Saturday, November 12, 2016

Interview with Ruth Latta about new YA novel

R.K.L. Interviews Ruth Latta

Q. Your latest young adult novel is Grace and the Secret Vault. What is it about?

A: Grace and the Secret Vault is about a thirteen year old girl, Grace, who experiences a crisis in her family life as a result of an event which became a major landmark in Canadian History. The novel takes place in 1919, a time of social unrest following the dislocation and hardships of the First World War.  Grace's father is involved in the labour movement and in the historic Winnipeg General Strike of 1919.  Grace comes to terms with his activism and its effect on her family, and finds a way to help her family during this tense time.




Q: What inspired you to write Grace and the Secret Vault?

A: Over twenty years ago a friend and I researched and wrote a biography of a woman in politics whom we both admired. Her name was Grace Woodsworth MacInnis. When she was a Member of Parliament from 1965 to 1974, another turbulent time in Canadian history, she was a strong spokesperson on matters of particular interest to women, and we were impressed by that.

In researching Grace's life for the biography, my co-author and I read about her girlhood and the impact of the Winnipeg General Strike on her family and on her political awareness.

My friend died a couple of years ago, and at that time, when thinking about the fun we'd had doing our research, I realized that the story of the General Strike and its importance to Grace would make a good novel for young readers, and grown-ups too.



Q: So the earlier book was a biography but Grace and the Secret Vault is a work of fiction?

A: Yes, Grace and the Secret Vault is a novel. It is based on real events, and some of the characters are real people, such as Grace's father, J.S. Woodsworth. But I have created several characters who are fictional, I've used scenes and dialogue, I've shifted some of the family events around in time a little bit, so the book is fiction - historical fiction.



Q: How do you think Grace and the Secret Vault will affect readers?

A: I think readers will go hand in hand with Grace as she learns from the dramatic, frightening events of this period in Canadian history and comes to understand her parents better.

It's a story about the process of growing up and taking on some grown-up responsibilities and challenges. Young adult readers can relate to that.

Also, young readers may learn a little about our history from this novel, and be inspired by the characters who have the courage of their convictions.

Q: What made you feel that you could write this novel?

A: I've always loved reading and history has always been a major interest of mine. Back when my name was Ruth Olson I completed a Master's in History at Queen's University, and this background has been an asset to me in researching and writing this book, and earlier ones.  Long ago I taught elementary school, and more recently I've been reviewing children's and young adults' books for Canadian Materials. I've read a great many excellent historical novels for young people and couldn't resist the temptation to write one.


Q: What is your favourite part of the book?

A: I like the part where Grace's father says, "It must have been hard on you. You must have been scared" and Grace, who has been very worried, says, "Maybe a little bit."



Q: What is your next book?

A: It's another novel, again about Grace. It begins in 1928 when she's 23, studying in Paris, and, like most people in their early twenties, trying to find true love and a life's work.  After some trial and error, she finds her "calling" and also finds "The One." So I've been in a "state of grace" with my writing for a couple of years now, and look forward to continuing in it for a while.

Grace and the Secret Vault

Here is the cover image of my new book for teens,
Grace and the  Secret Vault.

At the moment I'm correcting the proof. I should have books
in a month or so.

Friday, October 14, 2016

My reviews of two new books in Compulsive Reader

My review of This is Not my Life, by Diane Schoemperlen, has been published by Compulsive Reader:

My review of The Reason for Time by Mary Burns is now up too:


Tuesday, August 30, 2016

My poem "About Eric"

I had a poem published in an anthology, Memory and Loss. Unfortunately for me, the editor left out the last four lines.  Here is the poem as I wrote and submitted it:

ABOUT ERIC
by Ruth Latta

We left him in the common room
clapping to the rhythm of a country band.

She'd warned us not to say goodbye.

"It's best if we just slip away.
If he knows I'm leaving he gets upset."

On the hour-long return to her place
I pictured her driving alone
through sleet and snow
three times a week.

"You're a wonderful wife to him," I blurted.

"It's my job," she said calmly.
"The staff know a lot about Alzheimers
but I'm the one who knows the most
about Eric."

