Bokskriveri och bad på 'Marseillan plage'
(Efter en dag på stranden)
I morgon kommer våra kära grannar Marie-Jo och Bruno på besök och jag fasar redan efter att behöva blotta mina skrala franskakunskaper. Det är stimulerande att lyssna på Marie-Jos och Brunos intressanta berättelser om vad de gjort och vad som hänt i trakten på senare tid. Varma och generösa människor gör mig glad!
On 10 July...
... the admission letter our youngest daughter had been waiting for finally arrived!
Her dream was to get into law school in Lund, and on Thursday morning, the news came that she had been accepted to both her first (Lund) and second (Uppsala) choices. Now the project begins: finding somewhere for Eleonora to live before her studies start in August. On 13 July, the lottery begins (fingers crossed).
Thursday turned out to be a windless day, and I started the day by writing. The first part of the trilogy is finished, and part two is underway, with Cia in the lead role.
My problem is that I can see the whole story playing out in front of me, with all the details, character traits and events... but my fingers move much more slowly than my brain. It's frustrating, but hopefully it will sharpen my overly blunt patience.
An excerpt from book no. 1:
"The disciples were still standing in their circle formations, and their tapestries of animal heads looked even more macabre in the daylight the closer they came. The smell of something sour and musty hung like a blanket over the place that had served as a sacrificial site for centuries. She let the ring slip into her leather bag as she noticed that an opening had been created in the circle of bodies in front of the path leading up to the tree, where a winding queue of young people was already waiting for the blood ceremony. Cia tried unsuccessfully to avoid looking at the gnarled, dark tree with the dead bodies dangling in the wind, but her gaze was drawn inexorably there. The tree of darkness and blood hammered her dazed brain as if it had jammed, and she felt a chill in her bones despite the sun shining from a clear blue sky.
A tall, thin young man stood in front of her wearing an overly long tunic and unusually fine leather breeches, which probably meant that he had grown up in a cobbler's workshop. From this angle, she could also see the imposing black castle, which had been decorated for the occasion with bunting and colourful noble families crowding the walls, built in three storeys. The king seemed completely uninterested in the event and sat talking intently with a man dressed in a scarlet shirt, while the queen had her eyes fixed on something she was holding in her lap. Anger rose in Cia as she observed their indifference to this ceremony that was shaking so many lives and risking extinguishing others. She wondered how they would feel if they were forced to stand here on the grass, feeling the proximity of death surrounding them. Vestarr could have been one of those hanging abandoned on the fat, greedy branch, and she twisted around to see if she could see him behind her in the queue that had grown really long, but she jerked back when one of the guards yelled at her to look ahead.
After our writing session on the terrace, we decided to attack the nearest beach: Marseillan Plage. The road there is lined with large palm trees on either side and is full of small shops and cafés along the street.
The contrast between the village and the beach couldn't be greater.
During the summer, the place explodes with people of all shapes and colours – most of them red from sunburn.
People with inflatable rings around their waists, sun hats on their heads, parasols in their hands, bare chests (mostly men), and dogs of all sizes flow between the stalls or head for the beach.
From a water temperature of 25 degrees when we arrived, the temperature had dropped to 19 degrees, which keeps bathers like me above the water's surface. But it gives me the opportunity to read books. Emma, our eldest daughter, has started reading The Journals of Anais Nin (vol 2):
"Anaïs Nin (1903-1977) was born in Paris and aspired at an early age to be a writer. An influential artist and thinker, she wrote primarily fiction until 1964, when her last novel, Collages, was published. She wrote The House of Incest, a prose poem (1936), three novellas collected in The Winter of Artifice (1939), short stories collected in Under a Glass Bell (1944), and a five-volume continuous novel consisting of Ladders to Fire (1946), Children of the Albatross (1947), The Four-Chambered Heart (1950), A Spy in the House of Love (1954), and Seduction of the Minotaur (1961). These novels were collected as Cities of the Interior (1974). She gained commercial and critical success with the publication of the first volume of her diary (1966); to date, fifteen diary volumes have been published. Her most commercially successful books were her erotica published as Delta of Venus (1977) and Little Birds (1979). Today, her books are appearing digitally, most notably with the anthology The Portable Anais Nin (2011)."
After reading volume 1, Emma was eager to read this part as well...
Tomorrow our dear neighbours Marie-Jo and Bruno are coming to visit, and I'm already dreading having to reveal my poor French skills. It's stimulating to listen to Marie-Jo and Bruno's interesting stories about what they've been doing and what's been happening in the neighbourhood lately. Warm and generous people make me happy!




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