This year has been a test of anyone's sanity. In the winter, my beloved husband died painfully of
cancer. I want to roar like a bear in fury just thinking about it. He wasn't retirement age yet. This kick to our life plan put my own life at risk. Was it worth it? Was anything in this world worth living for now?
The first three months were like walking through a stage play, where everyone had a script but me. I was haunted by the way he had died and my helplessness to make much of a difference. Guilt can be tied to helplessness in a strange and not exactly rational way. I was alive, where he wasn't given the chance. And I didn't appreciate it, this life. I felt guilty for that.
My two grown-up daughters kept me going during this time.
About month four, I had a strange feeling. I'd been through this before. Not the exact situation. But the quite similar emotion of things being out of control, overwhelming, too much to handle.
When I was a young girl, my sweet little brother was sick. Or so we called it. Later, they gave it the label of autism. Our house was one of sadness, and at times, fear. I sought ways to escape. And the very best way, I found, was through creating stories.
The characters in my stories did what I said. I gave them wonderful adventures. But at the end of the day, they were under my control. That was it - pure, unfettered control, where in my own life, I had none.
As a kid, I started writing as a way to cope with an unstable home life. Could things be any more unstable than they were now?
I had no idea what to do with the rest of my life. No idea where to live. And with that, intense loneliness that had settled deep in my bones.
SALVATION: deliverance from harm, ruin or loss.
Writing - back then as now - has been my salvation. But not perhaps in the way that most people think. It's not that my prose allows me to reflect and write about my feelings as some form of therapy (although this does work in wondrous ways for some people.) Instead, it does the opposite. It takes me out of myself.
On those days where there doesn't seem to be much point to sticking around, this calling pokes at me. Get writing, it says. Write for other people - not yourself. Don't yield to the temptation to make this about you. Enough about you. Write for them.
I write humorous heists, epic fantasy and romantic comedy. Many of my books have been used in the ESL and literacy market, here and overseas. It took a long time, several months, for me to pull out of my grief to remember that. But the memories are starting to come back. In the back of my mind, a voice pokes through. That of a large man in his mid-thirties at a literacy event, saying to me, "If you hadn't written the Goddaughter books, I wouldn't be able to read now."
I'm making this year about him. Enough about me.
What about you, fellow writers and Sleuthsayers? Is writing crucial to maintaining sanity in difficult times?
No BSP this time. May we all touch someone with our writing.
Showing posts with label literacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literacy. Show all posts
26 October 2019
24 December 2016
My Christmas Wish: Literacy for All
Melodie’ll be right with ya. Christmas Eve and there I am at the shop and whadya know. In drops Santa. Seems in Brooklyn, somebody stole the hubcaps off his sleigh, knowhatimean? So just happened to have a set in stock, came in fresh this afternoon, a perfect match, indistinguishable from the originals, if you get my drift. Vinnie slapped them on while Solly helped cinch down the loot, er, gifts in the back. Solly didn’t do so good ’cause when Santa lifted off, whadya know… there’s a few items what fell off the back of the sleigh.
We was real heartbroken about that, especially when Gina and Velma walked in and gave us hell. Don’t mess with Velma. My coglioni still hurts from last year when I told her, “Baby, I got yer yule log right here.”
Gina was a little mollified when Santa sorta dropped his December issue of Ellery Queen and there was a Steve Steinbock report all about her. Well, not exactly her, but her mouthpiece. Ya got to add the word ‘mouth’ to that or she gets all unaccountably insulted. Anyways, this is what the review gotta say:
Melodie Campbell, The Goddaughter Caper, Raven Books, $9.95. Gina Gallo tries to steer clear of her family's questionable business dealings. But when she discovers the body of a local Peeping Tom in the alley behind her shop, fate forces her hand. She and various cousins find themselves in a topsy-turvy mess of missing bodies, a surplus of coffins, and geriatric misbehavior. Campbell's writing is always funny. The Goddaughter series, of which this slender novella is the fourth volume, is part of Orca Books' Rapid Reads imprint, making it a fast, fun read.That put her in a lot better mood and she didn’t dislocate no more body parts. She thinks you might enjoy it too, maybe find one in your stocking, capisci?
