Wednesday, 28 December 2022

Nan All Over


Eu sobre eu mesma

Carrossel na Arca Literária

Vale das Luas na Arca Literária

Eu na Amazon

Quer Apostar? na Amazon

Carrossel na Amazon

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Entrevista para a Editora Scortecci




Abaixo, entrevista para o Readers Around the World: 

RFDRREADERS

READERS AROUND THE WORLD

Questions:-

 

Please introduce yourself! Everyone loves a glimpse into the lives of other people, especially from foreign lands, so please tell us a little bit about your life and where you are from.

            - My love relationship with books led me to risk telling my own stories and, as I answer Readers Around the World questions, have already published an awarded short story and six books, romances with families that transit between the big city and the countryside, many breeding horses, as I do since 1990. I graduated in Architecture and Journalism, and have a post-grad in Marketing. I am Brazilian, carioca and botafoguense, meaning born in Brazil, specifically at the city of Rio de Janeiro and that my favourite football club is Botafogo. For those in the know, being born under these three epigraphs means you usually are either in total bliss or in true inferno. A big, rich and beautiful country with so many problems; the city which nickname is “Marvelous City”, surrounded by violence; and a soccer team that goes from heaven to hell so often, signifies that my seat belt is firmly fastened all the time and let the turbulence come! However, I have been blessed and had the privilege to spend holydays and vacations at my grandparents’ house in the countryside, climbing trees, eating fruit at their feet, swimming in the local stream, riding horses. Therefore, this is a bit of who I am: from asphalt to dirt, from blue to green, always trying to get the best of it all.

 

What are you currently reading?

- Just closed Aspergirls by Rudy Simone, very revealing. 10 Pound Penalty by Dick Francis awaits by the bed.

 

What genre of books do you enjoy?

-Definitely fiction books are my favourites, but this does not impede my reading non-fiction.

 

Name a few of your favourite authors and favourite books and why they are special to you.

- Authors: Agatha Christie, Dick Francis, Ken Follett and Shakespeare. Ligia Fagundes Telles and Fernando Sabino. Daniel Silva, Sue Grafton. Arturo Perez-Reverte. Marian Keyes. Books: Machiavelli’s The Prince – it is so cunning, so perceptive! Small Town Girl by LaVyrle Spencer – “you can take the girl from the small town, but you cannot take the small town from her”. Noites Tropicais (Tropical Nights) by Nelson Motta, an extensive look at a special period of time when music in Brazil was in ebullience.

Favourite biography/autobiography?

- Agatha Christie’s autobio is the sweetest.

 

What is one of the saddest books you’ve ever read?

- Tim Pears’s In a Land of Plenty. One questions if there can be true happiness in life.

Name a book that made you laugh out loud.

- Donald E. Westlakes’s Why Me? He is unlucky, he is clumsy and he is a robber.

What is one of the most shocking books you’ve read and why?

- Diego Marani’s The New Finnish Grammar. A man loses his language memory. I had many nightmares with the perspective. Unfathomable.

What is your go-to comfort book? A book you could read over again on a rainy afternoon?

- Susan Isaac’s Magic Hour. It has the perfect combination of mystery, treachery, lost lives, and romantic love.

Do you have happy memories of reading as a child and did you have any favourite children’s book authors?

- Only happy memories! The Brazilian Monteiro Lobato was the best for me, with the world he created in a farm, with a granny, two grandchildren, a cook with the hands of a fairy, a doll that spoke, a maize corn that was a Viscount… Unforgettable characters, adventures in the moon, in Ancient Greece, and we learned History, Geography, and Mathematics as we read.

 

What was the last book that kept you up past your bedtime?

- The Perfect Horse by Elizabeth Letts. A true story about courageous men who saved precious horses from danger during the Second World War.

In what language are books typically published in your country?

- In Brazil we speak Portuguese. It is the only country in South America which was not under the Spanish influence.

Do you have easy access to most types of books in your country?

- Thankfully, our country does not censure books.

Who is considered one of the most respected, recognized authors, poets or playwrights in your country? (Living or deceased.).

- There are many and I will cite the ones from the middle of last century, maybe we could call them “moderns”: the poet Carlos Drummond de Andrade (“I have only two hands and the sentiment of the world”); Vinícius de Moraes, poet and musician (“There is too much danger in this life for the ones with passion”); Jorge Amado, with his regional stories – maybe you have heard about one of his work, now famous around the world, Gabriela Cravo e Canela (Gabriela Clove and Cinnamon); the writer Clarice Lispector (“She believed in angels, and because she believed, they existed”).

Is there a particularly popular author or genre of books in your country?

- Paulo Coelho.

What book is considered a classic in your country?

- Grande Sertão: Veredas by Guimarães Rosa. The author describes life in a very harsh environment of Brazil. It is poor, it is hard, it is dusty, it is dry. The characters are exceptional and the rich language is a mix of the local dialect plus the one invented by Rosa.

Are children encouraged to read for pleasure and what are some of the most popular children’s books today?

– Recently we have experienced a boom in children’s literature, which is great. St. Exupery, Lewis Carroll, the Brazilian Ziraldo, are classics; Harry Potter and the Brazilian Thalita Rebouças for pre-teens and teens. And there are several new writers, like Ronize Aline with her O Dono da Lua (Owner of the Moon).

Do you have a local library and/or bookshop that people in your community enjoy visiting? What are their names?

