Kindred Spirits

So, I finally met up with the ever wonderful and super inspiring Amanda DiPasquale from Not A Model Blog. We’ve been meaning to meet up for ages and finally that day came. On a sticky and humid Thursday we met for lunch at St.Lawrence Market and chatted about books and writing. It was so nice talking to a fellow writer, reader, dreamer, and blogger. One who can listen to my corny stories and appreciate them. One who can quote lines from books I’ve read and understand what it feels like to love (and sometimes hate) being a writer. One of those people who remind you why you write, who remind you that it’s okay to be sensitive to your surroundings, that it’s okay to analyze things — that’s why you’re a writer. I don’t often come across a person I can really relate to, a person with similar ambitions, and even though our stories are different I feels as though I’ve found a kindred spirit in Amanda. I think that’s why I love her blog posts so much, I can always find something relatable and inspiring.

Our conversation left me feeling incredibly motivated to go after what I want and I appreciate all of her advice. It also got me back on track with my blog, it reminded me WHY I started it in the first place, and I promise to bring it back to where I want it to be.

Thanks for the wonderful conversation Amanda; I’m really looking forward to working with you soon!

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Love Always

Vanessa Xo

Red Joan [Book Review]

If you’re looking for a suspenseful, romantic, and quick read then pick up a copy of Red Joan by Jennie Rooney. If you like a little historical fiction, love affairs, war, and secrets in a novel, pick up a copy of Red Joan. I chose this novel for my second Random House Read for May and although it took me a bit to get into (in all fairness I was on vacation in Vancouver when I started to read it and therefore quite distracted) I thoroughly enjoyed it.

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Joan’s voice is almost a whisper. ‘Nobody talked about what they did during the war. We all knew we weren’t allowed to.’

Joan Stanley has a secret. 

For fifty years she has been a loving mother, a doting grandmother and an occasional visitor to ballroom dancing and watercolour classes. Then one sunlit spring morning there is a knock on the door.

It would appear that Joan has quite a few secrets and each page lays the foundation for a new confession, a new realization. Going back and forth from past to present, you get swept up in Joan’s world and all of her secrets. You fall in love with Joan, you sympathize with her, and sometimes you want to shake her and tell her to stop being so naive. I don’t want to say too much about the plot of this novel because I don’t want to ruin it. I want you to get so into this novel that you’re hunched over on the edge of your bed wondering what will happen next. I want you to feel the same concern for Joan as I did. I want you to wonder about Leo — to be cautious of him but undeniably attracted to him. I want you to see the flashbacks happen in black-and-white. I want you to meet Max and enjoy every moment with him. I want you to remember what it was like to be 18 and have your whole life ahead of you.

…she finds that she can still remember the feeling of that year with absolute clarity; the breathless sensation brought on by the knowledge that if she didn’t go somewhere and do something then her lungs might actually burst out of her chest…She is eighteen years old and impatient to leave. There is no particular reason for this impatience other than an underlying sense of life happening elsewhere…” (page 12)

I want you to remember what it feels like to stand up for something, what it feels like to be honest, and what it feels like to do what you know in your heart is right.

I want you to get so into this novel that you don’t even hear your phone ring, just like I did.

Love Always

Vanessa Xo

P.S Red Joan by Jennie Rooney comes out tomorrow (May 21st, 2013)! 

**Synopsis from the Random House of Canada website**

Bursting the Bubble [Week 6]

After going nonstop on my Vancouver Vacation/Adventure, Week 6 felt like it went by reallllllyyyyyyy slowwwwwwww. Does anyone else feel seriously depressed after returning from vacation? I didn’t have the same spring in my step this week, my thoughts were like anchors, weighing me down, my body folding in half from the pressure until I finally collapsed on the ground.

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I find that the BEST way to get over a funk like this is the read a great book, write it out, and talk to people who understand you. I wrote a hell of a lot this week (mostly emo-diary entries that I refuse to subject my wonderful readers to), I gabbed with the lovely Lindsey over lunch, and I read Sunset Park. I found the book incredibly moving, it pulled me out of my own self-inflicted misery, and it helped me understand what was really weighing on me.

“…he wonders if it is worth hoping for a future when there is no future, and from now on, he tells himself, he will stop hoping for anything and live only for the now, this moment, this passing moment, the now that is here and then not here, the now that is gone foever.” (Page 308)

Okay so that quote sounds morbid and depressing but what it’s saying is to live in the NOW. Something my parents, my boyfriend, and Lindsey have told me this week on some level or another.

