It's not because it is going to be 2009. It isn't about the new semester, either.
Nonetheless, there are two new(ish) things I want to do when I get home Friday: Read and write.
It is said to be a great writer, one must be a great reader. I'm hoping to try to get there being an OK reader.
Hopefully, however, if I read great pieces I'll be able to call it even.
To start, let's follow one, actually two, great writers.
In the film "Gonzo: The Life and Works of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson," it is said F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby" captured Thompson's interest by showing the haves and have nots.
If it's good enough for a doctor, who am I to say no?
I know I have this book because I bought in high school, but without any interest in reading or writing at the time I started, but never finished. However, I do remember enjoying what I read so maybe I can pick up where I left off.
Next on the list comes a series of articles I picked up around Halloween (which reminds me - Happy Holidays/Hanukah/Christmas/New Year). While in Kansas City for the ACP convention, a professor held a session on literary journalism and finished it with a number of articles by writers including Ernest Hemmingway and Mark Twain and Jack London's coverage of the 1908 San Francisco earthquake.
The list had 10 articles on there so that should be done fairly quickly. To continue my conquest of my miniscule literary world, I go back to my roots, to what actually sparked my interest in writing and journalism: poker.
At home I have the biography of Stu Ungar, who may have been the greatest cardplayer to ever live. He ruined his life, however, with the fast pace and drug culture of Vegas during the 1970s.
Hopefully, I will finish this by Jan. 15, but if I don't I have a lifetime ahead of me. Maybe before the end of it I will read about the man who inspired this quest, and blog: Dr. Thompson.
bAbel.
