The faerie-hunter, home from the hill
I have a copy of Cloud & Ashes. I got it tonight at
nineweaving's reading at the Harvard Book Store.
It has a little sketch of Grevil on the frontispiece, with his masterwork Reliquiae Nebulosae—Remains of Cloud—in hand.
You will not know this character if you have not read the novel. I encountered him first in drafts and fragments four years ago in November, a small-gentry scholar with badly kept secrets: a neater refraction of Tom o Cloud by his faded hair and his distraction, but like anything well-loved, he turned flesh from sticks and leaves as the story branched around him; and he was very dear to me.
Here he is.

Turning to the window, he looked out. "'Tis a history," he said, "of Cloud its ancientry, high Cloud. There are remnants of it, that in custom and in vulgar memory, the common tongue, yet live." Still his back to her, his arm raised to the windowframe, his brow to the glass. "A kind of monument."
"A book?" He turned round at her voice. Her face now one astonishment. "You've made a book?" As if he'd said, I wrote this tree.
Pink to the ears now. "Pieces of one. That is, 'tis matter for a book . . ." He gestured at the table, helplessly. ". . . but in a sort dispersed."

She wrote that tree.
It has a little sketch of Grevil on the frontispiece, with his masterwork Reliquiae Nebulosae—Remains of Cloud—in hand.
You will not know this character if you have not read the novel. I encountered him first in drafts and fragments four years ago in November, a small-gentry scholar with badly kept secrets: a neater refraction of Tom o Cloud by his faded hair and his distraction, but like anything well-loved, he turned flesh from sticks and leaves as the story branched around him; and he was very dear to me.
Here he is.
Turning to the window, he looked out. "'Tis a history," he said, "of Cloud its ancientry, high Cloud. There are remnants of it, that in custom and in vulgar memory, the common tongue, yet live." Still his back to her, his arm raised to the windowframe, his brow to the glass. "A kind of monument."
"A book?" He turned round at her voice. Her face now one astonishment. "You've made a book?" As if he'd said, I wrote this tree.
Pink to the ears now. "Pieces of one. That is, 'tis matter for a book . . ." He gestured at the table, helplessly. ". . . but in a sort dispersed."
She wrote that tree.

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Nine
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I know some people who have received their copies already. It may be a matter of which batch went in the mail when.
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I think that's appropriate to the book.
*hugs*
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I recommend it in the strongest possible language.
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Nine
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It shouldn't have disappeared: it showed up fine in my browser! I went back and reuploaded the image entirely. Can you see it now?
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Nine
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I want
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Nine
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I love his thoughtful face.
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I can't draw like that—are you kidding? I do little cartoon faces. Downstairs in my parents' house is a watercolor of a dragon dance with a real dragon passing overhead that I did when I was twelve or thirteen. There's a colored pencil illustration of my brother's now ex-parakeet on the same wall. Those are about the only pieces of visual art I have ever produced that were worth looking at. I just do words.
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ex-parakeet :-) Like ex-husband or ex-con .... but different.
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Nine
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Nine
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Nine
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Nine
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Wonderful! (though maybe not for Sovay if she hasn't slept all night...)
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I think she sketched it all on-the-spot at five in the morning before the reading, but it's still something to be impressed by!
It's a Secret to Everyone
I found it
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It's the back cover of the program for the 2008—2009 season of the Cantata Singers, all in honor of Benjamin Britten. The quote is his: "It is cruel, you know, that music should be so beautiful. It has the beauty of loneliness and of pain: of strength and freedom. The beauty of disappointment and never-satisfied love. The cruel beauty of nature, and everlasting beauty of monotony."