***

Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Santa Taking out the Trash

Santa Taking Out the Trash

Photo by Roger Latta.  Observed in our neighbourhood Monday August 15, 2016

Monday, August 15, 2016

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

The Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun exhibition

Yesterday Roger and I and a friend saw the Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada. Vigee Le Brun was born in France in 1755 and became the most important woman painter of the late 1700s. Self-taught, she became the portraitist of Queen Marie Antoinette. She left France during the Revolution of 1789 and went to Italy, then to Russia, where she painted portraits of the rich and famous. She eventually returned to France, where she died in 1842.

Although I am certainly not an art historian, I've learned a little over the years about great painters of the past, and in none of the courses I've taken was Vigee Le Brun ever mentioned. It's a pity how women's achievements have been erased from official history until recently.  The ninety paintings are beautiful and each makes you feel that you are glimpsing the unique personality of the sitter.  And, as the description on the National Gallery website says, "This must-see exhibition demonstrates both Vigee Le Brun's immense talent and her extraordinary ability to carve out a significant career in a man's world."

We also enjoyed a dress-up aspect of the exhibition. In a gallery decorated like Marie Antoinette's bedroom, a guide talked about the fashions of the period, and asked for a volunteer to put on the layers of clothing that constituted proper attire in which to appear at the royal court.  The young woman who volunteered was completely transformed - except for her sneakers, which showed below her skirts.

For more information visit the National Gallery of Canada website.  The exhibition is on until September 11th. I would like to go again.

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Obsessed, possessed

I'm obsessed, or possessed, maybe both.  I've extricated my central character from a love affair that shook her self-esteem. Being in a foreign country freed her to fall in love, away from the friendly observation of family, but it also meant that she was far from the anchors that affirmed her sense of self.  After a "dark night of the soul" that lasted for a year and a half, she found a job to throw herself into, one which suited her talents. There, to her surprise, she found the love of her life.

Anyone caught up in a compelling writing project knows how addictive it can be.  Up at 6:30 most mornings, I'm soon making corrections on my very rough draft or retyping new and improved chapters.

My central character is based on a real person, now deceased,  who made her journals and letters available in archives, so, presumably, wanted someone to make use of them in a biography, or even a novel.  My challenge is to get away from the "telling" (the narrative form) of letters and diaries, and to "show" her (dramatize her) in scenes.  The time frame is 1928-1932 so I must use the social mores and vocabulary of that era and at the same time make the story  understandable to readers in 2016.  The standard set by Paula MacLean in The Paris Wife and Laura Moriarity, with The Chaperone,  is a high one and I have read these and other novels based on real people to see the authors' approaches.

Why am I writing this novel, when it is so demanding ,and when I don't have a publisher for it?  My reasons will make perfect sense to many Canadian Stories writers.  First, I think the real woman behind my protagonist would want me to.  Secondly, she learned lessons from her experiences and drew on them later in life to help others, and I want to show that. Also, the real-life events lend themselves to a novel with a certain shape, and, having recognized that, I feel an urge to sculpt it in that form. As well, I want to get the novel written as best I can while I still have the wits and the eyesight to do so.

This morning I intended to have a lazy breakfast and watch the news. But when my husband got up around 7:30 he found me scribbling away on a revision to pages 118 and 119.  He didn't mind. He understands, and  approves of these endless revisions of the manuscript, because he knows that soon I 'm going to ask him to read it.





Thursday, June 2, 2016

Reviewing books? Who needs it?


Recently I wrote a very positive review of a first novel for an online magazine. It contained some "spoilers." Actually, I don't believe that "spoilers" necessarily spoil a book for readers. Many reviewers reveal some of the plot as part of their analysis of the book.

 Generally  editors accept the necessity of some spoilers in a serious, thoughtful review. Years ago I read a review of Alice Munro's Lives of Girls and Women, in which the reviewer mentioned that the two young men with whom the central character gets involved were two sides of the same coin. At the beginning of the novel there is no indication that the central character, Dell, will ever have a boyfriend, let alone two! Rather than spoiling the story for me, the reviewer's comments stirred my curiosity, kept me reading and helped me to understand the theme better.

The author whose book I recently reviewed sent me several emails. Normally an author wouldn't do that. The first was innocuous enough; she asked me to let her know when her book arrived. I did. Then a few weeks later she emailed me again to ask how the review was coming along. I reported back that I had sent it to the editor who hadn't posted it yet.  

Then, soon after it was posted, the editor emailed me saying that the author felt the review contained too many spoilers and had edited it to remove them. The editor was willing to post the edited version if I approved.