* POP * * Cue Bubble Burst Moment *

The question remains, can I live in the moment and NOT let my thoughts consume me? What should I be doing to better understand what I WANT to do in the future? What choice can I make today to ensure that I am living in the moment and not thinking so much about what will happen after June 27th? So far I’ve enrolled in a seminar at Ryerson about getting published (which I think will help out with my own writing aspirations and better my understanding of what the publishing industry is all about). I’ve been poking my head around in different departments at work to try to figure out which one interests me most. I’ve also been looking into writing classes offered by Ryerson. Right now I’m interested in books, publishing, and writing so each day I do something that relates to them in some way.

I wake up every morning and ask myself what do I want to do today? What interests me? What would make me happy right now? It’s amazing to start the day that way, to really put thought into yourself and each moment. I hope to walk into Week 7 of my internship with a bigger spring in my step than ever before! I’m looking forward to the other half of my internship and will think of each day as its own entity — making each one count.

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But that’s next week.

Right now it’s Saturday morning and nothing would make me happier than eating breakfast with the boyfriend and family.

So THAT is exactly what I’m going to do.

HAPPY LONG WEEKEND from my heart to yours.

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Love Always

Vanessa Xo

The Entrancing Life — A Mantra of Sorts

arts-graphics-2008_1129680a“Carlyle held that genius was an infinite capacity for taking pains. I don’t know about genius, but the entrancing life, I think, must be an infinite love of taking pains. You try it.

One more word. The ‘Great War’ has not ended. Don’t think that you have had the luck to miss it. It is for each of you that the war goes on within ourselves for self-mastery. Those robes you wear to-day are you Khaki for that war. Your graduation day is your first stripe. Go out and fight.” (Page 20-21)

These words belong to J.M. Barrie, delivered in 1930 when addressing Edinburgh University as Chancellor. Although I graduated from University a few years ago I can still relate to this speech. It’s amazing how 83 years later his message is still strong, like he has discovered some universal truth.

I’m using his words as a mantra, as a reminder that pain is part of life and the sooner you accept that, the sooner you embrace it, the better chance you have at surviving and living an entrancing life. His words will remind me to fight against anything that tries to tear me to pieces. They will reminf me to fight for the person I am and the person I want to become.

If you read his entire speech you’ll better understand the significance of what he’s trying to say. He talks about life as a play with three Acts. He talks about how we’re all in the Second Act of our life (the longest Act beginning just after graduation), the Act that doesn’t necessarily flow perfectly into the third. It is in the Second Act that you define who you are, where you figure out if you’re going to let in the bad or let in the good, where YOU experience a lot of pain (if you’re lucky), and where you (hopefully) learn how to deal with it.

Here’s to the Second Act — break a leg ;)

Love Always

Vanessa Xo

A Constellation of Vital Phenomena [Book Review]

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I finished reading A Constellation of Vital Phenomena on Saturday May 4th, after a three-hour uninterrupted reading stretch. My cheeks were wet with tears, my heart ached and pounded as if I drank too much coffee, my eyes stung with gratitude, and my head throbbed from feeling so many things at once. That is just the physical impact of what this novel did to me. In 384 pages, Anthony Marra discussed and depicted every kind of relationship possible. He brought me into a broken world, a disheveled country, a place where everything is in ruin and everyone is broken, but left me with a lingering sense of hope.

A haunting novel set in a nearly abandoned hospital in war-torn Chechnya that is both intimate and ambitious in scope. Eight-year-old Havaa, Akhmed, the neighbour who rescues her after her father’s disappearance, and Sonia, the doctor who shelters her over 5 dramatic days in December 2004, must all reach back into their pasts to unravel the intricate mystery of coincidence, betrayal and forgiveness which unexpectedly binds them and decides their fate. In his bold debut, Anthony Marra proves that sometimes fiction can tell us the truth of the world far better, and far more powerfully, than any news story. You will not forget the world he creates—A Constellation of Vital Phenomena and its characters will haunt you long after you turn the final page.

I don’t think I have enough words in me to describe how moving this novel really is, so I’m not going to try. What I will tell you is that A Constellation of Vital Phenomena will remind you what means to be human, what it means to love, and what it means to have hope. You will learn something different from every character you encounter and you’ll probably add them to your FAVOURITE CHARACTERS OF ALL TIME list. You will love Havaa and admire her brilliance, you will hate then love then hate then love Sonja and her broken heart, you will laugh at (and with) Akhmed and cherish him at the same time, and you will marvel at the various ways their lives are connected. The two relationships that had the greatest effect on me were that of Havaa and her father, as well as, Sonja and her sister Natasha. I understood their relationships and saw a piece of my own reflected in theirs. I am that little girl who thinks the world of her father (and mother). I am one of those siblings, there to catch the other when balance is lost, seemingly unaware of how much I need her (and my bother) too.

