Showing posts with label coincidences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coincidences. Show all posts

Friday, August 28, 2009

Galway Bay, by Mary Pat Kelly

'Tis far away I am today from scenes I roamed a boy, And long ago the hour I know I first saw Illinois; But time nor tide nor waters wide can wean my heart away, For ever true it flies to you, my dear old Galway Bay. -F.A. Fahey, Galway Bay

Too often when I pick up a book at school nowadays, I'm picking it up because if it's fiction I need to read it for class or if it's non-fiction I'm reading it for research. I've advanced into reading non-fiction books for fun, which is probably a bad thing, so it's not often that I read fiction books I don't have to take notes on and annotate copiously.

Over the summer I've had a chance to change that and read a little bit more fiction, probably because the selection of fiction at the three libraries I frequent when I'm at home is a lot better than the selection at school. A friend of my mother's recommended Galway Bay to her when she found out I was soon to be studying there, and like the good bookworm I am, I borrowed the book from Mom before she had a chance to read it.

It was a wonderful read. I plowed through it in three days, which is a testament to both my ability to plow through books (already aptly demonstrated) and M.P. Kelly's ability to tell a story. And what a story! It starts in a very small village in Ireland before the Great Famine, with a young woman named Honora who is thinking about becoming a nun until she meets Michael Kelly, a very charming young man with a gorgeous horse, a knack for telling stories, and dreams that are just as big as Honora's. Kelly then follows her heroine through the famine, five children, and immigrating to Chicago, a place whose history I know and love well.

This book comes highly recommended by me as well as a slew of much more famous voices, including Frank McCourt's, and it's not terribly difficult to follow or keep track of Honora's many family members. Historically interested types may want to take note of this novel as an interesting way to experience family history -- Mary Pat Kelly based the story on her own family's experience as Honora herself told it to her granddaughter, Agnella Kelly. I also loved the stories within the story told by Honora and her grandmother and the way those stories had such a centrality in thier lives.

But this book was interesting to me for another reason; Honora came from Galway and went to Chicago, and here I am, twelve days away from leaving Chicago and going to Galway. She went on foot and by boat, while I'll go by plane and bus and automobile. I'll probably see many towns that were once like Honora Kelly's, and that makes me really happy inside. I feel, in a very small way, that I'm adding to that story even though I'm not Irish and my people never had to flee a country because their crops were rotting and their government wasn't helpful and their landlords wanted them gone.

Who knows? Maybe this will inspire me to find out what the great-grandcesters of Mercury Gray were doing way back in the day in France and Germany and wherever else we came from!

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Great Minds...

...Often think alike, as the saying goes. And I don't claim to be a great mind most of the time, but when the creator of a hit TV show and I have the same idea, I'll consider myself a great mind for the time being.

From TvGuide.com

Exclusive: Grey's Digs Dirt Star as McArmy's Old Flame

As teased weeks ago in a Mitovich Mega Minute, Grey's Anatomy is going to be shedding light on the shadowy Owen Hunt — by introducing viewers to someone from the Army vet's past.

Playing Owen's ex-lover, TVGuide.com has learned exclusively, will be Laura Allen, whom you either know from A) Dirt, B) The 4400 or C) All My Children. Allen will guest-star in this season's 15th episode, which is shooting this week (and also marks Melissa George's final appearance as Sadie).

Kevin McKidd himself gave me the heads up on this storyline development when I ran into him at Sunday's Golden Globes after-parties. McKidd also hinted that to further explore his character, Hunt's mother or father might be cast later this season.



Okay, I haven't shared much of my new addiction to Grey's with you all on this blog yet, but if you've been following my fanfiction posting, you'll notice that I have written two fics so far, one called The Small Matter of Teaching about Cristina's apparent lack of any teaching chops whatsoever with her interns, and another called All the Befores and Afters about -- guess what? -- Owen's old girlfriend showing up at Seattle Grace. With James Wilson, of all people. Because someone needed to write a Grey's/House crossover and I'm kind of like a crossover guru right now.

So I'm kind of interested to see how this turns out. And to see if my version of Cristina's perception of Owen's previous relationships is true -- "She didn’t look like the sort of woman Cristina imagined Owen dating, but maybe the hospital gown hid that. (In her mind’s eye, Cristina always saw before-Owen dating intense, strong women who climbed mountains and ran marathons for a living, not oncologists who were basically like her except that their line of work involved less stress.)" My Before!Owen girlfriend OC is an oncologist at the University of Chicago who's a pretty chill, awesome type of girl because I think that works with Owen's former adventuresome, adreniline junkie personality. I'm not liking this Laura Allen person in this former girlfriend role because she looks like she's a bit...spiky.

And, for the record, I came up with my idea all on my own. Before this press release, in fact. You can check the dating on my fanfiction if you don't believe me. Now I'm working on expanding the All the Befores and Afters compass to include Owen and Wilson's perspectives on the situation. But it really was my idea. I just hope Shonda Rhimes and the rest of the Grey's writing crew do a good job with their version.