Another Busy Writing Week:

My week’s writing schedule is filling up fast. Today, I’m making phone calls, tying up loose ends, handling business that was dropped during my week in Oklahoma because of my brother’s death, and working on editing the Daily Harvest book. I also have an SCV meeting tonight. The rest of the week relates to my new children’s book, Jim Limber Davis: A Black Orphan in the Confederate White House:

Wed. July 11, Public Library presentation in Winnsboro, LA 1:30 pm
Thurs.  July 12 6:30 pm Library presentation in Ruston

Friday July 13 – Algiers Naval Exchange, New Orleans. (signing) 11:00 am-1:00 pm
Friday afternoon, 3:30, Presentation at the Assumption Parish Library in Napoleonville, LA

Saturday, July 14 – Signing at the Jackson House, New Orleans 1:00 pm
Sunday, Signing at A Tisket, A Tasket in the French Quarter in New Orleans. 1:00 pm They have a cool Web site: http://www.atisketatasketneworleans.com/index.html

Oklahoma Shakespearean Festival 2007

While attending to the needs of my parents and the death-details of my brother this week, I did manage to attend two plays for the annual Oklahoma Shakespearean Festival in Durant, Oklahoma. I saw two plays: Smoke on the Mountain and MacBeth. Both plays were directed by Paul B. Crook who teaches theatre at Louisiana Tech at Ruston. I especially enjoyed MacBeth. I loved the language of the director’s notes on this play. Crook said:

“I’ve always been attracted to this play because it is truly a study of the potential for Evil that all of us have. Thankfully the vast majority of us have no trouble resisting those impulses, but it’s fascinating to watch characters who are unable to fight those base and primal urges. MacBeth understands that his Evil actions are perverse, yet he continues . . . demonstrating a supreme moral disorder and disrupting the lives of those around him and, by extension, an entire country. Watching his descent is riveting and terrifying.”

My signing at Roby’s Hallmark and Flowers shop in Durant did well on Saturday, July 7. Riley H. Risso-Coker, the producing director of the festival, now in its 28th year, really promoted the book at the Shakespeare Festival. She wants to go to schools and perform a staged version of my children’s book, Jim Limber Davis: A Black Orphan in the Confederate White House. In case you don’t know Jim Limber’s story yet, here is a condensed version:

Jim Limber Davis was rescued from an abusive guardian by First Lady Varina Davis when he was only five years old. Jefferson and Varina Davis then became his legal guardians and Jim lived with them in the Confederate White House for several years, enjoying life as a member of their family.

When Union soldiers invaded Richmond, Virginia, and captured Jefferson Davis, they also kidnapped Jim Limber. Soon after his capture, cruel rumors spread that Jim was Jefferson Davis’s slave. After the Civil War, Jefferson Davis tried to locate Jim, but he was never found.

This true story shows how Jim Limber was accepted as one of the Davis’s own children and reveals their love for him. Although Jim’s whereabouts after the war still remain a mystery, the story offers an example of compassion during this complex time in our nation’s history.

A Novel about Art and Artists

I’m still in Oklahoma. At the coffee shop again after a day of chores and a visit to a lawyer concerning legal matters concerning my brother.  Death is not an easy thing to deal with.  To relieve some stress, I mowed my parents three acre yard. I’m going to a dinner theatre tonight, a performance of Smoke on the Mountain. Should have a grand time.
Whitney Otto: The Passion Dream Book

I just finished reading Whitney Otto’s The Passion Dream Book. The author also wrote the New York Times best seller, How to Make an American Quilt. Having enjoyed this read, I’ve also added How to Make an American Quilt to my reading list.

The Passion Dream Book is a complex novel, a novel of ideas centered around art, artists, and the relationships of artist to patron and of artist to fellow artist. Rich in allusions and historical details as well as brief snapshot synopses of many artists (painters, writers, dancers, singers), I found this novel a rich and rewarding read.  Personally, it was also a timely read, for it addresses many of the issues I think about and face as I focus on promoting my own art.  Otto speaks of art as ephemeral, smoky, and shape-shifting. I underscored many, many lines in this novel. Here are some quotations I really liked:

About the nature of artists:
Romy (central character) discovers “early on that a crowd of artists are too outside, too removed from the rules of the general public, and too egocentric to care” ( (94-95).

“[H]ome is where your art is” (125).

“That’s the problem of the colony of artists; they are a small group who seldom go outside their tribe. The life of a secret under these circumstances is brief” (181).

“You need to be connected with other people, and these connections often lead to love. In contradiction, you need to be alone. If you are alone, they you are leaving your loved ones alone. If they are alone too much, they might find someone new who won’t leave them alone so much. If you are always alone, what life do you have to put into your work?” (202).

