy wholeheartedly.
The quality you most like in a woman?
Compassion.

What I appreciate the most in my friends?

Loyalty, fun, closeness, their individuality and stories.

My principle fault?
Difficulty living with strong emotions.

What is your favorite occupation?
Same as preferred occupation.

My dream of happiness?
Being confident in the knowledge I am able to deal with life's difficulties and still enjoy what it produces.

What might my greatest misfortune be?

Lack of confidence.

What would I like to be?
Myself, with the confidence.

In what country would you like to live?
A hybrid of Britain, France, Spain and Italy:
Britain for village fêtes and disinterest in clothes.
France for stalking the vineyards.
Spain for the mountain lizards.
Italy for watching children playing in piazzas in the evenings.

The color I prefer?
At the moment, the juxtaposition of dark cerise and bottle green.

The flower I like?

Scabious.

The bird I prefer?
Robin.

My favorite prose authors?
Charlotte Brontë, Peter Carey, Arundhati Roy, David Sedaris, John Steinbeck, Salman Rushdie (only Midnight's Children), Jane Austen, Jilly Cooper, Raymond Chandler, Paul Scott, Terry Pratchett.

My preferred poets?
Brian Patten.

My favorite composers?
Byrd, Scarlatti, Bach, Vaughan Williams, Herbert Howells, Benjamin Britten, George Gershwin, Duke Ellington, Joni Mitchell.

My favorite painters?
Paulo Uccello, Piero della Francesca, Van Eyck, Vermeer, Holbein, Brueghel, Degas, Lautrec, Modigliani, Samuel Palmer, Spencer, Michael Sowa, Joe Hargan.

My heroes in real life?
David Attenborough, Jared Diamond, Robin Dunbar. All people who are devoted to the study of life on earth.

My favorite historical heroines?

Elizabeth I.

My favorite names?
Sally, Margot, Kitty, Adeline, George, Arthur, Fred, Gerrard, Theo.

What is it you most dislike?
Paperwork, solitary confinement, concrete cities, rudeness, plastic, lack of common sense, unkindness.

Historical figures whom I scorn the most?
George Bush, whom I'm looking forward to being historical.

The military feat that I admire the most?
Dambusters! (Which shows I haven't thought about it at all!)

The reform that I admire the most?

I'm waiting for one which takes really tough measures with those of us who consume obscene amounts of everything.

The gift of nature I would like to possess?
The ability to conquer fear and keep learning.

How I would like to die?
To be killed quickly by a lioness and fed slowly to her cubs.

The present state of my mind?

Daunted by, yet hopeful for the future.

What is your slogan?

I don't have one, but if I did it would be "stay interested and learn."

Nov 12, 2007

Chestnuts with M. Jalabert


Last night was our annual chestnut-eating, vin nouveau-swilling soiree with our neighbor, M. Jallabert, first name Etienne. He was born in 1918 right here in Labastide Esparbairenque (which means he'll be 90 in June) and he says he never had a desire to leave. (Why would he, after all, this place has it all...views, fresh air, nice people, good food...)

I asked him if he had a period roughly historically that he liked best. He said,"Before." He made a mildly disgusted face while peeling the charred, flakey skin from a hot, fleshy chestnut. He popped it in his mouth, and chewed while we listened. "People had nothing, but we were content." He nailed us with his blue eyes. "I worked hard." He thumped his chest with a shaking hand. (He has Parkinson's but still gets up every morning at 7 to do his garden.)

Mining, factories, farming, carpentry, whatever was available, all the while with his own two hands rebuilding stone by stone an old ruin here, where he still lives with memories of his wife and echoes of his now grown boys.

One of the sons, Renee, known to locals as "Jeff", we call in French Strongman. The boys call him "The hairy Jallabert" for his perfectly round beard blended into his perfectly frizzy head of hair. Jeff always collected animals, including a crow. The only remaining wild pet is a wild boar Jeff found four years ago and keeps in a pen in his father's yard, an excuse to come by every day: to feed the pig. It was a baby when he found it, no doubt cute, and he named it Zoe. Now, she's very very large but seems perfectly happy to sit in her little cave all day waiting for Etienne to come and caress her, then Jeff to come bring her leftovers. I never realized how expressive a huge, slimy snout could be. She certainly seems happy.

