If you are interested in Canadian Literature

and want to know who the important writers and books were from the 1850s to 2000, check out my vlog/ other blog, Googling canlitbooks.ca
I have provided myriad rare images from my large CanLit collection related to the topic.

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Teaching Sinclair Ross’s “The Painted Door”

There is one space-break between paragraphs late in the story between the episode when John’s wife is hovering on the edge of deciding to sleep with the young neighbor Steven and the next one when she wakes up the next morning.

I said “So after John’s wife has spent the night with Steven…”, a grade 12 girl student spoke up protesting, asking where that happened. I replied it was implied, understood, and strongly suggested by/with the space-break in the 1940s story. Boy, was she let down!

(This is the only rare online copy of this book that I know of which was signed by Ross for Harborfront Festival organizer-book collector Greg Gatenby. Ross’s collection of stories are the best ones about the Canadian Depression.) 

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Easy Viewing Decision Tonight:

Academy Awards or Westminster Dog Show. Will follow the dogs with part 4 (the last) of Ken Burns’ excellent DVD documentary of the The Dust Bowl. Absolutely riveting and raises the bar on understanding, empathy, and sympathy for what those poor folks horrifically and absurdly went through. Should be must-viewing for every grade 10er in high school Social Studies.

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Pillcase Escapees

Ever notice how, when you open a pillcase, a pill tries to escape as you go into it?

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Memorable Moment: Vancouver

Back in the 1980s at English Language Arts Council while staying at the Hotel Vancouver. We took a mini-yacht dinner cruise from Granville Island out past Lions’ Gate Bridge around Stanley Park, mooring in darkness in the inlet by the boathouse with a view of the lit-up skyscrapers and condo-apartment buildings. We had eaten a nice steak dinner and wandered alone outside on the edges of the boat taking it all in, with the only noise muffled from the inside diners.

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“No Quit in Me”: A Gutsy Tale of Tongue Cancer Survival

(Previously posted on March 11, 2019 by rdavies)

 

Click on this link http://www.noquitinme.ca/downloads/ to see a brochure that highlights compelling testimonials from a wide range of patients and professionals.

John Kuby is a 68 year-old healthy sports guy who unexpectedly ran into a tongue cancer diagnosis while checking out his nasal problems. His book about adapting to and surviving this cancer is a tell-all, gutsy synthesis of 80+ blog posts which track his amazing 2-year process. Along the way, the reader gains innumerable insights into what John describes as a story “about recovery, strength, endurance, and hope.” The book is also an easy read and has its fair share of humor and lightness.

John, himself, best summarizes his diverse physical issues at one point in this way: “weight loss, strength loss, exhaustion, pain, swallowing problems, loss of appetite, tastebud changes, dry mouth, exhaustion, pain, mucus management issues, mouth sores, foul tastes, nausea, vomiting, burning sensations, constipation, inability to talk, facial changes, turkey neck, sleep deprivation, fear, memory loss, brain fog, and concentration problems.” All of these would overwhelm many of us, but John determinedly toughs them all out.

Simply regaining the ability to eat and drink becomes a major chore and feat as even sweets and favorite foods become unpalatable and disagreeable. Fatigue is another obstacle with John feeling wasted for long, recurring periods of time. Fortunately, he remains an avid exerciser who stays active via walking, yoga, resistance training, kayaking, mountain biking, snowboarding, and even surfing which he also takes up.

There are many other aspects to his treatment including dealing with ongoing dental /mouth problems such as thrush and his failure, at first, to follow his dentist’s advice. He comes to realize he has ignored his teeth and mouth care, eventually recovering his recommended dental regimen. There is a similar setback when he tries to come off morphine cold turkey, and he has to learn to reduce the drug more gradually to avoid its serious ill effects. John’s psychological adjustments are also as important as the physical challenges and he discusses the many ups and downs he goes through mood-wise at various stages.

The book is laid out in chronological order and follows the process structure of the original blog posts. So it starts with John’s fateful doctor appointment, followed by the choice of treatment that he has to select from a few possibilities. Then he starts his blog, meets with his family, sells his business, and retires to meet the distracting challenges head-on. Gradually, John again starts eating, drinking, talking, swimming, and resuming a physically active life, is pronounced cancer-free, goes snowboarding ,and learns to surf. The book ends with his recovery and there is a nice overview chart summarizing the key events of his 2-year odyssey.

His wife Linda is very instrumental in assisting John’s recovery. She provides periodic Caregiver Notes at the ends of sections to provide another helpful viewpoint on what John and she went through as a couple and on how her roles changed, so that the reader gains many insights into how extremely difficult it is to look after a cancer patient. (Must reading for anyone with cancer and their ‘buddies’.) In particular, the reader gets to see the inevitable communication problems especially when John can’t talk much. Linda also goes into her many adjustments to maintain their relationship and the couple also both touch on what happens to sex for cancer couples.