— Pietro ‘the Limp’ Peyronie (as dictated to Velma)
My Christmas Wish: Literacy for All
by Melodie Campbell (Bad Girl… only not so bad today)
Last year, I had the honour of being guest speaker at the Hamilton Literacy Council AGM. This wonderful organization provides one on one tutoring to adults in Hamilton who don't know how to read. The teachers are marvelous. They are mostly volunteers.
The theme for the AGM was all about wishes. Dream Big. That sort of thing. And so the staff came up with a brilliant idea for centrepieces for the AGM. Each table had a crystal globe in the centre of it, like a snow globe. Each globe had a different note inserted into the middle. And on the note was the dream of one of the students from the literacy council.
I picked up the globe on my table. The note inside it read:
"I want to work in a store someday."
I felt my throat constrict. My eyes started to tear.
Many of us work in stores when we are in high school or college. It is our 'starter job' - the one we can't wait to leave after graduation from school to get the better job for which we trained. I remember working at a mega grocery store. Eight hours on my feet, unrelenting noise, and lots of lifting. I was so grateful to leave it.
I thought about our student who wrote that note. What she wanted most in the world was to become literate so she could work in a store.
Because she couldn't work there now. She couldn't read labels. She couldn't read sales slips. Most stores have computers. She couldn't read the text on the computer screen.
She couldn't even fill in the application form to work there.
Literacy has always been a cause dear to my heart. I write a series of crime books for adult literacy students who are reaching the advanced certificate stage. I donate all the proceeds from my book launches to the literacy council. But at the AGM, this student opened my eyes and reached my heart.
In our society, we expect everyone to be able to read. Jobs today require it.
All my life, I have imagined how sad it would be to be unable to read a book. Imagine how it would feel to be unable to fill out a job application.
My fervent wish this Christmas is the gift of literacy for everyone. May everyone in my town, Hamilton, and my country, Canada, be able to read. May everyone in the world have the chance to learn, and may teachers and tutors everywhere continue to make it happen.
Merry Christmas to all.
Labels:
Ellery Queen,
EQMM,
literacy,
Melodie Campbell,
mystery magazine,
reading
Location:
Hamilton, ON, Canada
07 April 2015
Because Something is Happening Here But You Don’t Know What it is, Do You, Mister Jones?
by Paul D. Marks
One of the things that scares me most as a writer is an illiterate society. Not only illiterate in the sense of people being unable to read and write. But “illiterate” in the sense that, as a society, we have touchstones that everyone or at least most people are familiar with. Or I thought we did at one time. I’m not so sure anymore.
Let’s start with plain literacy on a personal and anecdotal level.
When my wife and I were looking for the house prior to our current house we noticed something odd, at least odd to us. We’d go in various houses in different parts of Los Angeles. But, unlike some of the shows on HGTV, you could still see the real people’s stuff in their houses. Their junk, ugly sofa, hideous drapes and kids’ toys strewn all over, laundry baskets, cluttered closets, etc. One thing we didn’t see much of were books. Sure, a house here or there had them, but the majority didn’t. And if they did they had a coffee table book or two of some artist they thought would make them look chic or intelligent or maybe a book of aerial views of L.A. One place we expected to see lots of books was in kids’ rooms or a potboiler on their parents’ nightstands. But, alas, the “cupboards” were bare.
This was twenty or so years ago, so well before smart phones, Kindles and e-readers. So, it’s not like all their multitudinous libraries were in e-form. No, there just weren’t many books to be seen.
We found this odd, as we have books stuffed to the rafters, as do most of our friends. Here, there and everywhere, in the living room or the dining room, library, the hallway, and even shelves upon shelves in the garage.
Flash forward: Cultural Literacy
When we went hunting for our current house, about ten years ago it was more of the same. By then there might have been some e-books and the like but the real revolution still hadn’t hit full bore yet.