… her father would have found her performance enchanting, would have scooped her up in his arms…His approval sparked magic into the blandest day, could layer her in the self-confidence and security she otherwise might lack; and without it, without him, she felt small, and helpless…” — Page 44

My favourite thing about this novel? You are taken on a 5-day journey that spans over many years (past, present, and future), and although you are constantly on the edge of your seat, waiting to find out what happens next, by the last page you can bask in the comfort that there are no loose ends. I truly understand why this is one of the most anticipated books of the year and if it sounds like your cuppa tea, you can pick up a copy today (Indigo Eaton Centre has signed copies).

Love Always

Vanessa Xo

P.S. This is Random House Read #2 for the month of May!

** Synopsis taken from the Random House of Canada website **

I thrive best hermit style

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One of the best pieces of advice (or scorn) my mother ever said to me was “You can’t be a hermit all your life, Vanessa!” To which I always replied by going to my room, closing the door, reading a book, and not coming down until dinner. I disliked people, I hated how no one listened to me, I avoided going outside simply because I hated smelling like fresh air, I hated the beach simply because the sand made me itch, and I was the kind of kid who would read a book inside on the couch instead of outside at the cottage with my family. Why? Well, I was a shy kid, the kind of kid who kept quiet, the kind of kid who felt uncomfortable whenever I left the house, whenever I was in a big crowd.

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I’m either growing up, changing, or taking my mom’s advice and putting it to good use (probably a little bit of all three). Although there is still no greater comfort to me than staying home, I find myself wanting to get outside, wanting to take a walk on my lunch, wanting to explore, wanting to be surrounded by people. I pay attention to things like flowers blooming, I sit outside and read just to be in the company of my parents when they’re hanging out in the backyard, I go nuts when my sister talks about the baby growing inside her (I freak out every time she gets bigger), I make an effort to be home when we have company. I’m noticing there’s so much LIFE outside, so much LIVING going on, so many MOMENTS to be apart of. Sounds a little bizarre that I’m just seeing all of this now, doesn’t it? Don’t get me wrong, when I need to be left alone, I am. When I need to concentrate or just NOT be social, everyone leaves me be, but I feel as though I’m finally starting to live. I’m finally starting to see the need for a balance between all of the wonderful books and stories that I read, and the one life that I’m living.

‘Cause that’s just it, you’re only given one life and it’s YOUR fault if you’re not enjoying it, living it, breathing it.

Love Always 

Vanessa Xo 

Finding your voice – The Silver Star [Book Review]

cvr9781451661507_9781451661507_lgIn March I was sent an ARC of The Silver Star by Jeannette Walls. I truly fell in love with this novel. I love books with strong, young, female characters. Characters that are forced to handle big issues, face huge challenges, falter and stand back up. They remind me of what a sheltered life I’ve lived and make me wonder if I could, in fact, survive if I had to face what they did.

It is 1970. “Bean” Holladay is twelve and her sister Liz is fifteen when their artistic mother Charlotte, a woman “who flees every place she’s ever lived at the first sign of trouble,” takes off to “find herself.” She leaves her girls enough money for food to last a month or two. But when Bean gets home from school one day and sees a police car outside the house, she and Liz board a bus from California to Virginia, where their widowed Uncle Tinsley lives in the decaying antebellum mansion that’s been in the family for generations.

An impetuous optimist, Bean discovers who her father was and learns many stories about why their mother left Virginia in the first place. Money is tight, so Liz and Bean start babysitting and doing office work for Jerry Maddox, foreman of the mill in town, a big man who bullies workers, tenants, and his wife. Bean adores her whip-smart older sister, inventor of word games, reader of Edgar Allan Poe, non-conformist. But when school starts in the fall, it’s Bean who easily adjusts and makes friends, and Liz who becomes increasingly withdrawn. And then something happens to Liz in the car with Maddox.

The author of The Glass Castle, hyper-alert to abuse of adult power, has written a gorgeous, riveting, heartbreaking novel about triumph over adversity and about people who find a way to love the world despite its flaws and injustices.

Bean is one of the most loveable and smart twelve-year-old characters I’ve encountered (she kind of reminds me of Flavia DeLuce). Liz is the a smart and exceedingly bright girl who just needs to find her place among outsiders. I felt that I could relate to both of the girls in one way or another and I admired their strength and bravery. Uncle Tinsley is a wonderful and sweet man who needs Bean and Liz as much as they need him. Charlotte, on the other hand, needs to get her stuff together. I didn’t like her character at all, the only thing I liked about her is what she tried to teach her girls whenever she decided to hang around.

