Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Last Welty Event on Thursday, October 29
Please join us in the library on Thursday, October 29 as we discuss The Optimist's Daughter. This will be the final program in this month of celebrating Eudora Welty. We'll start at 12:45 pm. So, please join us for an enlightening conversation about the book.
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
When "Halley Came to Jackson"
Tonight and especially early in the morning on Wednesday, we'll be able to see the Orionid meteor shower, a yearly event which should be a good show around here because skies are clear.
Eudora wrote about the night sky and learning to appreciate it as a child. From One Writer's Beginnings:
"The night sky over my childhood Jackson was velvety black. I could see the full constellations in it and call their names; when I could read, I knew their myths. Though I was always waked for eclipses, and indeed carried to the window as an infant in arms and shown Halley's Comet in my sleep, and though I'd been taught at our diningroom table about the solar system and knew the earth revolved around the sun, and our moon around us, I never found out the moon didn't come up in the west until I was a writer and Herschel Brickell, the literary critic, told me after I misplaced it in a story. He said valuable words to me about my new profession: 'Always be sure you get your moon in the right part of the sky.'"
I think that I'll honor Eudora tonight and look at the pieces of Halley's that fall from the sky near the new moon.
(By the way, Mary Chapin Carpenter wrote and recorded a song about this Welty memory; the song is entitled "Halley Came to Jackson.")
Eudora wrote about the night sky and learning to appreciate it as a child. From One Writer's Beginnings:
"The night sky over my childhood Jackson was velvety black. I could see the full constellations in it and call their names; when I could read, I knew their myths. Though I was always waked for eclipses, and indeed carried to the window as an infant in arms and shown Halley's Comet in my sleep, and though I'd been taught at our diningroom table about the solar system and knew the earth revolved around the sun, and our moon around us, I never found out the moon didn't come up in the west until I was a writer and Herschel Brickell, the literary critic, told me after I misplaced it in a story. He said valuable words to me about my new profession: 'Always be sure you get your moon in the right part of the sky.'"
I think that I'll honor Eudora tonight and look at the pieces of Halley's that fall from the sky near the new moon.
(By the way, Mary Chapin Carpenter wrote and recorded a song about this Welty memory; the song is entitled "Halley Came to Jackson.")
Welty as Reviewer
Welty was a very prolific book reviewer. Did you know that she wrote a review of the delightful children's book, Charlotte's Web? Her review was published in The New York Times on October 19, 1952--almost precisely fifty-seven years ago today. It's hard to believe that Charlotte and Wilbur are that old!
Here's an excerpt from that review:
"What the book is about is friendship on earth, affection and protection, adventure and miracle, life and death, trust and treachery, pleasure and pain, and the passing of time. As a piece of work it is just about perfect, and just about magical in the way it is done. What it all proves -- in the words of the minister in the story which he hands down to his congregation after Charlotte writes "Some Pig" in her web -- is "that human beings must always be on the watch for the coming of wonders."
Susan Haltom talk was wonderful!
On Monday, October 19, we were enlightened and entertained by garden designer Susan Haltom--via Skype! Susan was in charge of the Welty garden restoration in Jackson, Mississippi. She showed us pictures of the types of plants put in the garden to restore it to its peak from the 1920s to the 1940s. This was the time period in which Eudora's mother, Chestina, was actively tending and planting it.
Susan also showed us some private Welty family pictures, mostly of Eudora, her parents, and two brothers in the garden throughout the years. Susan is using many of these photographs, along with Eudora's letters, in a book she's writing. She expects it to be ready for publication within two years.