Again this seemed odd. But more than odd, it’s scary. Especially for a writer. Because a writer needs readers. And if people aren’t reading, I’m out of a job, and maybe likely so are you. Even scarier though is the fact that, imho, we are becoming a post-literate society. And we are losing our shared background, some of which is gotten through books. Aside from the greater implications of that in terms of the country, it makes it harder as a writer because when we write we assume some shared cultural background. And we make literary or historical allusions to those ends. We mention composers or songs or symphonies. Books, authors, “famous” or “well-known” quotes that we assume most readers will be familiar with, some foreign phrases, even biblical references. Hemingway and even Bob Dylan songs (and I’m talking those from the 60s before he found religion in the 70s), as well as other writers, are filled with them. But often these days readers are not familiar with these references, so they miss the richness of the writing. So then we begin to question whether or not to include these references and sometimes end up writing to the lower common denominator. And that diminishes our works and our society, even if it sounds pompous to say that.
Maybe people won’t know who Rudy Vallee is, and that's understandable, but many also don’t know who Shakespeare is in any meaningful way.
When I would go to pitch meetings in Hollywood I would often have to dumb down my presentation. I would try to leave out any historical or literary allusions. Hell, I’d even leave out film allusions because while these people may have heard of Hitchcock, few had seen his movies. And they were mostly from Ivy League type schools, but they didn’t have much of a cultural background. So when you have to explain basic things to them, you’ve lost them. They don’t like to feel stupid. And sometimes they’d ask me to explain something to them about another script they were reading by someone else. One development VP asked me to explain to her who fought on which sides in World War II, because she was reading a WWII script someone had submitted. The writer of that script already had points against him or her since the development VP didn’t even know the basics of the subject matter. And I would have thought before that incident that just about everybody knew who fought on which side in WWII. And this is just one example. I have many, many more experiences like this.
After college, the stats show that many people never—or very rarely—read another book. Literacy rates in the US are down. A lot of young people aren’t reading, but they think they’re smart because they look things up on Google. But looking something up on Google isn’t the same as knowing, though it’s better than nothing, assuming people do look things up. See: http://www.salon.com/2014/10/12/google_makes_us_all_dumber_the_neuroscience_of_search_engines/
I’ve seen several authors, some very well known, ask on Facebook if they should include X, Y or Z in a novel because their editor says no one will get the references, even though the references aren’t that obscure. But even if they are, what’s wrong with using them and having people (hopefully) look them up. Isn’t that how we expand our knowledge? But nobody wants to challenge anyone in that way anymore. We’re dealing with generations now that have been told how wonderful they are without having earned it. So when we unintentionally make them feel stupid by using references they’re not familiar with, they turn off. Is it just me or does our society seem to have no intellectual curiosity, no interests or hobbies other than texting or watching the Kardashians? They don’t have the will to look further than the screens of their smart phones?
I know I’m generalizing and that there are pockets of intellectual curiosity (like the readers of this blog!), but I feel like we are becoming a minority.
And when you do a book signing or a library event, do you notice the average median age and hair color of the audience? More times than not they’re older and grayer. And where are the young people? That’s scary.
I wish more people would make New Year’s resolutions to improve their minds as well as their bodies, to exercise their brains as well as their muscles. So maybe we should do yoga for the brain as well as the body.
At this point I’d even settle for grownups reading comic books or graphic novels as long as there’s words in them.
All of this scares me, not just as a writer, who might not have an audience in the future. But for society as a whole. We need to have a shared background, a common knowledge, a literate society of people who are engaged. Not everybody can know everything, of course. But there should be some common background that we can all relate to.
Shakespeare picture: Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hw-shakespeare2.jpg#/media/File:Hw-shakespeare2.jpg
Blonde on blonde album cover: "Bob Dylan - Blonde on Blonde" by Source. Licensed under Fair use via Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bob_Dylan_-_Blonde_on_Blonde.jpg#/media/File:Bob_Dylan_-_Blonde_on_Blonde.jpg
One of the things that scares me most as a writer is an illiterate society. Not only illiterate in the sense of people being unable to read and write. But “illiterate” in the sense that, as a society, we have touchstones that everyone or at least most people are familiar with. Or I thought we did at one time. I’m not so sure anymore.
