tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7917245635820611026.post1345416464937347671..comments2024-03-28T03:20:13.802-04:00Comments on A Good Blog is Hard To Find: Living With a Writer’s BrokennessA Good Blog Is Hard to Findhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13823958967965785849noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7917245635820611026.post-56634927721500220612012-06-08T08:08:44.944-04:002012-06-08T08:08:44.944-04:00Wow.
Awesome post to read,
I enjoyed a lot after r...Wow.<br />Awesome post to read,<br />I enjoyed a lot after reading this.<br />and i liked Hadley's statement "I’m not sure I get it completely, but I can tell you’re a writer. Whatever that thing is, you have it."book publishinghttp://www.bonzoi.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7917245635820611026.post-24039952026865634952011-07-11T22:28:49.252-04:002011-07-11T22:28:49.252-04:00Great post -- and I just finished the book also. I...Great post -- and I just finished the book also. I loved it and it was hard to read -- all at the same time. My heart ached for both of them and for Hemingway's loss of himself. He poured so much into the writing that there wasn't enough left over for Hadley.Maryhttp://MaryRSnyder.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7917245635820611026.post-72616356604076370492011-06-22T10:51:45.228-04:002011-06-22T10:51:45.228-04:00Great post, Susan. Ginger (wife) is very supportiv...Great post, Susan. Ginger (wife) is very supportive of my writing. She is a multi-tasker and can jump from one to another and back with out losing her focus. She does not understand it takes me time to reach that place, just outside myself, where the words flow, and a single interruption is like a bubble burst that can't be regained. Another can be created but something may be lost. I'll have to put "The Paris Wife" on my reading list.Hermannoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7917245635820611026.post-77657859378452402942011-06-22T09:01:07.123-04:002011-06-22T09:01:07.123-04:00Wonderful words Susan - the relationship portrayed...Wonderful words Susan - the relationship portrayed in The Paris Wife was co-dependent and immature, but is certainly not unlike many young marriages I've seen. I think it is when a couple can grow up and through that stage and become autonomous beings, while still remaining connected, that makes for a marriage like you and your spouse seem to have. Writers live in their heads so much of the time (speaking for myself), and you really cannot think through and develop those stories and characters when living inside a video game (which life gets to be at times). My husband and I are so similar in personality type that we understand each other's need to have quiet and chaos-free time to write. There are days when he sits in his study, and I sit at the dining room table, and both of us are writing. But we also know the other is breathing down the hall and we remain connected. A miracle in this modern world. Thank you!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05746848980923855417noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7917245635820611026.post-30464130389356170722011-06-21T22:20:02.639-04:002011-06-21T22:20:02.639-04:00Brilliant post, Susan. I just finished reading The...Brilliant post, Susan. I just finished reading The Paris Wife, and I loved it. Like your husband, I can write with chaos around me, but I prefer time alone. And not just to write. To ponder, to walk, to play, to dream, to be. And then write. After three decades of marriage and raising children, I seem to need it more than ever.Darrelyn Saloomhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11948492186125419830noreply@blogger.com