planahea,
beautiful list! Would love to have been able to shake your hand on this one.
all the best to you.
Nothing new expect the last line.
Lol...much appreciated, Ponder... It's good to know of your interest in the young people passing through here, perhaps for the first time, who may not have over a thousand posts under their belt or may not know exactly how much you know about Fante's resurgence in popularity through Martin's efforts and the extent that he promoted other writers who are still worth reading... Everyone has a first time... Perhaps I just felt like writing something glowing out of gratitude for Martin, so well understood, of course, that Fante's name isn't mentioned even once in over 31 posts in this particular thread, without a reader having to dig it out of other threads... Someone may pick up on
Dreams... and decide to read it now, and they'll know that Fante was blind when he dictated it to his wife Joyce and it still has the freshness of youth like it was written yesterday - an amazing feat for a sick and dying man who was being carved up by his surgeons to prevent gangrene because of his out-of-control diabetes... My post also led to a posting of the complete list of Black Sparrow authors promoted by Martin, and that goes out to the newcomers as well - I'd forgotten how extensive the list was, thanks to planahea, and I got to personally thank him for it - another gain that might benefit others... I think some of you discount someone else's efforts to give a relative newcomer, perhaps groping in the dark somewhere, looking for some light of inspiration found in unsuspected places - the same chance of discovery. I think it's important to remember one's own roots and never take the first time for granted, and I remain grateful to the sacrifices these great writers made to get their words out at great cost to themselves and the chance to express that gratitude in my own words, even at the risk of boring those who've seen and done it all. They didn't just write words - they were real people...
Anyway, sorry to have bored you and I thank you for the unexpected chance to further expand on why I felt that Fante's last novel,
Dreams From Bunker Hill, is well worth reading, perhaps one of his best. It leaves the wistful impression that he was a
master writer who had
many more novels in him, even at that late stage in life, but he simply ran out of time. And through the extent of Martin's efforts, he is likely to be read and remembered for a long, long time.
Luck, Poptop.