“‘Find the magic,’ mom always said. ‘And if you can’t find the magic,’ she added, ‘then make the magic.’”

Jeannette Walls crafted a wonderful story filled with tears and heartaches. The writing was fluid, powerful, and smooth. For some reason this story truly played at my heartstrings. It reiterates the need to find your own voice and never pretend like something didn’t happen. Face it. Do something about it and don’t give up.

Love Always

Vanessa Xo

 

** Synopsis from the Simon and Schuster website **

The Aftermath [Book Review]

coverMy first Random House Read for May is The Aftermath by Rhidian Brook. Before I spend the next 300 words or so praising the crap out of this novel, I’d like to share the synopsis with you.

Hamburg, 1946. Thousands remain displaced in what is now the British Occupied Zone. Charged with overseeing the rebuilding of this devastated city and the de-Nazification of its defeated people, Colonel Lewis Morgan is requisitioned a fine house on the banks of the Elbe, where he will be joined by his grieving wife, Rachael, and only remaining son, Edmund.

But rather than force its owners, a German widower and his traumatized daughter, to leave their home, Lewis insists that the two families live together. In this charged and claustrophobic atmosphere all must confront their true selves as enmity and grief give way to passion and betrayal.

The Aftermath is a stunning novel about our fiercest loyalties, our deepest desires and the transformative power of forgiveness.

The Aftermath is officially in my top three favourite historical fiction novels of all time, tied with The Purchase and The Aviator’s Wife. It is a wonderful story about forgiveness, loyalties, and giving into your deepest desires. Rhidian Brook has created a complex story with unbelievably real characters, characters you can feel sympathy for, characters you can have a connection with. Each character experiences some kind of loss — a loss so heartbreaking that none of them know quite how to face it. This story is as much about trying to rebuild a nation, as it is about rebuilding relationships and having sympathy and compassion for your fellow human beings.

A huge part in my love for this novel has to do with the flawless writing. It’s smooth, concise, descriptive, and wonderfully thought-provoking. I love how Rhidian Brook allows you to see and understand so many sides of the same story. The way his writing shows you something extremely important about humanity: that we all feel pain and we all heal differently. That forgiveness can literally save lives.

What else can I say about this novel? Well, I don’t want to say too much or I’ll ruin it for you, but I will say that there were so many twists and turns I could barely keep up. I was literally on the edge of my seat, holding my breath, waiting for something to happen (or not happen). I strongly suggest that you add it to your “to read” list — it comes out on May 7th 2013.

He could see  a whole new city growing out of the desolation. A fine city fit for children, parents and grandparents, lovers and seekers, for the broken and the fixed, the missing and the missed, the lost and the refound.”

Love Always 

Vanessa Xo

** The synopsis is from the Random House of Canada website **
** The quote is an indirect quote from page 321 of the novel **

Bursting the Bubble [Week 4]

It wasn’t until I purchased my second Metro Pass that I realized I’m almost a month into my 12-week internship. HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE?! The weeks are literally flying by! The good news is that I still love it, I’ve haven’t gotten over the sincere calm I feel when I’m on the subway, or the excitement that flutters in my heart as I walk toward my building, or the spring in my step when I hear the church bells ring – people told me that all of that gets old pretty quickly, I’m glad they’re wrong so far. I am thoroughly enjoying every minute.

THIS week I’ve been mesmerized by Paul Auster’s memoir Winter Journal, where he gives a sensory account of his life –

…put aside your stories for now and try to examine what it has felt like to live inside this body from the first day you can remember being alive until this one. A catalogue of sensory data.” Page 1

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This memoir made me think about my childhood and made me wonder about the memories I could conjure up if I sat down and really thought it out. I spent an entire subway ride home in this contemplative state, probably making odd faces as the past resurfaced. Is it odd that my memories are few and far between? I don’t remember anything before the age of 4 (or is it 5?). I remember the first house we lived in (where I was born, not conceived in case you were wondering), my old friends, the musty smell of our huge basement, the blue toy room we spent our days playing in, and the kitchen (also in the basement) that never seemed to be used. I remember our court being very quiet – I remember a wiener dog running around on our patch of grass.

Most vividly, and perhaps only because it pertains to this week, I remember my father taking us all to a Jays game. My brother wasn’t born yet, I wore my favourite red dress with small white polka dots, the dome was open and the sun was blistering hot. We took the subway down, an adventure in and of itself, and I remember seeing people sleeping in the middle of the floor, some sitting up and holding signs, some playing instruments, most begging for money. I remember being afraid of these dirty, loud people (give me a break I was 6). Then I remember my dad, throwing coins into whatever hat, cup, or case sat in front of them. I remember him handing cigarettes to a man when he ran out of change. I remember some of them saying thank you, over and over again. I don’t remember thinking much of it while watching the game but my dad’s small form of generosity stuck with me long after that.

