Category Archives: Chanel Bonfire
Summertime Goodreads Giveaway!
Happy Monday! If you have a friend who hasn’t read Chanel Bonfire or if you’ve given away your copy, here’s a chance to get a new autographed hardback edition! Click on the link below and go to Goodreads. If you’re not already registered, register and then sign up for the giveaway. I’ll send the winner their book–anywhere in the world–after the July 24th closing. If you’re not on Goodreads, you should be; it’s a fantastic site for reviews, discussions and recommendations for every kind of book — a real community of readers.
http://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/show/58782-chanel-bonfire
And remember, if your Book Group is reading Chanel, you can set up a Skype Q & A with me by emailing chanelbonfire@gmail.com!
Beach Read Book Mobile
Mothers & Daughters
Meeting Readers: Talking Moms
If you are part of big group or association and would like me to come speak about Chanel and the challenges of dealing with difficult, challenging or just plain toxic mothers, click on the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau button on the right.
Happy Monday!
Happy 4th of July!
http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/declaration_transcript.html
Georgann Rea and Betty Draper
The heat in Los Angeles, whether seasonally warm summer heat or dry electrically charged Santa Ana wind heat, makes me think of my mother. You feel confined by the LA heat–trapped in your air conditioning, behind shades or sheets or blinds; constricted by the air as the yellow sky clamps a lid on the city. Joan Didion called it “Knife Sharpening Weather” referring to Raymond Chandler’s description of the Santa Anas as a time when normally meek housewives would sharpen their kitchen knives with an eye on the back of their husbands’ necks. Knives, the threat of violence, out-sized inappropriate responses to external conditions all remind me of my mother, Georgann Rea. Mother thought harrassing phone calls, baseball bats and getting someone fired were appropriate responses to teenage heartbreak. It was a mothering instinct like Medea’s — ultimately all about my mother. I couldn’t help but laugh when I saw Betty Draper for the first time on Mad Men. They were/are both constricted by their time, society, roles but also psychology. Betty shares many of Mother’s qualities, and her actions and reactions–like the shooting of her neighbor’s birds in her nightgown, smoking a cigarette–are straight from Mother’s playbook. I don’t know if Betty will turn out to be completely psychotic but… stranger things have happened.