http://lauries-interviews.blogspot.ca/2013/01/the-city-of-earthly-desire-by-francis.html#more
A description of the writing process that went into The City of Earthly Desire and an a brief excerpt from the novel are now posted at Laurie's fine blog:
http://lauries-interviews.blogspot.ca/2013/01/the-city-of-earthly-desire-by-francis.html#more
0 Comments
Top Ten Books, Francis’ view of writing and an excerpt from The City of Earthy Desires from Francis BergerThis entry was posted on January 25, 2013 by victoriapinder, in Historical and tagged Catcher in the Rye, Charles Dickens, Christmas Carol, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Harry Potter, Holden Caulfield,Leo Tolstoy, William Shakespeare. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment
Top Ten Books And Why – Francis Berger The Bible In these secular times it has become somewhat unfashionable to read “The Good Book.” Nonetheless, even if someone is a hardened atheist, an understanding of the foundation of Western society, especially in the realm of ethics and morality, would not be a detriment. Having said that, it is still the go-to source for great and often archetypal stories. The Greek Myths – Robert Graves Perhaps the most accessible and careful retelling of the myths that serve as the prototypes for so many later narratives. Hamlet – William Shakespeare To be or not to be . . . need anything more be said? Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoevsky All the tension of a whodunit enveloped in the moral labyrinth of a why-did-he-do-it. More than anyone, Dostoevsky screams to us from the rooftops of the dangers of a world “where everything is permitted.” War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy Most people refuse to read this novel for its sheer bulk alone. Yet, interestingly enough, many of those same people see nothing wrong with reading several thousand pages of the Harry Potter series. If length alone does not scare most readers off, the complexity of the plot and the many characters who people it do. In today’s age, where all kinds of supplementary material can be found online with a few pushes of some buttons, there is no excuse for anyone to avoid Tolstoy’s masterpiece. Lost Illusions – Honore de Balzac Ever know anyone who came from humble beginnings and wanted to make it big in New York City or Hollywood? Were you ever one of those people yourself? Perhaps you still are? Fascinated by American Idol? Forget all that. Balzac delves into the lustful furnaces of human ambition to discover what steel society is really tempered from. Moby Dick – Herman Melville The greatest metaphysical story ever composed, complete with Shakespearean syntax and the towering figure of Captain Ahab, one of the most compelling characters ever created. The Gulag Archipelago – Alexander Solzhenitsyn In order to create a utopia, one first needs a sewer system. A damning document of communism and its inherent cruelty. A warning to all future attempts at creating heaven on earth. A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens The ultimate redemption story. A timeless classic and, for Dickens, refreshingly brief in its telling. The Catcher in the Rye – J.D. Salinger Salinger does such a masterful job capturing the narrative voice of Holden Caulfield the reader cannot help but be swept away in the all the angst and anger. I also tip my hat to the idea that Salinger steadfastly refused to have anyone make a film adaptation of his novel. Let’s all hope Catcher never makes it to “a theater near you.” Victoria’s Response: I see book lists all the time, and this screams to me smart, literary. Former attorney and now high school AP economics teacher here. The Bible is awesome. I recommend it to anyone and then go a step further. Read how people have looked at them through the years and through multiple religions. To me Edith Hamilton wrote the text book on myths. And there is so much to be said of Hamlet. It’s a great story, and for people who don’t know the Lion King is Disney’s reinterpretation of the classic. It’s different, but Hamlet is interesting. (Side note to females: Never kill yourself because a guy doesn’t want you. Ophelia’s an idiot. Move on.) Moby Dick and a Christmas Carol… awesome, but I like these stories. Perhaps one day though a man will explain to me in words I care to hear why Crime and Punishment, War and Peace or a Catcher in the Ryeare on these lists. If I hate the book, like I hate the Great Gatsby, no amount of telling me why I’m wrong works. I’m missing the emotional connection. Just my two cents and not worth even that much. Now teacher, let’s hear your process. My Writing Process – Francis Berger Since The City of Earthly Desire is my first novel, I can only describe the writing process that went into its creation. This novel took a long time to write; the various phases of the process mirrored the changing seasons of the year: spring was for planting and nurturing, summer was for creation and manifesting, fall was for reaping and harvesting, and winter was for analysis and consideration. Of course, my writing seasons were not as neatly divided as seasons during the year are. My writing spring, for example, dragged on for far