Etienne still gardens vigorously in his subsistence-farming-size plot of land, with its long, clean, even, abundant rows of salad, green beans, tomatoes and beautiful fruit trees, preened to look more like forks (i.e. 2-dimansional). He brings John down every now and then to give him a tutorial in growing things. No honest Bastidole would buy potatoes from a store.

The boys ate about fifty chestnuts each, one after the other, watching and listening to M. Jalabert. Seamus asked why his voice was scratchy, why were his eyes floppy, why his hands shake. Both boys kissed Etienne on the cheek when we left. Every year he says this will be our last such gathering, and he said it again. "This time, for sure."

Nov 9, 2007

Chris Momenee - Screenwriter




Christopher Momenee has a master’s degree in French literature from Indiana University and an MFA in Dramatic Writing from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. He comes from Toldeo, Ohio. His script Paperboy won the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award. Since then he has written a novel, several screenplays and sold Time Flies, a comedy, to Columbia Pictures. Harley, a comedy, was a semifinalist in the 2004 Scriptapalooza Screenwriting Contest. Chris lives in New York City.

What is, for you, the height of misery?
Seeing my parents get old.

Where would you like to live?
Aix-en-Provence.

Your ideal of earthly happiness?
To never have to work for anyone else other than yourself.

For which faults do you have the greatest amount of indulgence?
Shyness, sloppiness, forgetfulness.

Who are the novelistic heroes whom you prefer?
Holden Caulfield, Long John Silver, Jenny Gerhardt, Victor Frankenstein.

Who is your favorite historical character?
Thoreau.

Your favorite heroines in real life?
Oprah, Sinead O’Connor, me mum.

Your favorite painter?
Van Gogh.

Your favorite musician?
Mike Scott (The Waterboys).

The virtue you most prefer in men?
Humility.

The virtue you most prefer in women?
Beauty (inside and out).

The virtue you prefer?
Compassion.

Your preferred occupation?
Anything creative.

Whom would you have liked to be?
Bono.

The principal trait of my character?
Openness.

The quality you most like in a man?
Sense of humor.


The quality you most like in a woman?
When she is unaware of her beauty…

What I appreciate the most in my friends?
Truthfulness, authenticity.

My principle fault?
Procrastination.

What is your favorite occupation?
Storyteller.

My dream of happiness?
To be a successful storyteller.

What might my greatest misfortune be?
Failing to be a good friend to my friends.

What would I like to be?
Guitar virtuoso.

In what country would you like to live?
France.

The color I prefer?
Blue.

The flower I like?
Tulip.

The bird I prefer?
Cardinal.

My favorite prose authors?
J.D. Salinger, Charles Dickens, Theodore Dreiser, Somerset Maugham, Graham Greene, Robert Louis Stevenson.

My preferred poets?
Charles Baudelaire, Mary Oliver, Arthur Rimbaud.

My favorite composers?
Lennon & McCartney, Jagger & Richards, Mike Scott, Carlos Santana.

My favorite painters?
Van Gogh, Hopper, Renoir.

My heroes in real life?
Jefferson, Ghandi, Mandela, FDR.

My favorite historical heroines?
Rachel Carson, Edith Wharton, Sacagawea, Edna St. Vincent Millay.

My favorite names?
Mookie, Olivia, Elizabeth, Timmy, Santiago, Duck-billed Platypus, Yo Yo Ma.

What is it you most dislike?
Inconsiderateness, cell phones, waste, arrogance.

Historical figures whom I scorn the most?
George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Adolf Hitler.

The military feat that I admire the most?
The 300 Spartans holding their own against the Greeks.

The reform that I admire the most?
Banning cigarette smoking indoors.

The gift of nature I would like to possess?
Stamina.

How I would like to die?
Struck by a bolt of lightning.

The present state of my mind?
Peace.

What is your slogan?
It’s not you; it’s me.

Nov 8, 2007

La Muse English & French Classes


Just back from the first bilingual conversation course offered by La Muse at the social hall here at Labastide Esparbairenque. It went well!