Let’s start with plain literacy on a personal and anecdotal level.
When my wife and I were looking for the house prior to our current house we noticed something odd, at least odd to us. We’d go in various houses in different parts of Los Angeles. But, unlike some of the shows on HGTV, you could still see the real people’s stuff in their houses. Their junk, ugly sofa, hideous drapes and kids’ toys strewn all over, laundry baskets, cluttered closets, etc. One thing we didn’t see much of were books. Sure, a house here or there had them, but the majority didn’t. And if they did they had a coffee table book or two of some artist they thought would make them look chic or intelligent or maybe a book of aerial views of L.A. One place we expected to see lots of books was in kids’ rooms or a potboiler on their parents’ nightstands. But, alas, the “cupboards” were bare.
This was twenty or so years ago, so well before smart phones, Kindles and e-readers. So, it’s not like all their multitudinous libraries were in e-form. No, there just weren’t many books to be seen.
We found this odd, as we have books stuffed to the rafters, as do most of our friends. Here, there and everywhere, in the living room or the dining room, library, the hallway, and even shelves upon shelves in the garage.
Flash forward: Cultural Literacy
When we went hunting for our current house, about ten years ago it was more of the same. By then there might have been some e-books and the like but the real revolution still hadn’t hit full bore yet.
Again this seemed odd. But more than odd, it’s scary. Especially for a writer. Because a writer needs readers. And if people aren’t reading, I’m out of a job, and maybe likely so are you. Even scarier though is the fact that, imho, we are becoming a post-literate society. And we are losing our shared background, some of which is gotten through books. Aside from the greater implications of that in terms of the country, it makes it harder as a writer because when we write we assume some shared cultural background. And we make literary or historical allusions to those ends. We mention composers or songs or symphonies. Books, authors, “famous” or “well-known” quotes that we assume most readers will be familiar with, some foreign phrases, even biblical references. Hemingway and even Bob Dylan songs (and I’m talking those from the 60s before he found religion in the 70s), as well as other writers, are filled with them. But often these days readers are not familiar with these references, so they miss the richness of the writing. So then we begin to question whether or not to include these references and sometimes end up writing to the lower common denominator. And that diminishes our works and our society, even if it sounds pompous to say that.
Maybe people won’t know who Rudy Vallee is, and that's understandable, but many also don’t know who Shakespeare is in any meaningful way.
When I would go to pitch meetings in Hollywood I would often have to dumb down my presentation. I would try to leave out any historical or literary allusions. Hell, I’d even leave out film allusions because while these people may have heard of Hitchcock, few had seen his movies. And they were mostly from Ivy League type schools, but they didn’t have much of a cultural background. So when you have to explain basic things to them, you’ve lost them. They don’t like to feel stupid. And sometimes they’d ask me to explain something to them about another script they were reading by someone else. One development VP asked me to explain to her who fought on which sides in World War II, because she was reading a WWII script someone had submitted. The writer of that script already had points against him or her since the development VP didn’t even know the basics of the subject matter. And I would have thought before that incident that just about everybody knew who fought on which side in WWII. And this is just one example. I have many, many more experiences like this.
After college, the stats show that many people never—or very rarely—read another book. Literacy rates in the US are down. A lot of young people aren’t reading, but they think they’re smart because they look things up on Google. But looking something up on Google isn’t the same as knowing, though it’s better than nothing, assuming people do look things up. See: http://www.salon.com/2014/10/12/google_makes_us_all_dumber_the_neuroscience_of_search_engines/
I’ve seen several authors, some very well known, ask on Facebook if they should include X, Y or Z in a novel because their editor says no one will get the references, even though the references aren’t that obscure. But even if they are, what’s wrong with using them and having people (hopefully) look them up. Isn’t that how we expand our knowledge? But nobody wants to challenge anyone in that way anymore. We’re dealing with generations now that have been told how wonderful they are without having earned it. So when we unintentionally make them feel stupid by using references they’re not familiar with, they turn off. Is it just me or does our society seem to have no intellectual curiosity, no interests or hobbies other than texting or watching the Kardashians? They don’t have the will to look further than the screens of their smart phones?
