The ides of March are come. (Ceasar)
Ay, Caesar; but not gone. (Soothsayer)
The ides of March are come. (Ceasar)
Ay, Caesar; but not gone. (Soothsayer)
Seven Locks combines history with legend to provide a vivid illustration of what the American Revolution meant . . . Issue 63 –February 2013
Catskills-based novelist Christine Wade reads from her new novel “Seven Locks,” based on local folklore (second half of the clip). She talks about what inspired it, what influenced her and the book’s unusual characters and structure.
Click here for the file (audio/mpeg)
Produced by Ann Forbes Cooper.
Content partner: WGXC.org
Christine comments about the proverb used in the title Silver’s Reviews: scroll to the end of the comments.
More Campaign posts: Seven Locks, The Book—The Movie
For my recent foray into the 1970’s with reads of Just Kids by Patti Smith
and Let the Great World Spin by Collum McCann. See: Writers Read
I applied The Page 69 Test to Seven Locks on the blog spot
The Campaign for the American Reader
which is hosted graciously and thoughtfully by Marshal Zeringue.
See how I applied the test at: Seven Locks page 69
by Elizabeth on her blog Silver’s Reviews
by August Crochet on her blog To Be Read Pile