The idea was to offer French conversation courses to La Muse artists and writers (which we've been doing for years) but to extend the sameopportunity to locals needing to learn French, as well as locals wanting to learn English.

First, our attendees like to know about the area and often find themselves at the bread truck wanting desperately to be able to communicate with our French neighbors who want desperately to communicate with our Anglophone clients. Also, we have all these newcomers (a lot of them previous attendees) who've bought houses here and, come on, need to learn the language of their second home! Call it a lingual bridge class...

So, Helene Geyre - she runs a Lama Farm - the French teacher, had two students, Ralph (a toothless Englishman who is often spotted walking in a kilt with his dogs; he lives in nearby Mas Cabardes) and our attendee Michelle Lovegrove Thompson, a writer and filmmaker from Canada (her 26th birthday is Friday). I (Kerry) had three students, Claude and Lillian (both neighbors) and Yvonne (from Roquefere). They're all around 70. I tried to teach them the basics of introduction (What's your name, Where are you from, How old are you, What do you do, etc). It was my first class ever. They were all looking forward to coming back next week...will keep you posted on how it goes!

Salut! (And thanks to John for taking care of the boys!)

Kerry

Nov 4, 2007

"France, through her lens"



This is an article written by the photographer Kara Lewis for the Ashland Daily Tidings:

"Guess what? I spoke English most of the time since I've been in France," I said to my friend as we drove to Charles de Gaulle Aéroport on my last morning in France.

It was true, the people I stayed with in five different places in France for the months of August and September all spoke English with me, either because English was their first language as well or they were being nice and did not want to exclude me from their conversations. My trip started with attending the wedding of a friend who I had met during my second year at Southern Oregon University when she was an exchange student from Poland. During the week of the wedding, I met many people from all over the world, and I learned that people are the same no matter where they are from or what language they speak. We are all connected by the thoughts and feelings (and fashion sense) we share as a species.

In particular, I noticed more similarities than differences between French people and people from home. In Carcassonne, a city known for a centuries-old castle called La Cité, I felt almost transported back to the U.S., even though everyone was speaking French around me, because I saw people I would see in any community here: young couples hanging out together, adults working or meeting friends for lunch, individuals running errands or going to a café for coffee and chats with other regulars. Carcassonne particularly reminded me of Ashland as it had music and art festivals, tourists, and a grower's market.

What interests me most about my trip to France is that I felt united with the people I met and the experiences I had because of music and photography. I collected and exchanged music with people I met, and now when I listen to the songs from them I am reminded of that time. Also, I captured moments with my camera (a digital Canon Rebel EOS) that struck me as beautiful or inspiring. I stayed for a month at the artist's and writer's retreat La Muse, a place with French, Irish and American charm, and photographed people, still-lifes, and landscapes. These images, songs, and experiences that I have brought home with me motivate me to return to France. In fact, in the car on the way to the airport for my return trip to Medford, I told my friend, "Guess what else? I'm coming back."

La Muse has rooms for November! Apply through www.lamuseinn.com.

For more photographs of Kara Lewis' trip to France, visit
  • Ashland Daily Tidings
  • Oct 28, 2007

    Tom Darnell: Artist



    Tom Darnell is a contemporary American artist. Born in San Antonio, Texas in 1958, Tom received his painting degree from the University of Texas in Austin where he continued to live and work until 1992 when he moved to Europe. Along with his wife Nicole and their children Joseph and Ava, Darnell currently lives in southern France.

    What is, for you, the height of misery?
    Seeing someone you love suffering something horrible and not being able to do anything about it.

    Where would you like to live?
    Where I am living now in the south of France in a comfortable house with beautiful views.

    Your ideal of earthly happiness?
    Living a long, fun, experience-rich life in great health with loads of loving family and friends and having no regrets when you die.

    For which faults do you have the greatest amount of indulgence?
    I indulge a lot of faults, but drinking too much red wine and acting like a fool would easily top the list.

    Who are the novelistic heroes whom you prefer?
    From childhood: Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn and from adulthood: Alyosha in The Brothers Karamozov.