There are several memorable scenes described vividly in detail such as the episode when the couple go kayaking on the North Saskatchewan River in their then-home city of Edmonton. There are also many others who help with John’s treatment and recovery including his family and friends, Gary Harvey (who had tongue cancer before John), a herbalist, a relationship coach, a speech therapist, and many doctors.
Despite its graphicness and viceralness, John’s book is truly positive and heartening in tone. Although it may seem like a harsh read on the surface, John’s determination makes you want to continue reading always. The reader identifies easily with John’s fearlessness and begins to pull for him early on in the narrative.

Not to be forgotten too, are the numerous tips and advice to other cancer patients and their caregivers; comparable experiences by other contacts are mentioned, too.
In the end, John leaves you buoyed with final thoughts about his process and what he learned. John is now in his 70s and has, happily-endingly, retired to idyllic Vancouver Island. If you are more curious about John’s process and character, I highly recommend his original blog (noquitinme.ca) with its candid photos taken by his son recording his physical changes and even later movies of him snowboarding and surfing during his recovery period.

–Richard Davies (Edmonton)

(By way of disclosure/context, John is an acquaintance from our shared 1964-66 Silver Height Collegiate, Winnipeg days. He also lived close to me on Wallasey Street there.)

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Two Interesting Spoken Word Audio CDs

Aldous Huxley’s 1932 Brave New World narrated by Huxley with music by Bernard Herrmann of Citizen Kane and Psycho fame, CBS radio, 1956.

Oscar Wilde The Picture of Dorian Gray read by Hurd Hatfield who played Gray in the celebrated film classic. Forum, 2102. Originally on Caedmon Records. 2 CDs with Basil Rathbone reading “The Happy Prince”, “The Selfish Giant” and “The Nightingale and the Rose” on the second CD.

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Some Positive Eco Folks

Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan woman leading an effort to plant 30 million trees in Africa.
Jimmy Donaldson, launched a campaign to plant 20 million trees.
Ethiopia, where 23 million people planted 350 million trees in a day.

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“The Devil’s Disciple” (1959 Film on DVD)

With the passing of screen legend Kirk Douglas, it is time to go back and dust off his many classics including Spartacus, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, The Vikings, Lust for Life, Paths of Glory, and so many more hits from the golden age of film. Hence, last evening I went back and watched an olde favorite I once saw with my Dad on an early 1960ish CBC Winnipeg tv late movies show, a fun adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s The Devil’s Disciple, co-produced by co-star-friend of Douglas, the late Burt Lancaster, with whom Douglas co-starred several times.

It is set in the American Revolution and representing the foppish British is Laurence Olivier while Lancaster plays a moral serious-minded minister, and Douglas a scene-stealing jocular rebel-scallywag, a role the latter always played well in his various other roles, too. It is pure pleasure to see these three famed actors interact and play off each other; this at a time when memorable screen acting was still commonplace before the CGI era. Director Guy Hamilton, of James Bond fame, also does a nice job on pacing and controlling the ironic plot and scenes.

The humor is light, mainly verbal, and ironic all the way through, true to Shaw’s original play. The result is a different, but successful adaptation with some unique, naive animated transitions to punctuate changing scenes. Originally back when I was 11 or so, I was impressed by Douglas’s rogueish performance and the many years since then have not diminished the pleasures of watching him being ‘bad’. The Devil’s Disciple remains a nice, clean-fun, ironic, black-and-white entertainment.

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My Bottom-Line and the Continuing Upward and Onward

I don’t believe in systems. Became disillusioned within and by them by 40. At which point, I reaffirmed my individuality and realized Hamlet’s “To thine own self be true” (the name of my blog) as my credo.

Since then nothing has shaken that view and my total disillusionment with and retreat from politics (world-wide, North Americanly, provincially, and locally) have followed culminating today.

I still most believe in individuals whether they be creative, talented, or heroic as well as Real People (who are ordinary, use common sense, are decent, hard-working, who are not snobs, full-of-themselves, who are not fakes and phonies).

I especially believe in the Great Men and Women of history who have truly moved Western Civilization of olde forward: the Michelangelos, the Beethovens, Shakespereares, Edisons, Bantings, Carsons, King, Jrs. of the planet. These are the people writ large who have most mattered, who have illustrated our human best, maximizing our great potential over and over again.

The Trumps, Hitlers, and Putins will ultimately end up in the meaningless black holes they have generated that have, tragically, had too much influence on way too many everywhere.

The course I set in 1990 and from retirement on with my study of every great person I have been interested in (c.f. other featured blog entries about many of these)  continues far, far away from the frenzy of the madding crowd and the large black hole that has yawned wide open south of the border.

In this personal choice, there is wisdom, survival, and a continuing form of personal success and fulfilment I have, only-childly, long sought after all my 70 years. The path is only clearer, crystal clear, loftier, and more spiritually uplifting than ever before.

Yup, certain individuals over systems. Systems, government leaders, and e-technology will never love you.

Cheers.

(cover of Upward and Onward, the new forthcoming book of poems)

(And after that)

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