The “work of an artist is emotional work” (267).

About art:
“America’s near refusal to support art and artists at all” (147). [This would be in contrast to ancient Florence and Venice that honored and supported artists generously].

After a brilliant discussion of how rich and powerful patrons of the arts needed artists to insure immortality, Otto says of the artists: “Artists . . . saw the power and money and need of their patrons as a way of doing their work” (2).

I found a great summary of Otto and her work here: http://www.writersontheedge.org/otto.html

My Brother’s Ashes: An Epitaph

Last Saturday, June 30, 2007, my younger brother died. I’m in Oklahoma with my parents this week, trying to be strong, but failing miserably at it. I’m still rather numb and mute from grief, but I thought I’d post this short epitaph.

Jimmy Dale Pittman

(April 21, 1954-June 30, 2007)

The youngest of our family,

Of the four of us,

You should have been the last

To leave this earth

Instead of the first.

You and I had talked of caring

For our parents, for the end of their lives,

Instead, they and I cared for yours.

You were always twice as strong as me,

Twice as tough, twice as wild and reckless,

Twice as devoted to work and family,

I truly thought you indestructible.

Your passing was

So sad, so sudden, so shocking,

The grief is like the ocean’s tide,

Semidurnal, drowning me in emotions at its high,

Ebbing only enough to allow me to catch

My breath and hold on to my sanity.

I didn’t understand the physics of loss.

Your wife will keep your ashes,

Until that day when her own are mingled with yours,

Search the urn and you’ll find

A part of my heart there too,

Mingled with my brother’s ashes.

Fried Friday

Today was a hot day, but an enjoyable one. I drove to Alexandria and set up book signings at the Books A Million and Waldon Books. The dates:

August 17, Friday: 3:00 p.m. until closing Waldon Books at the Mall in Alexandria.

August 18, Saturday, 10:00 a.m.-12:00. Waldon Books at at the Mall in Alexandria.

August 18, Saturday, 1:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. Books A Million in Alexandria.

December 21-22, All Day. Waldon Books at the Mall in Alexandria. This one will be not only for Jim Limber Davis: A Black Orphan in the Confederate White House, but also for Stories of the Confederate South.

Today was also a sad one. My younger brother, Jimmy, is in Baylor hospital in ICU. Very serious condition. Please say a prayer or light a candle or something for him. I’m beside myself in worry.

America’s Greatest Sin

Here’s a quote I thought I would use for today’s first post. I found it on the jacket of a book I’m reading entitled, War Crimes Against Southern Civilians by Walter Brian Cisco (Pelican Publishing). This is a book that stirs the emotions of sadness and anger that such things could have happened to Southerners then be covered up (or rewritten) by historical revisionists and the ultra-politically correct.

“Of all the enormities committed by Americans in the nineteenth century–including slavery and the Indian wars–the worst was the invasion of the South, which destroyed some twenty billion dollars of private and public property and resulted in the deaths of some two million people, most of whom were civilians–both white and black.”–David Aiken, editor of A City Laid Waste: The Capture Sack, and Destruction of the City of Columbia.

Tonight’s Interview: Passionate Internet Voices Talk Radio

Tonight at 7:30 p.m. I was interviewed for approximately thirty minutes on a live internet radio program. According to the program’s Website, Lillian Cauldwell, the interviewer, “started Passionate Internet Voices Talk Radio, Inc. when she decided to create her own public broadcast radio talk internet station.” This station has a huge audience. Cauldwell is a noted author, speaker, media trainer, mentor,  writing instructor, book reviewer, and CEO/President of PIVTR and Pod-cast Media Broadcast Services. Obviously, she is a sharp and multi-talented lady. I also found her to be an engaging interviewer. In addition to providing me this interview, she has agreed to write a review of Jim Limber Davis: A Black Orphan in the Confederate White House. I studied the Website carefully, and I think I will tune in to their interesting and eclectic programing when I can. Here is the address:

http://www.internetvoicesradio.com/home.htm 

Speaking of sharp ladies, this interview was arranged by my promotion manager at Pelican Publishing, Samantha Perez. Having just graduated from high school, she became a summer intern with my publisher. She has helped me immensely in the promotion of my children’s book. Not only has she done a fantastic job with Pelican in promotion, I found out she is an award-winning writer herself. Specifically, she was the winner of the 2006 Mel Williams Award for Excellence in Writing, the top journalism prize from the Scholastic Press Forum.
A Katrina victim, she relates her family’s and the hurricane’s story in some of the best prose I’ve ever read. To read her account of the Katrina days, and to learn more about this beautiful and talented writer, go to this site:

http://home.comcast.net/~majerus-collins/hurricanejournal.htm

As You Like It: Auburn Street Players Shakespeare Production

Tonight, I went to Auburn Presbyterian Church here in Monroe, Louisiana, for their annual Shakespeare production. The selected play was Shakespeare’s As You Like It and was directed by Amy Medlin. After watching the play and talking to her, I’d have to say that this sharp girl has immense talent and certainly great things await her. She set the play in the 1960’s and made music a major part of her interpretation and presentation.
The song selections worked well, as did the costumes. A true dramatic spectacle. The young actors really got into the mindset, actions, dances, and speech of hippies in the 60’s. The set was minimalistic, but the church’s stage provided ample room for movement and the actors used the space well. I’m anxious to see the play again next weekend if possible when it’s performed outside at the Kiroli Park amphitheater in West Monroe. This was an enjoyable and energetic presentation of a play that’s easy for a troupe to flounder in. As I watched and listened, I was reminded again of the fact that Shakespeare truly is our greatest writer. So many of the lines were powerful and spoke to the heart. For some reason, these lines from V.ii stuck in my mind tonight:

“for your brother and my sister no sooner
met but they looked, no sooner looked but they
loved, no sooner loved but they sighed, no sooner
sighed but they asked one another the reason, no
sooner knew the reason but they sought the remedy;
and in these degrees have they made a pair of stairs
to marriage which they will climb incontinent, or
else be incontinent before marriage: they are in
the very wrath of love and they will together; clubs
cannot part them.”
I highly recommend this play and this church as well. You can learn more about Auburn Avenue Presbyterian Church here at their Website: http://www.auburnavenue.org/

Summer Plans

The past two days I’ve been at work editing and researching, helping my friend, Teresa Gordon, and the owner of Daily Harvest Bakery and Deli with her cookbook. I’ve also made good progress on my next children’s book about the mill workers of Roswell and New Manchester, Georgia. Such a sad story, another of those forgotten tales that gives one a true perspective as to what the War Between the States was about.

Here is my tentative calendar for the promotion of Jim Limber Davis: A Black Orphan in the Confederate White House.

July 12-15, New Orleans signings.

July 21, Signing at the Books A Million in Sherman, Texas

July 24-28, I’ll be in Mobile, Alabama for the National Convention of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. That town is filling up fast and finding a hotel was a problem. I’ll be in the Radisson Semmes Hotel, only four blocks away from where my vendor’s booth and the convention will be. I’ll have more to say of this event in future posts.

August 2, a signing at One Penny Time, a children’s bookstore in Monroe, Louisiana.

August 4, a signing at the Books A Million in Monroe

August 6, a signing at the West Monroe Public Library.

There are other events, conferences and signings beyond these, but this will give you an idea as to where I’ll be the next few weeks.

Future Children’s Books

Pelican Publishing has asked me to write a children’s book about the mill workers of Roswell, GA. I don’t have a working title yet, but I’m nearly finished with the story. I’m also working hard on two other children’s books as well: Malcolm McCandlish, the Boy Who Brought the Thistle to America, and a Scottish ABC book.  Considering the Celtic Renaissance that’s taking place in America, those books should do very well.
Today was spent working with Teresa Gordon of Daily Harvest, a deli and bakery here in Monroe. I’m editing and formatting a cookbook for her. I’ve learned so much from her about healthy eating.  Her methods reminded me of how the ancient Egyptians made their bread. You can find more information about her and her bakery here: http://dailyharvestbakery.com/home.html.  I’m getting more editing and writing work every week. Looks like it will be a good year for me. God knows I need it.

I also decided to post a song, “The Waltz of St. Cecelia” by a Cajun band I like.  Their Website is here: http://www.angelusband.com/ As usual when I post a song’s lyrics, there are some memories attached.
The Waltz of St. Cecilia

by Katie, Paige, and Stephen Rees

He said, “I don’t know how,
Annie, I don’t know when,
God willing, my love,
I will hold you again.”

He sang as they danced
“Annie, I may be long.
Will you be waiting for me?”

“Then the children will sing,
The white dove will bring
A sweet olive flower
For your hair,

And your name on my lips
Will be my morning prayer,
Until again we dance the Waltz of St. Cecilia.”

Je connais pas comment
Et je connais pas equand
Mais s’il Bon Diue veut
Je vat te tien collais encore

Espérez sur moi: Et moi je te promis
Qu’on va danzer ensemble
Pour la balance de notre vie

Les enfants vont chanter
Une tourte blanche va t’amener
O’lvier de chine pour tes cheveux

Ton nom sur mes l’evres
Va d’étre ma priere du matin
Jusqu’a on danse, la valse de Ste. Cecilia.