    Who is your favorite historical character?
    Uhm..Mahatma Ghandi would be one.

    Your favorite heroines in real life?
    There are so many people who overcome so much I can't say...Rosa Parks comes to mind first.

    Your favorite painter?
    Caravaggio.

    Your favorite musician?
    That's like asking which red wine is my favorite...I like so many.

    The virtue you most prefer in men?
    Integrity.

    The virtue you most prefer in women?
    Compassion.

    The virtue you prefer?
    Argh...integrity I suppose.

    Your preferred occupation?
    Painting paintings as I do but I hate the business end and the phony baloney involved.

    Whom would you have liked to be?
    Pablo Picasso except without the asshole qualities.

    The principal trait of my character?
    Fun-loving or honest though my wife would probably say crotchety or liar.

    The quality you most like in a man?
    Inner strength and calm courage, the ''benevolent king'' thing...like the total opposite of Bush.

    The quality you most like in a woman?
    Tolerance/patience, nurturing, warmth.

    What I appreciate the most in my friends?
    A great sense of humor tops the list.

    My principle fault?
    Making snap judgments without knowing the whole story then getting needlessly angry (mostly around the kids).

    What is your favorite occupation?
    If by that you mean professional occupation, I think being a photographer for National Geographic or a food and wine critic (just the research not the writing part though) oh, movie critic too.

    My dream of happiness?
    Barring the occasional horrors, I think I am living it now. For me, happiness involves both focus and surrender...I try and guide my life's journey but am willing to take the occasional side road.

    What might my greatest misfortune be?
    My childhood and adolescence were often hellish but of the things I could have avoided and didn't, it would be working many years at a boring job (for security and comfort) instead of following my passion right from the start.

    What would I like to be?
    All forms have their ups and downs I guess, I'm happy being human.

    In what country would you like to live?
    France or Mexico or Italy.

    The color I prefer?
    I only like black and white. Just kidding, I like most colors found in nature ...bright yellowy green probably.

    The flower I like?
    White roses.

    The bird I prefer?
    Besides our parakeet of course, there exists an amazing bird in the rain forest which can mimic the sound of anything at all...including the sounds of car alarms, motor-driven cameras and sadly, chain saws and the crashing sounds of the trees they cut down..really incredible.

    My favorite prose authors?
    Marquez, Anne Michaels, anyone with a poetic style and also the hilarious ones like Augusten Burroughs and DBC Pierre

    My preferred poets?
    Naomi Shihab Nye is easily and consistently my favorite.

    My favorite composers?
    Old school: Chopin and contemporary: Arvo Part or Gorecki.

    My favorite painters?
    Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Picasso, Richter.

    My heroes in real life?
    Too many to name.

    My favorite historical heroines?
    Ditto.

    My favorite names?
    Ava, Nicole, Joseph.

    What is it you most dislike?
    Besides injustice and corruption, milk skin on my coffee.

    Historical figures whom I scorn the most?
    Are Bush and Cheney history yet?

    The military feat that I admire the most?
    Peace keeping...rebuilding.

    The reform that I admire the most?
    No response.

    The gift of nature I would like to possess?
    A really big ....

    How I would like to die?
    I want to die before my children do, at a late age, suddenly in my sleep ....without pain of course and with nothing left on my life's to do list.

    The present state of my mind?
    Good.

    What is your slogan?
    Make the most of every moment because that's what life is, this moment now.

    Oct 25, 2007

    November and December Reductions!


    La Muse will offer a 50% reduction on retreat rates for November and December, to fill remaining available rooms.

    Because it's last minute, we'll accept stays of less than one month (we usually require a one-month minimum). Interested parties should send in an application consisting of

    1. a bio/CV
    2. statement of intent
    3. sample of work, and
    4. two references both for personal and professional contacts.

    Our email is: getaway@lamuseinn.com

    Thanks!

    Kerry & John

    (Photo by Kara Lewis)

    Oct 24, 2007

    Monsieur "Cowboy" Garcia



    This is a photo of Monsieur Garcia just down the road from us, taken by one of our attendees last month, Kara Lewis. She's a great photographer from southern Oregon.