longer than three months, whereas my writing summer barely lasted two months. Still, the notion of the seasons and the different responsibilities each one brings can still be validly applied to the writing of the book. Spring For my novel The City of Earthly Desire, spring lasted almost a year. I had a notion I had to write a novel about post-communist Hungary and its burgeoning adult entertainment industry, but it took me a long time to conjure up the characters and assemble the story. I didn’t burden myself with deadlines during this phase. Nor did I pressure myself in any way. I merely opened myself up to ideas and let them take me where they would. Once I had a vague outline for a story, I began research in order to broaden, deepen or, in a worst-case scenario, destroy the ideas that had come to me. Summer Because I am a teacher, I have two months off during the summer and I dedicated this time solely to the first draft. Unlike the imagining, conjuring, researching, and assembling, I found it impossible to parcel up my time when it came to the actual writing of the narrative. When I finally get down to writing, I cannot have other distractions. My day began very early in the morning and would often not end until very late at night. By the end of August, I had completed the first draft. Fall With the first draft complete, I could return to dividing up my focus on the book with my other responsibilities. I spent five or six months reading and revising what I had written. This turned out to be much tougher than I had anticipated and the piecemeal nature of the work I did during this time helped me focus on the specifics rather than on the general. Winter When the revisions were complete, I dedicated two or three months simply to proofreading and editing. Considering the length of the novel – over 200,000 words, this was no small task. Overall, I found this approach to be effective and I am certain I will utilize it again in the future. Victoria’s response: Francis, you are brave. My first book was rejected everywhere. I have a pile of 100 plus rejections. Fun times to be told… no, no, no. I am also pointing out now to every reader, your child’s teacher does not get paid over the summer. We have ten month jobs, not twelve months. To take the time to write and not get another job, watching your child at a summer camp somewhere, is a HUGE commitment. In this day and age where it’s bash the teacher time, I do like to point out the sacrifice. I made more money working in engineering and then later on in law as a lawyer. Most teacher do not have time to write like this. Sorry Francis for the statement, but people always seem to forget the money issue, unless you are fabulously wealthy beyond belief. I know a teacher. Not me, but I know a guy. 200000 words is a HUGE, HUGE book. The idea behind it sounds interesting, and all in all your story sounds pretty darn intense actually. I have a feeling you’re an intense guy and probably a great teacher. You’re showing your passion with this book, and the excerpt itself sounds smart, engaging, and interesting. We’re very different in style, approach, and everything else, but I love talking to people with deep opinions and commitment. All in all, I’m impressed. Historical Fiction / General Fiction Title: The City of Earthly Desire Author: Francis Berger Date Published: 9/26/12 A gripping story of ambition, lust, seduction, and betrayal . . . After the communists destroy his dream of becoming a recognized painter, Reinhardt Drixler escapes Hungary and moves to America to further his artistic ambitions and provide a better future for his young family. Twenty-five years later, his son Béla falls in love with Suzy Kiss, an alluring striptease dancer whose interest inBéla can be summarized in two words: green card. When Suzy is mysteriously deported, a devastated Béla must make a decision – should he stay in New York and continue with the noble artistic ambitions his father instilled in him, or should he follow his heart to Hungary and explore the enticing and risqué opportunities blossoming in Budapest after the collapse of communism? Excerpt: PART ONE: WHITE STAG, RED STAR Once there was or once there was not a hungry, frightened Danube-Swabian woman who gave birth to a boy in a forest. The woman was hungry because for three days she had eaten nothing but stale crusts of bread; she was frightened because the Russian soldiers who had occupied her village showed no signs of wanting to leave. The woman feared she would give birth in the small, dilapidated hunting cabin to which she had fled with twenty of her fellow villagers before the soldiers arrived. The villagers hiding in the cabin with the pregnant young woman prayed the soldiers would be gone before the labor pains began, but their prayers went unanswered – the soldiers were still in the village when the contractions started. The hungry, frightened Danube-Swabian woman began to moan and wail. To muffle the noise, the young woman’s mother-in-law placed a rolled up handkerchief into her daughter-in-law’s mouth. The men took the children and stepped outside. It was a cold early morning in November. A thin layer of sticky snow blanketed the forest. The Russian soldiers