I too have been a new author, and I too have sought reviews in the hope of selling books.I have never complained about a review to an editor, though, not even  when I was mystified as to what book the reviewer had actually read, because it sure didn't sound like mine.

 I consider it unprofessional of a writer to demand that a review be changed.  In the case of one sloppy review that missed the point of my novel, I didn't demand a do-over and I certainly didn't revise the review to suit myself. Other reviews were about a book that was recognizably mine,  and I used the most positive ones to publicize my novel.  

What the author did, essentially, was use my review as a framework for creating a review that she liked. I have often wanted to self-review my books, but never thought I could get away with it. Clearly I lack imagination and initiative. 

On one previous occasion, I was asked to change a review. In that instance, the author was an acquaintance of the editor and was a hypersensitive member of a minority group, so I made the changes she wanted, but I will never again read or review anything she has written. And in this second instance, I also said O.K., because I'd already spent enough time thinking about that ****** book. 

The moral:  The squeaky wheel gets the grease. Or, whining brings results.

Reviewing books? Who needs it?

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Lawn libraries

 When we were out walking in our Ottawa neighbourhood some weeks ago we noticed a little building on a pole on a suburban lawn near the street. It was too small for a bird house, and certainly not a mail box, since we are all using community boxes now. Up close we saw that the structure had a little door, which, when we opened it, revealed about fifteen books,, including some recent novels,  Home-lettered on the door was "Lexington Library."

Turned out that it was a lawn library. Apparently they are sprouting all over.  The homeowner heard about another one in Ottawa, thought it was a good idea, built the little structure, and started it off with some books that he was thinking of putting in the recycling bin. 

The idea is that neighbours and passers-by can leave books and take books at will.  During the month or so that the Lexington Library has been up and running, there has been a complete turnover in the contents.  It encourages neighbourliness, decluttering, recycling, and reading, and saves people the trouble of carting unwanted books to the public library. it's also nice to get something for free. The public library accepts book donations but resells them.  My earlier donations to the LL - Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and a book by John Berends, have been snapped up. Today  Roger contributed a book by Christopher Hedges, and I came away with a heavily annotated book by Bart Ehrman.

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Grove's young adult novel

My review of The Adventure of Leonard Broadus, by Frederick Philip Grove, published by Rock's |Mills Press, Oakville, ON, appears in Canadian Materials magazine, Volume XXII, No. 31, April 15, 2016  See https://www.umanitoba.ca/vol22/no31,theadventureofleonardbroadus.html

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

recent publications

My review of Mary Razzell's Taking  a Chance on Love was published in the online magazine Canadian Materials, Volume XXII, No. 3, April 8, 2016

My poem "Evasion" is in Verse Afire, the tri-annual publication of The Ontario Poetry Society,  Vol. 2, May-Sept. issue, ISSN 1715-0280  Contact the Ontario Poetry Society at #10, 65 Spring Garden Ave., Toronto M2N 6H9 or visit its web page for information about poetry contests.

Thursday, March 31, 2016

review in Canadian Materials

My review of the young adult novel, Before the New Moon Rises, appears in Canadian Materials

 CM . . . . Volume XXII Number 28 . . . . March 25, 2016

Friday, March 25, 2016

review: What's Yours is Mine

My review of Tom Slee's book, What's Yours is Mine, has just been published in Compulsive Reader. The link is below:
http://www.compulsivereader.com/2016/03/25/a-review-of-whats-yours-is-mine-by-tom-slee/

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Winnipeg after the General Strike, a new book

 http://www.compulsivereader.com/2016/03/11/a-review-of-were-going-to-run-this-city-by-stefan-epp-koop/

Above is the link to my review in Compulsive Reader of Stefan Epp-Koop's book, "We're Going to Run This City, about municipal politics in Winnipeg in the decades following the General Strike of 1919.

Saturday, March 5, 2016

review of Apostate Englishman, a book about Grey Owl.

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My review of a new book about Grey Owl, titled Apostate Englishman, has been published by Compulsive Reader.:
http://www.compulsivereader.com/2016/03/05/a-review-of-apostate-englishman-by-albert-braz/
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Sunday, February 21, 2016

Here are the links to two reviews of mine that were published a few days ago in the online magazine, Compulsive Reader.







Friday, February 12, 2016

A quotable quote

"Other people's judgments are the mosquitoes of being human."

Carolyn Hax

Sunday, January 10, 2016