I know I’m generalizing and that there are pockets of intellectual curiosity (like the readers of this blog!), but I feel like we are becoming a minority.
And when you do a book signing or a library event, do you notice the average median age and hair color of the audience? More times than not they’re older and grayer. And where are the young people? That’s scary.
I wish more people would make New Year’s resolutions to improve their minds as well as their bodies, to exercise their brains as well as their muscles. So maybe we should do yoga for the brain as well as the body.
At this point I’d even settle for grownups reading comic books or graphic novels as long as there’s words in them.
All of this scares me, not just as a writer, who might not have an audience in the future. But for society as a whole. We need to have a shared background, a common knowledge, a literate society of people who are engaged. Not everybody can know everything, of course. But there should be some common background that we can all relate to.
Shakespeare picture: Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hw-shakespeare2.jpg#/media/File:Hw-shakespeare2.jpg
Blonde on blonde album cover: "Bob Dylan - Blonde on Blonde" by Source. Licensed under Fair use via Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bob_Dylan_-_Blonde_on_Blonde.jpg#/media/File:Bob_Dylan_-_Blonde_on_Blonde.jpg
Labels:
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culture,
google,
Hemingway,
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Rudy Vallee,
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14 March 2015
A Note of Their Own
A serious post from me (don’t everyone faint….)
Sometimes a simple sentence can make you gulp back tears and
realize how lucky you've been.
I received the following note from the Hamilton Literacy
Council re the donation of sales revenue from the launch of The Artful Goddaughter mob caper:
"As I write this note to thank you...I am reminded of
the dream of some of our clients that they will one day be able to write a note
of their own."
The Hamilton Literacy Council is my charity of choice. I first came across them when I worked in
health care at an urban hospital. We had
an Out of the Cold program that treated
homeless people with health problems, and provided people with blankets and extra
clothing to keep them warm on the streets.
Warm on the streets…I
should mention here that I live south of Toronto in Canada, where we have winter
for four months of the year. Real
winter. This year we have had 38 days
in a row below freezing.
I won’t describe the health problems suffered by people who
live day and night on the streets, under bridges, and in bus shelters. That is a topic for an even more serious
post.
The person I am thinking of now is a woman I met during that
time. She was middle-aged, which at the
time I thought was forty-five. (My guideline
has changed since then.) We gave her
care, for which she was grateful. And
for that care, we required her signature on a piece of paper, in order to
please our sponsors.
She stalled. We
pressed again, in plainer English, in case it was her second language. It wasn’t.
We were baffled. She looked away and then she told us. She couldn’t write her name.
It’s an odd thing.
When I think of someone being illiterate, I think of them not being able
to read books and newspapers. It wasn’t
until this moment that it dawned on me that being illiterate also meant not
being able to write.
At SleuthSayers, many of us make at least part of our income
from writing fiction tales. We produce
reams of manuscript pages, year after year. We may labour over the perfect sentence. We grumble when editors try to change our
words. We joke (at least I do) about putting
a mob hit on said editors, or at the very least, killing them off in our next
book.
Writing is my therapy.
Reading is my escape from the real world. I can’t imagine enduring the calamities of life
without that escape. And I don’t live
under bridges or in bus shelters.
Next year, I will have a book launch again, and I will
donate the sales from that launch to the literacy council. It’s so little to do, when compared to those
who actually volunteer as tutors. I will
continue to write books that are easy to read, and hopefully, entertaining for
those who are acquiring the skill of reading.
Learning to read as an adult takes concentration, determination,
and immense courage. I think, perhaps,
that no one understands the value of the written word more than those who have
struggled to master it.
This is my salute to the men and women who dream of writing
a note of their own.
Melodie Campbell occasionally writes serious stuff, but her
books are mainly comedies. This is
probably a good thing.
The Artful Goddaughter on Amazon
www.melodiecampbell.com
The Artful Goddaughter on Amazon
www.melodiecampbell.com
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