occupying the village of Altfreidorf were barely a kilometer away. “What happens when the child comes out? You can’t slip a handkerchief into its mouth and tell it to be quiet!” the blacksmith said as he stood outside with the other villagers. The men around him nodded, furrowed their brows, and scanned the columns of oak trees for any sign of the soldiers. The hours passed slowly. No sounds came from the cabin. The villagers outside listened to the constant rumblings of their empty stomachs. The only other sound that punctured the relative silence of the forest was the cawing of unseen crows. In the late afternoon, just as the diffused daylight from the overcast sky began to fade, the cabin door creaked open and Anna Drixler, the young woman’s mother-in-law, stepped out into the snow wiping the jackknife she had used to cut the umbilical cord. “It’s a boy,” she said. “Gertrude has named him Reinhardt.” “It’s done? We didn’t hear a thing,” the astonished blacksmith whispered. “What can I say? He’s an intelligent lad,” Anna Drixler said. She folded up the jackknife and slipped it into her apron pocket. “As soon as he came out, we all told him he had to be quiet, and he understood.” The blacksmith smiled and withdrew a flask of pálinka from his inner coat pocket. He offered it to the new grandmother, but Anna Drixler politely refused. The blacksmith shrugged, raised the flask into the air before him as if proposing a toast, then took a quick drink. He was about to pass the flask to the priest when the sound of a branch snapping a short distance away made him stop. Everyone outside the cabin froze and listened. Far away, an angry crow cawed, then all was quiet again. The villagers remained as motionless as statues, straining their ears to pinpoint the location of the snapping branch. When no further noise came, the villagers’ tense expressions relaxed, and they began to move once more. As soon as they did, another branch snapped. The villagers froze again. A few of them pointed to a tangled copse of oak saplings and elderberry bushes near the cabin. Before any of them had the chance to discern what the source of the noise might be, a large stag burst forth from the brush and came to a halt in the clearing before the cabin. Had it been a common deer, the kind the villagers sometimes saw in the wooded, rolling undulations of the Mecsek hills surrounding Altfreidorf, the appearance of the animal would have been passed off with a chuckle or a shrug, but the buck standing before them was no common deer. To begin with, it was enormous – nearly twice the size of any they had ever seen – and it proudly displayed antlers so intricate, ornate, and majestic they rivaled the finest candelabra adorning the palaces of kings. But what truly made the beast spectacular was its coat, which was as white as the snow cloaking the forest floor. For the villagers, the appearance of the white stag was magical; a myth come to life right before their eyes. They stared at it in awe. The sight of the entire Red Army charging toward them led by Stalin himself would not have impressed them as much. The beast looked at the villagers with its large black eyes and snorted a series of misty exhalations. After a moment, it shifted its gaze to the cabin. It stared at the cabin for a while as if in a trance, then, without warning, it scraped the snowy ground with its monstrous left hoof, snorted again, reared up on its hind legs and, with one terrific bound, leaped back into the thicket, and disappeared from view. “I thought those things only existed in fairy tales,” one of the men said after a minute had passed, his voice puncturing the silence the white stag had left. “It’s a sign!” the blacksmith said. “It’s a sign from God!” the priest said. He snatched the flask from the blacksmith’s hand, took a long drink, wiped his mouth with his coat sleeve, and then added, “A blessing! Think of St. Eustace. Think of St. Hubertus.” He turned to Anna Drixler. “Your grandson has been blessed!” Anna Drixler and the other villagers bowed their heads and crossed themselves as the diminishing light of the late afternoon darkened the forest around them. When they filed back into the cabin, they all stared at the newborn infant Gertrude cradled in her arms as she lay in the corner upon one of the cabin’s two beds. The women quickly strung up a makeshift curtain to afford the new mother and child some privacy. After the curtain – made of aprons and undershirts tied together – was up, Gertrude, weak, exhausted, throbbing from the pain of her delivery, leaned close to her mother-in-law and asked why the villagers had all looked at her and her son so oddly. Anna Drixler quietly described the appearance of the white stag. “Father Ebner said your son has been blessed by God.” Gertrude did not know how to respond. She moved her baby to her breast and leaned her head on Anna Drixler’s shoulder. In the end, all she could think to say was, “I’m hungry.” The next day before dawn, two men from the cabin carefully made their way down to the edge of the forest to survey the village. They returned after dawn and informed their fellow villagers that the Russian soldiers had left Altfreidorf. The priest insisted there was