- Unfortunately, libraries and bookshops are disappearing from the cities in Brazil. Near home in Rio de Janeiro, Argumento, Travessa and Timbre are bravely resisting. In the village where I breed horses there is one which sells and lends books, besides holding cultural events: Prosa & Verso Livraria.

Please tell us about any interesting traditions or customs in your country, community or family, involving books and reading.

– I do not know why, but every one of my family reads – and likes! - the books I wrote 😉

Where do you typically buy your books?

- Bookshops and Amazon for my Kindle.

What author would you like to have dinner with?

- With Agatha Christie at a table set for 13. 😊

Do you have a question for an author about one of their books? Who and what is it?

- Anne Holt’s 1222. The end was very clear until the moment, at the last page, she mentions a person and, for me, it made no sense: who is this character? What does it have to do with the story? Where did it come from? What did I miss? It is funny, because, I was so astonished by it that I asked my husband to read, then my aunt, who engaged a friend of hers and none could not explain it for me. We were all dumbfounded, in the dark!

What fictional character would you like to be friends with and which fictional world would you like to spend a week living in?

-Jane Austen’s Elizabeth Bennett should be a fun friend and J. K. Rawlings’s Hogwarts.

What are the most common nationalities of the authors you tend to read and which countries are they usually set in?

- North Americans, English, Scottish, Irish, Brazilians. The places are in the U.S., Europe and Brazil. Sometimes India and Middle East countries.

Have you ever seen a film adaptation better than the book?

- No. I have noticed that some adaptations are totally different from the books. For instance, Helen Fielding’s Bridget Jones’s Baby: except for the main character’s preposterous pattern of behaviour, the book has nothing to do with the film. However, enjoyed both tremendously, have reread the book and watched the film several times.

Apart from actually reading, what else do you enjoy about the world of books? (E.G. Visiting bookshops, reading reviews, etc.).

- I spend hours in bookshops, choosing the next one, remembering the ones already read, analysing covers, and seeing where my books are exposed, if at all. I like to read reviews, but they are not always a guide. As my husband is also a voracious reader, we enjoy time talking about the present book, if we would recommend the other one to read it. We also analyse the stories, the characters, the writer skills, the goofs; if it is a translation, whether it is good or not…

Tell us a little bit about how you became a book lover! Who or what inspired your love of reading?

- My grandmother would read aloud to me when I was very little. Later on, an uncle did the same with my cousin and I. It was in his house that I chose my first “grown up” book from the shelves: The Diary of Anne Frank. I was 10 years old. All in all, both sides of my family enjoy reading, I cannot remember one single house without books overflowing out of the shelves.

We would love to hear about any unusual reading habits or rituals you may have.

- Since 1999, when I finish a book, I write down an appraisal of the story in a journal I keep nearby. Sometimes I post it on Facebook or my blog.

Please tell us about a time when a book helped you through a challenging time in your life and if there are any fictional characters who have inspired you in your life.

- Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus by John Gray. It helped me break a repetitive behaviour that was not good. After the reading I bought it as a gift for several friends of mine.

What would we learn about you if we viewed your book collection?

- I still reread my childhood favourites.

Where is your favourite place to read?

- A cuddly wingchair at my living room near a window.

Do you keep books you've bought or pass them on? How do you have your books kept/displayed?

              -My husband is also a big reader and we have bookshelves, numerous and large ones, where the books are sorted by author. He is a strict keeper, but I pass along the ones I know I will not reread. A side note: I do not lend books! I may give them as a present, but what is mine, is mine. In my whole life, I have lent 3 books which never returned, soooooo…

What’s one word or sentence to describe how books and reading have enriched your life?

– Books have been my most reliable company, through thick and thin.

Do you take a break between reading books or do you usually always have one on the go?

– If the book was a really good one, it may take two to three days before I open another, however, the next one is always awaiting on my bedside table.

Outside of reading, what are your other most enjoyable hobbies and interests?

– I breed horses, therefore, spending time with them is wonderful.

Tell us how a book or an author inspired you to try something or go somewhere you'd never imagined doing before reading it.

- Ernest Hemingway led me to drink a Bellini at Harry’s Bar in Venice, Italy.

Is there a country that you would like to visit as a result of reading books?

             -Most certainly, Agatha Christie’s Egypt.

Have you found reading or any particular book(s) helpful to cope with these strange times we are in right now due to the coronavirus?

- Not really. Reading is a must, period.

Do you have an anecdote about your life with books? (E.G. A story about an unusual experience or meeting though a book club, bookshop visits, etc.)

– I was a teenager and as usual was reading in the bedroom I shared with two younger sisters, when suddenly something very big fell over the bed. What a scare, but then, it was only one of my sisters who tried to see for how long I would be engaged in the reading before I took notice of her. Since I did not, she went and pulled a white linen over her head and dropped like a log at my side! We still laugh about it nowadays.

What is your idea of a perfect Sunday?

– A hammock and a book, music playing softly on the background so I can, maybe, pick one or two to be part of a soundtrack of the story on my mind.

Is there a literary quote you particularly like?

– I used it as an epigraph to my first book: “Some men see things as they are and say why: I sometimes dream of things that never were and say: why not?” by George Bernard Shaw.

Anything else you would like to add?

            -I find it very hard to point out favourites when the subject is books and its authors. I feel as having betrayed many. Therefore, here goes my “sorry, fellows”, If I were to rewrite all of the above, with the exception of the mentions to Agatha Christie, it would be completely different and other stories and writers would be most certainly mentioned! Furthermore, it has been great knowing “Readers Around the World” and following the Besotted Bookworm!


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