It would be silly to pretend that I haven’t noticed people sitting on the streets since I’ve started interning downtown. I spend a lot of time on my lunch walking around and of the many homeless people I have walked by, I only helped out one of them. Why? In truth, I tend to get distracted when I go for walks — I’m busy taking pictures or admiring buildings. Other times I try to walk by as quickly as possible since I never have change on me (that sounds horrible). BUT the other day I made eye contact with the lady who sits outside the nearest Tim’s and as she wished me good day, I found myself asking her if she wanted a coffee. She replied yes-please-thank-you-so-much. So, I bought her a coffee and a muffin, handed it to her, smiled and walked off.

Only as I walked away did I realize that this woman held a genuine kind of gratitude in her eyes. Her hair was ashen with dust, her teeth yellow and chipped, but her eyes were filled with thanks and life.

Moral(s) of my story: be generous like your father (and mother).

The smallest gestures go a long way.

You can see so much if you just OPEN YOUR EYES; if you slow down a little.

Isn’t that what new experiences are about? Isn’t that the only way to burst your bubble?

By looking, seeing, and paying attention.

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Love Always

Vanessa Xo

Someday, Someday, Maybe [Book Review]

coverAs a HUGE fan of Gilmore Girls, I can’t deny how excited I was to read Someday, Someday, Maybe by Lauren Graham. This is my second Random House Review for April and to be honest I was a little scared to choose it. I thought: what if it doesn’t live up to my expectations? What if it doesn’t remind me of Gilmore Girls? What if I hate it? 

Someday, Someday, Maybe is a light read with fantastic writing and an incredible message. It didn’t disappoint me one bit! And may I just say that the dialogue is WONDERFUL — real, believable, and witty. I laughed, I cried, and I fell in love with every single character in this novel. Although I have never wanted to be an actress, I felt truly connected to Franny Banks and her BIG DREAMS mentality. I love her vulnerability, her tough bravado, her smarts, her insecurities, and all of her faults. She is a character that I will never forget.

It’s January 1995, and Franny Banks has just six months left of the three-year deadline she set for herself when she came to New York, dreaming of Broadway and doing “important” work. But all she has to show for her efforts so far is a part in an ad for ugly Christmas sweaters, and a gig waiting tables at a comedy club. Her roommates―her best friend Jane, and Dan, an aspiring sci-fi writer―are supportive, yet Franny knows a two-person fan club doesn’t exactly count as success. Everyone tells her she needs a backup plan, and though she can almost picture moving back home and settling down with her perfectly nice ex-boyfriend, she’s not ready to give up on her goal of having a career like her idols Diane Keaton and Meryl Streep. Not just yet. But while she dreams of filling their shoes, in the meantime, she’d happily settle for a speaking part in almost anything—and finding a hair product combination that works.

Everything is riding on the upcoming showcase for her acting class, where she’ll finally have a chance to perform for people who could actually hire her. And she can’t let herself be distracted by James Franklin, a notorious flirt and the most successful actor in her class, even though he’s suddenly started paying attention. Meanwhile, her bank account is rapidly dwindling, her father wants her to come home, and her agent doesn’t return her calls. But for some reason, she keeps believing that she just might get what she came for. 

I learned a lot about myself from reading this novel, about realizing my own dreams and potential. I learned about the importance of being true to yourself, to working hard, and to letting your heart guide you. My heart swelled when one of the characters said something similar to what my father always tells me:

…just the act of repetition itself–will bring enlightenment…the idea that quantity becomes quality. I always took it to mean that if you do anything enough, if you keep putting effort in, eventually something will happen…You don’t have to have faith when you start out, you just have to dedicate yourself to practice as if you have it.”

I would recommend this book to anyone who aspires to do anything, anyone who has a dream, anyone who loves Gilmore Girls, and anyone who is looking for a book that will make you smile. I would recommend it any anyone who wants to smile on this gloomy Wednesday!

Someday, Someday, Maybe comes out on April 30th, 2013 — BE AWARE that if you pre-order you can take part in Lauren Graham’s Pre-order Video Chat! All of the details can be found here – the chat will be taking place on Monday April 29th, so save your pre-order number!

XOXO

Love Always

Vanessa Xo

** Synopsis from the Random House of Canada Website **

** Quote from page 312 of Someday, Someday, Maybe **