Today was my 4th meeting as an official member of the Woodland
Shakespeare Book Club. It has not been a stellar membership thusfar. I missed
the first meeting because I was doing something with my mother. The rules are that
you must attend every meeting unless you contact the president and let her know you won't
be coming. That means that generally at least 40 and perhaps more women will be at
every meeting. (Today people could bring guests so nearly 80 people were there)
The second meeting was a discussion of the book "Ramona,"
which I did a marathon reading on, finishing at about 6 a.m. the morning of the meeting.
But I enjoyed it and was disappointed that there wasn't more actual group discussion
of the book.
Last month we read Jack London's "Valley of the Moon,"
which I simply could not get into. By the time of the meeting I had read
only about 1/4 of it, but that was OK because there was no discussion of the book by the
membership in general, just by the four women who were doing a presentation about the
book.
The club really needs Ned's friend Greg, and I'm surprised his good
friend, who got me into the club, hasn't talked to him. The room where we meet is so
big, and the women who "present" each month are not trained actors, so they must
use a microphone, but the sound system is so crappy it's often impossible to hear them
over the distortion of the mics (combined with their unfamiliarity with how to use a mic).
But I strain and I do hear some of what is being said and it is usually quite
interesting.
The book for this month was "The Geography of Home," which
I gather is an anthology of poems about California. I ordered it at the start of
December and what with all the busy-ness of the month of December, it was only last week
when I realized it had never come. I contacted Amazon, which contacted the book
store that was going to sell it to me, and I got the order canceled and my money refunded.
So I was going to the meeting without having even seen the book, much less
read any of it.
Before the actual program started, we were given homework to
do...actually work to do while there. We were supposed to write two poems, following
the directions given. For the first one, you were to write down the name of a place
where you live or have lived.
- On the second line, write two adjectives which describe the place
- On the third line, write three verbs which signify some sort of action in that place
- On the fourth line, create a phrase that gives more identity to the place.
- On the fifth line, either rewrite the name in the first line or create another descriptive sentence.
The example given was:
First Avenue, Crockett
Changed, decayed
hilly, small, empty
Gone are the families and merchants I knew
The generations of my Irish family lived there for over 140 years
If you check the third line, you'll see that "hilly, small,
empty" are NOT verbs, and the English teacher who wrote the assignment apologized for
writing adverbs instead of verbs and told us to use verbs. But...uh...I
think "hilly, small, and empty" are adjectives, not adverbs!
I did my best, while others around me stared off into space making no
attempt to write anything. I guess we were going to share at the end of the meeting.
The presentation was again by four women, each of whom chose 3 poems
to read and to tell a little about the author. They gave the page number of each
poem so you could follow along but, of course, I didn't have the book so could not. The
sound system was particularly bad today and one woman chose to read a poem by a Japanese
author and could not pronounce any of the Japanese words included in either the bio or the
poem.
We broke for "tea" after the first three presentations.
There were egg salad sandwiches and lots and lots of cucumber sandwiches, as well
as a nice selection of desserts.
I had decided I was going to leave early because, in all honesty, I
couldn't take another minute of inaudible poetry and mentioned as much to my friend,
sitting next to me. She said she also had to leave early and suggested we leave
right then, and so we did, sneaking out through the kitchen. So I don't know how the
meeting ended. But I have ordered next month's book, "Day of the Locust"
and fully intend toread it! before the first Saturday in February, so I can feel
like I'm participating. But I did feel like a kid sneaking out of class when I left
the hall.
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