“Spreading your wings in a perplexing world”
August, 2017 James Hurd
Contents
- New blog article: Twin Trials in Texts
- Writer’s Corner
- Book and Film reviews
- E-zine subscription information
- How to purchase Wingspread: Of Faith and Flying
- Quotable quotes
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New blog article: Twin Trials in Texas
I guess I was too overconfident that Sunday afternoon in 1965. I’d only flown the Cessna 310 a couple of times, and now I had three passengers aboard and was shutting one engine down. But even when I wound up the other engine to full power, the airplane continued sinking toward the earth. What could I do to save us…?
Read more here: https://jimhurd.com/
(*Request: Please share with others, and leave a comment on the website after reading the article. Thanks.)
Writers’ Corner
Writer of the Month: The Venerable Bede. Seventh-century English scholar who wrote the amazing Ecclesiastical History of the English People. He is referred to as “The father of English history.” Buried in splendor in the Durham Cathedral, England.
Word of the Month: Beats: Short interruptions in dialogue that reveal something about the speaker.
Example: “I’m ready for this!” Jane lowered her head, folding and unfolding her hands.
As you revise your piece, try highlighting the beats.
Quiz of the Month: When do you use a hyphen, an “en” dash, and an “em” dash? [The hyphen is the shortest, then the “en” dash, then the longest, the “em” dash.)
Last month’s quiz: What’s the difference between flaunt and flout?
Answer: They’re spelled differently. (Just kidding!) Flaunt means ostentatious display. Flout means to ignore, disobey. “He flaunted the fact that he regularly flouted college regulations.”
Tip of the Month:
“Always use ‘i’ before ‘e’ except after ‘c’ … Except when either your weird feisty neighbor or his eight foreign heirs forfeit their beige heifers and seize freight. A good label for this mess: “fun for new English speakers.”
Book and Film Reviews
Death of a Salesman. A 1940s Arthur Miller play about a family, organized around their salesman father, Willy Loman. Aging Willy, full of a salesman’s optimistic counsel to his two sons, is the last person to discover he’s washed up. Intense family drama.
The Shack (book and movie). A grieving father gets to take his complaints to the tribune of the Trinitarian God in a wilderness shack—and gets much more than he bargained for.
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Buy James Hurd’s Wingspread: A Memoir of Faith and Flying. How childhood (Fundamentalist) faith led to mission bush-piloting in South America—and Barbara. Buy it here: https://jimhurd.com/home/ (or at Barnes and Noble, Amazon, etc.)
See pics here related to Wingspread: Of Faith and Flying: http://www.pinterest.com/hurd1149/wingspread-of-faith-and-flying/
Quotable quotes
Faint praise for other people’s books:
♠ “I can find only three things wrong with your book—the beginning, the middle, and the end.”
♠ “I’ve read your book, and much like it.”
♠ “Your book has several gripping moments, punctuated by boring half hours.”
♠ “Thank you for sending me your book; I’ll waste no time reading it.”
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