Play review, Love, Janis

My parents took me and my son to see the play Love, Janis at the Herberger Theater in Phoenix night before last. Plays about artists (writers, artists, singers, actors) often touch me more deeply than other topics.
This was as much a concert as a play…a concert of her songs, her letters, her interviews: her voice in many forms. The Janis who loved the stage and feared it came through, the vulnerable twenty-something who drank southern comfort like water to keep her feet on stage.
It makes me grateful writing is a bit more back-door. When I give a talk I usally sleep badly the night before, arrive exhausted, and then the adrenaline kicks in and my subconsious delivers a talk and afterwards I nap somewere dark and quiet. But when I write, the things that scare me are between me and the page or between me and another writer over a beer. Our work is judged after we’ve done it. How much harder to need to be on every moment, to need some way to access your bright brave and authentic self while thousands watch?
No wonder the Paris Hiltons and the Janis Joplins and Jimi Hendrixes are so challenged.
The play was worth seeing. And hearing. Loud, like the sixties, and intensely psychadelic like the sixties. And a little sad, too.

No Responses so far

    There are no comments for this post.

Leave a comment

Books

Reading the Wind by Brenda Cooper

Reading the Wind cover image

Audio promo:

"Brenda Cooper's newest novel is a feast of character and concept. She depicts the devastation of war on microcosmic and macrocosmic levels, and even more so, the driving motives of young men and women caught in deadly conflict. Cooper is a master explorer of the interaction of society and individuals. She probes the psychology of her genetically enhanced characters with both rare depth and fidelity to scientific plausibility. Moral conundrums drive the plot in this unforgettable narrative. Don't miss this compelling work by a major new talent." - Mary A. Turzillo, An Old-Fashioned Martian Girl.

"Brenda Cooper tells a tale of a powerful brother and sister in a fight for their lives, offering insights along the way into the nature of courage and the hunger for community that burns in every human being. This is a lively book, full of colorful images and a memorable cast of human and animal characters, a worthy successor to The Silver Ship and the Sea." - Louise Marley

Available in July, 2008, from Tor Books.

The Silver Ship and the Sea by Brenda Cooper

Silver Ship and the Sea cover image

Audio promo:

"The first solo novel by Larry Niven's Building Harlequin's Moon (2005) coauthor portrays the thoroughly convincing human colonial society on Fremont, a dangerous planet rife with vicious predators, frequent earthquakes, and falling meteors....Distinctive characterizations, well-limned interrelationships, and the vividly realized Fremont contribute to an exciting coming-of-age story with a strong message about the evils of prejudice." - Sally Estes, Copyright American Library Association.

Mass Market Paperback, July 2008.
Included by Booklist as a "Best Adult Book for Young Adults."

Building Harlequin's Moon by Brenda Cooper and Larry Niven

Building Harlequin's Moon cover image

"Fans of both hard and softer, psychological SF will welcome veteran Niven and newcome Cooper's well-written tale of a 60,000 year layover in space, in which physical challenges of world building are matched by the social challenges of collaboration among disparate groups." - Publisher's Weekly

About

I am a writer, public speaker, and a futurist. I'm interested in how new technologies might change us and our world, particularly for the better, and in global warming. Learn more.

Speaking

I can be booked for keynote speeches on the future. I'm a generalist, with wide interests, and tailor my talks to the topics audiences are most curious about. Talking about the future is one of the most important conversations we can have. I can also talk about writing and publishing books and stories. Learn more.

Latest updates via Twitter

    Most Recent Posts

    RSS Feed.

    Categories

    /