    M. Garcia's nearly ninety and still grows all his own fruits and vegetables, raises chickens (the eggs are amazing) and rabbits and never stops laughing. Our boys call him Cowboy because when they first saw him with that hat on - they were one - one of them shouted "Cowboy! Cowboy!" And it's stuck.

    He's one of the reasons we live here.

    All the best,

    John & Kerry

    Oct 23, 2007

    La Muse Awards Residency to University of Iowa Alum



    Tom Montgomery-Fate (MA.W, 1987) is the first winner of the La Muse Nonfiction Writing Fellowship, offered to an alum of the University of Iowa Nonfiction Writing Program.

    Tom will be spending most of the month of January 2008 at La Muse working on a new book of nature essays. Tentatively titled A Box of Wind, the collection is also a kind of conversation with Henry David Thoreau's work and its startling relevance in the modern era. (The title essay is forthcoming in Riverteeth.)

    Tom Montgomery-Fate is the author of Beyond the White Noise, a collection of essays, and Steady and Trembling, a memoir. His essays frequently air on National Public Radio and Chicago Public Radio, and have appeared in the Chicago Tribune, Boston Globe, Fourth Genre, Manoa, Puerto del Sol, and other magazines, journals, and anthologies. He is a professor of English at College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn IL.

    Congratulations to Tom, and many thanks to Robin Hemley, Director of the Nonfiction Writing Program at the University of Iowa, and to Hope Edelman, Chair of the NWP Alumni Association, for all their help with the judging.

    Stay tuned to this blog for other fellowship and residency updates!

    All the best,

    Kerry and John

    Oct 22, 2007

    La Muse Proust Questionnaire



    Whether inspired by the feature film Little Miss Sunshine or Vanity Fair's “The Proust Questionnaire” - we can't remember where we came up with it - La Muse has decided to offer a slight spin on M. Proust's questionnaire. Perhaps Steve Carell's character Frank is the number one Proust scholar in the United States and perhaps Proust is the second greatest writer in history next to Shakespeare, but this does not interest us. What does interest us is what our previous attendees and those of you associated with La Muse think and feel when asked these questions.

    So, every Friday, we will be uploading the answers of writers, artists, publishers, photographers etc. to BOTH Proust questionnaires, as Marcel was asked to fill out the questionnaires at two different social events in his life, not just one.

    Here's his responses. The first were made when he was a sprightly 13 year old. (The questions came out of a party game at the birthday party of Antoinette Felix-Faure. They were put into Antoinette's birthday book):

    What is, for you, the height of misery?
    To be separated from Mama

    Where would you like to live?
    In the country of the Ideal, or, rather, of my ideal

    Your ideal of earthly happiness?
    To live in contact with those I love, with the beauties of nature, with a quantity of books and music, and to have, within easy distance, a French theater

    For which faults do you have the greatest amount of indulgence?
    To a life deprived of the works of genius

    Who are the novelistic heroes whom you prefer?
    Those of romance and poetry, those who are the expression of an ideal rather than an imitation of the real

    Who is your favorite historical character?
    A mixture of Socrates, Pericles, Mahomet, Pliny the Younger and Augustin Thierry

    Your favorite heroines in real life?
    A woman of genius leading an ordinary life

    Your favorite heroines in real life?
    Those who are more than women without ceasing to be womanly; everything that is tender, poetic, pure and in every way beautiful

    Your favorite painter?
    Meissonier

    Your favorite musician?
    Mozart

    The virtue you most prefer in men?
    Intelligence, moral sense

    The virtue you most prefer in women?
    Gentleness, naturalness, intelligence

    The virtue you prefer?
    All virtues that are not limited to a sect: the universal virtues

    Your preferred occupation?
    Reading, dreaming, and writing verse

    Whom would you have liked to be?
    Since the question does not arise, I prefer not to answer it. All the same, I should very much have liked to be Pliny the Younger.