Susan also showed us some private Welty family pictures, mostly of Eudora, her parents, and two brothers in the garden throughout the years. Susan is using many of these photographs, along with Eudora's letters, in a book she's writing. She expects it to be ready for publication within two years.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Next Event: Monday, October 19
Please join us on Monday, October 19 at 12:45 pm in the library for our next Eudora Welty in Focus event. We'll be videoconferencing with Susan Haltom. Susan was the garden consultant in charge of the restoration of the Welty garden on Pinehurst Street in Jackson, Mississippi. Eudora Welty lived and wrote in this house for a large portion of her life. Chestina Welty, Eudora's mother, planned and maintained the original garden--with much assistance from Eudora.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Monday's Talk
We had a very informative talk on Monday by Kendall Adams. He discussed Welty's photographic style and subject matter. Kendall pointed out that Welty's shots seemed natural, and her method was not marked by traditional rules of composition, making her style different from the styles of some of her contemporaries. She met these people of 1930s Mississippi on their--and her--home turf, conversed with them, and then, when they were at ease with her presence, took their photographs, or, as she often called them, snapshots.
Here are Welty's own words in describing the experience of traveling her home state during the Great Depression:
"By recording what passes, the photographer offers the illusion of not letting it go. These pictures represent such efforts. They are among hundreds made by me in the late 1930s and early '40s in the State of Mississippi. If a value persists in them, it is because life, whatever it meant, had to mean, in those poor times, speaks for itself in the unchanging language of movement and gesture, and looks undefeatedly back at the camera's eye."
"Life ... speaks for itself ...." Eudora usually says it best!
Here are Welty's own words in describing the experience of traveling her home state during the Great Depression:
"By recording what passes, the photographer offers the illusion of not letting it go. These pictures represent such efforts. They are among hundreds made by me in the late 1930s and early '40s in the State of Mississippi. If a value persists in them, it is because life, whatever it meant, had to mean, in those poor times, speaks for itself in the unchanging language of movement and gesture, and looks undefeatedly back at the camera's eye."
"Life ... speaks for itself ...." Eudora usually says it best!
Monday, October 12, 2009
Welty Quote of the Day
“Among all living creatures, only human beings seem to have the knowledge that the moment is passing, and the acute wish to hold that moment. In the most unpretentious snapshot lies the wish to clasp fleeting life. Framing a few square inches of space for the fraction of a second, the photographer may capture—rescue from oblivion—fellow human beings caught in the act of living.” – E. W.
Today at 12:45 pm
Please join us in the PTC Library today at 12:45 pm for our next One Book, One College program. Kendall Adams will discuss Welty's photography.
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Next Welty Event
Please join on Monday, October 12 at 12:45 pm in the Library. Kendall Adams, PTC graphic arts instructor, will be speaking on Eudora Welty's photography and the photography of others who worked for the WPA in the 1930s.
Kendall is an outstanding photographer himself, and the program promises to be very interesting and informative.
Kendall is an outstanding photographer himself, and the program promises to be very interesting and informative.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
"Powerhouse"
Last night at the "Welty" reception, Hunter Holmes entertained us with some classic Mississippi blues music. Eudora Welty was interested in, and enjoyed, this type of music, and music figures prominently in some of her works. In fact, "Powerhouse",originally published in A Curtain of Green, is the story of a Fats Waller-like blues pianist and his band, performing for an all-white audience in 1930s Mississippi.
Here's a quote from "Powerhouse":
"Then he took hold of the piano, as if he saw it for the first time in his life, and tested it for strength,hit it down in the bass, played an octave with his elbow, lifted the top, looked inside, and leaned against it with all his might. He sat down and played it for a few minutes with outrageous force and got it under his power--a bass deep and coarse as a sea net--then produced something glimmering and fragile, and smiled."
Here's a quote from "Powerhouse":
"Then he took hold of the piano, as if he saw it for the first time in his life, and tested it for strength,hit it down in the bass, played an octave with his elbow, lifted the top, looked inside, and leaned against it with all his might. He sat down and played it for a few minutes with outrageous force and got it under his power--a bass deep and coarse as a sea net--then produced something glimmering and fragile, and smiled."
"Welty" Exhibit Opens
Monday, October 5, 2009
"Welty" Reception
Please join us on Tuesday, October 6 from 5-7 pm for a reception to kick off the "Welty" photography exhibit and our entire month of One Book, One College programming.
Friday, October 2, 2009
It's here!
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