a divine connection between the white stag’s appearance and the soldiers’ departure. “A blessing! A sign from God!” he repeated over and over again. Many of the villagers did not care if the stag’s appearance had any direct correlation to the soldiers’ departure – they were simply relieved the soldiers were gone. They waited in the cabin for a few hours just to be safe, then made their way back to Altfreidorf, trickling down the wooded hillside like a human rivulet. Villagers who had hidden in other parts of the forest also returned. For a few brief moments, there was happiness – as if the white stag had blessed them all just as the priest claimed. But when they set foot on the village’s only road and listened to the eerie silence, their joy dispersed in the cold winter air. Most of the hundred souls who had refused or had been unable to flee the village had disappeared. Among the missing was Anna Drixler’s husband, Johann Drixler, the patriarch of the family who had defiantly chosen to remain in the village to protect his house and property from the soldiers. “They marched him away. They took them all,” Mrs. Schwartz, an octogenarian who was blind in one eye lamented. Before she broke down in tears, she pointed her skeletal finger at the ten elderly villagers and pack of small children nearby. “They left only us.” It was true – the soldiers had left the very young and the very old, but very little else. They had ransacked every house. The cold cellars were empty; the pantries, pilfered; the wine barrels, drained. The animals had become dried pools of blood and heaps of bone and fur. Jewelry, clothing, footwear, tools, silverware, paintings, and countless other items had vanished. The most commonly looted items were timepieces. Reinhardt Drixler’s first days of life were measured out by hunger and the sun’s movement across the sky. Francis Berger Francis Berger was born in New York City in 1971. Recently, he completed a six year stretch as a high school teacher in the Bronxand Queens in New York City. He has published some short stories, most notably in The Toronto Star. The City of Earthly Desire is his first novel. He currently lives near Toronto, Canada with his wife and young son. http://francisberger.weebly.com/ http://francisberger.weebly.com/contact.html Buy Links http://www.amazon.com/City-Earthly-Desire-Francis-Berger/dp/1478387882/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1354673740&sr=8-1&keywords=the+city+of+earthly+desire http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-city-of-earthly-desire-francis-berger/1113052991?ean=9781478387886 Virtual Book Tour January 7 – February 4 January 7 – Reading Addiction Blog Tours – Meet and Greet January 8 - Lov Liv Life Reviews - Guest Post/PROMO January 12 - My Devotional Thoughts - Guest Post/PROMO January 14 - Honesty Variety Books - Review/Guest Post January 18 – My Reading Addiction – Review January 23 - Must Read Faster - Review/Guest Post January 25 - Love in a Book - Guest Post/PROMO January 26 - Laurie’s Thoughts and Reviews - Interview/PROMO January 29 – Author Ever Leigh – Review February 1 – My Cozie Corner- Review February 2 - Andi’s Book Reviews - Interview/PROMO February 4 - Books For Me - Review
Thank you Melissa at "Must Read Faster" for this review of the novel!
This book had me and my attention from the start. It's a sweeping story that is just beautifully written. I honestly cannot pinpoint any flaw. The size of this book intimidated me at first, but once you start reading you do NOT want to stop. The characters are flawed but still beautiful in their own way. This is a story that will haunt you well after you have finished. I loved it. I read it in a day and a half, and the half was because I FORCED myself to go to bed and woke up earlier the next morning to finish! That should tell you something, because I am in LOVE with my sleep. Great writing, great characters, and in depth story development..read this book! Got it!? You can visit Melissa's fine book blog by clicking the link below. A review of The City of Earthly Desire is now up on the blog "My Reading Addiction." Thanks for the kind words, Cami!
http://myaddictionisreading.blogspot.ca/2013/01/blog-tour-city-of-earthly-desire-by.html The other day someone asked me if I had based the character of Suzy Kiss from The City of Earthly Desire on anyone. In terms of physical appearance, I modeled Suzy Kiss after the erotic actress Suzie Diamond (the long dark hair, blue eyes, etc.) As for the rest of Suzy Kiss, that is all fiction. Though I have never met her, I imagine Suzie Diamond is a much nicer person than Suzy Kiss!
Strangely enough, the photo below also inspired 'the palace in the sky' apartment the crime boss Vilinovich gives Suzy and Bela and the eventual taunting of the lights in the Buda Hills that drive Suzy to the edge of despair. Well, here comes the first real wave of self-promotion! I am pleased to announce Reading Addiction Blog Tours will host a month-long virtual book tour of The City of Earthly Desire beginning January 7. The tour will feature guest posts, interviews, and book reviews. Clink the tab below for dates and details. I am really looking forward to this! It should be a lot of fun!