    Here are his responses at around the age of 20:

    The principal trait of my character?
    A craving to be loved, or, to be more precise, to be caressed and spoiled rather than to be admired

    The quality you most like in a man?
    Feminine charm

    The quality you most like in a woman?
    A man's virtues, and frankness in friendship

    What I appreciate the most in my friends?
    Tenderness - provided they possess a physical charm which makes their tenderness worth having

    My principle fault?
    Lack of understanding; weakness of will

    What is your favorite occupation?
    Loving

    My dream of happiness?
    Not, I fear, a very elevated one. I really haven't the courage to say what it is, and if I did I should probably destroy it by the mere fact of putting it into words.

    What might my greatest misfortune be?
    Never to have known my mother or my grandmother

    What would I like to be?
    Myself - as those whom I admire would like me to be

    In what country would you like to live?
    One where certain things that I want would be realized - and where feelings of tenderness would always be reciprocated.

    The color I prefer?
    Beauty lies not in colors but in thier harmony

    The flower I like?
    Hers - but apart from that, all

    The bird I prefer?
    The swallow

    My favorite prose authors?
    At the moment, Anatole France and Pierre Loti

    My preferred poets?
    Baudelaire and Alfred de Vigny

    My favorite hero of fiction?
    Hamlet

    My favorite heroines of fiction?
    Phedre (crossed out) Berenice

    My favorite composers?
    Beethoven, Wagner, Schumann

    My favorite painters?
    Leonardo da Vinci, Rembrandt

    My heroes in real life?
    Monsieur Darlu, Monsieur Boutroux (professors)

    My favorite historical heroines?
    Cleopatra

    My favorite names?
    I only have one at a time

    What is it you most dislike?
    My own worst qualities

    Historical figures whom I scorn the most?
    I am not sufficiently educated to say

    The military feat that I admire the most?
    My own enlistment as a volunteer!

    The reform that I admire the most?
    (no response)

    The gift of nature I would like to possess?
    Will power and irresistible charm

    How I would like to die?
    A better man than I am, and much beloved

    The present state of my mind?
    Annoyance at having to think about myself in order to answer these questions

    To what faults do you feel most indulgent?
    Those that I understand

    What is your slogan?
    I prefer not to say, for fear it might bring me bad luck.

    Oct 18, 2007

    Cepes Among the Chestnut Trees


    I brought the boys to a waterfall nearby today to have a snack of walnuts and plums and on the road all the way we kept finding mushrooms...St. Michels, cepes, Rosiers des pres, and some standard fungi, which look pretty in the basket but I don't think we'll eat.

    Of course, I checked with the locals to make sure I wasn't about to poison my family and got the greenlight. What a lunch we had!

    One of my favorite things about living here is eating the stuff of the mountains...hunters bring us wildboar and chevreuil, we collect chestnuts, figs, plums, pears. Our neighbors make honey and grow rabbits and chickens and pigs! Gotta love it. We cook it all up in our bread oven, which we only this summer learned to use, thanks to a food writer who came in March and got it cleaned out and started up. Our next slated bread-oven feast is Thanksgiving!

    Anyway, I really should be doing laundry.

    Tell us any of your recipes if you know some!

    All the best,

    Kerry

    Oct 17, 2007

    This is the new attendee entrance!


    It was a previous attendees' idea: Ramsey McPhilips. He's actually coming back to La Muse next month. You've got to check him out on TV; just type in Ramsey McPhilips - hilarious:
  • YouTube


  • The wisteria is only a couple of years old and it's already 10 feet off the ground, and the Vigne Verge ("Virgin Vine" - what a name) is flying up the wall and it was only planted last May!

    Keep on creating!

    La Muse

    Oct 13, 2007

    News


    Hey,

    Been too long.

    We were snowed under with all the many, many renovations: new slate roof, new attendee entrance, new dining room, new professional kitchen, library, bread oven etc. etc....

    We now have a new website too!

    So, please post your comments and let us know where and what you are doing, or check us out on Facebook or at:
  • MySpace


  • Keep on creating!

    La Muse

    P.S.: The photo is of our new sign that our neighbor made for us as a gift!

    Jan 24, 2007

    La Muse

    Under Construction


    Hey,

    The renovations are going well and it snowed in Labastide today. Really beautiful.

    We're just back from Maine and had a good Christmas.

    Hope all is well out there.

    Soon,

    La Muse