Book Tidbits 2: Of Plath's Legacy, why reading won't change your life, and others
Today, when I should be writing things that will generate me some income, I'm here surfing again for book news, just because I like it.
- Sylvia Plath's son, Nicholas Hughes, also commits suicide. It was only now that I learned the full story of the deaths in Ted Hughes' family. Pretty tragic.
- Why aren't I a bestselling author? 'Cause if I were, I could make deals like Audrey Niffenegger's for her second book.
- Funny, funny rant on silly blurbs and why books won't change your life.
- Finally, a hilarious cartoon on how Harry Potter, the book, was really born:
Comments
"The novel concerns a pair of mirror-image twins, Julia and Valentina Poole. The twins are young, sheltered American girls who inherit a flat on the edge of Highgate Cemetery in London, bequeathed to them by their recently deceased aunt. Julia and Valentina are inseparable, and function almost as one being, although in temperament they are opposites. As the story begins, they arrive in London to live in their aunt's apartment.
Their presence disrupts the lives of their upstairs and downstairs neighbors. Martin Wells is a translator who never leaves his apartment and struggles with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Robert Fanshaw works as a guide in Highgate Cemetery and is devoted to all things associated with death. Julia takes it upon herself to "cure" Martin; Robert falls in love with Valentina and begins to pry her away from her twin. Valentina starts to crave autonomy. Julia becomes more demanding and possessive. Things get out of control, as you might imagine."