This is a review of a collection of poems in Hungarian. The great Hungarian poet Attila József once stated that “the past must be acknowledged.” In essence, this is what A Magyar Magány by Tóth Tibor Albert tries to do. In the first book of this three book collection, the poet examines his heritage and the long, turbulent history of the small central European country from which he hails, a country not many outside its borders (or what had at some time been its borders) know much about, or care to know much about. So in many ways, these are poems about the past. The trouble with the past is this – it is contentious. And nowhere is this truer than in Hungary, especially today. Twenty-three years after the collapse of the communist regime and the deluge of “freedom, liberalism, and democracy”, most contemporary Hungarians can be solidly divided into two opposing camps: the red and the white. (This is a rather crude division that in noway addresses the existing complexities of the country, but for the purposes of ideological analysis, this model should work.) The reds are the socialists and liberals and all those who wholeheartedly embrace everything socialism and liberalism promulgates: multiculturalism, individual rights, secularism, globalization, etc. The whites are the traditionalists and nationalists and all those who celebrate everything traditionalism and nationalism espouses: family values, heritage, religion, and protectionism. To the reds, to steal a phrase from Princeton Professor Kim Lane Scheppele, who is strongly entrenched in the red camp, the whites are “primitive, parochial, petty, punitive, and increasingly paranoid.” The reds point to the rise of right-wing political parties like Jobbik and sound the alarm bells of encroaching fascism. The whites, on the other hand, lament the reds' disregard for Hungarian tradition and heritage. The reds, they claim, are internationalists who, either accidentally or as part of some grand scheme, are intent on destroying the Hungarian nation through such tools as lax immigration policies, foreign speculation, financial exploitation, etc. On the surface, this sounds like a typical liberal/conservative political conflict, but in Hungary, nothing is typical. One need only see the history of the country's past ten years to understand that, in many ways, the past still needs to be acknowledged. The question is – whose past? The current Fidesz government leans auspiciously more toward the side of the whites. Their populist stance and insistence on a new constitution both make an attempt to overcome more than a half-century of communist oppression and exploitation by reinstating or reinforcing traditionalist values. Unfortunately for Fidesz, the rest of the Western world, the EU and the United States included, leans more toward the red side. A savage media battle has raged ever since Fidesz was ushered into power. The result? Well, if one were to judge Hungary by Western media sources alone, one would be inclined to think Hungary has become a hotbed of neo-fascism and that the entire country is barreling unstoppably toward some hellish form of pre-second world war autocracy. Seen in this light, there is a certain loneliness in the Hungarian, as Mr. Tóth's book of poems suggests, though I would be more apt to substitute the words solitude, alienation, or perhaps even forlornness for loneliness. Enough of the preamble . . . let's get to the poems. In the first book in this three book collection, the poet, whom I would place on the white side of the field in terms of ideological beliefs, often reaches back through ten centuries of Magyar history as he reminds the reader and, perhaps even himself, that his past is a rich one, peopled with noble figures, heroic deeds, dogged determination, and incredible endurance. The poems are a bittersweet blend of praise and criticism, celebration and scorn, pity and disgust. Adding to the overall bittersweet tone of the poems is the poet's own ironic self-exile from home – the verses were written mostly in the United States and, in terms of perspective, come off like a series of out-of-body experiences . . . that feeling of being outside of yourself and watching yourself in daily life yet being utterly powerless to influence any course of action your body chooses to do. There is a rich use of symbolism and allusion in all of the poems in this collection, most of them Magyar in nature and origin. At times, I found them fresh and profound, like experiencing an old forgotten flavor or visiting a place of deep nostalgic value; other times, I found them esoteric and obscure and overwhelming to the point of being overbearing. (Are there Hungarians alive today who truly feel a deep personal, nay, spiritual affinity with the Huns or Árpád that goes beyond words or the scope of historical narrative? Perhaps there are. I certainly am not one of them, though I do appreciate the significance of the history behind them.) Maybe this is the essence of the Hungarian loneliness/alienation/forlornness? Perhaps there is a point where outsiders, or quasi-outsiders like myself, cannot cross over, cannot understand. One thing is for certain, historical considerations aside, the poet's whispered warnings of the dangers his country has faced and continues to face are valid warnings to all, Hungarian and non-Hungarian alike, for they strike at the core of what it means to be a human being today. The second book (rough English translation I Dream of Gold) deals with more contemporary themes: working and living in a foreign country, the nature of society, dreams of success; whereas the last book when "kisses are not enough" deals primarily with love. I found the second book both insightful and entertaining, while the third book, though well-written and moving, was a little too subjective for my taste. (I have a personal aversion to reading subjective romantic poetry, but others who enjoy it are sure to appreciate the vignette poems and the confessions they contain.) Overall, this is a fine collection of poems written in Hungarian – I hope it finds its respective audience. My only complaint is there is no English version, so I cannot recommend it to my non-Magyar speaking friends. Is an English translation a future possibility? |
Blog and Comments
Blog posts tend to be spontaneous, unpolished, first draft entries ranging from the insightful and periodically profound to the poorly-argued and occasionally disparaging. Comments are moderated. Please use your name or a pseudonym in comments. Emails welcome: f er en c ber g er (at) h otm ail (dot) co m Blogs/Sites I Read
Bruce Charlton's Notions Meeting the Masters Trees and Triads From The Narrow Desert New World Island New World Island YouTube Synlogos ✞ Aggregator Adam Piggott The Orthosphere nicholasberdyaev Archives
December 2024
|