Showing posts with label Madam Mayo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Madam Mayo. Show all posts

Monday, January 07, 2019

Literary Travel Writing: Synge, Kapuscinski / Wordpress in 2019

By C.M. Mayo www.cmmayo.com

Warmest wishes to you, dear writerly readers, for a fabulously felicitous and swirlingly creative 2019.

With the new year two brilliant titles have just been added to my list of recommended literary travel memoirs: J.M. Synge's The Aran Islands and Ryszard Kapuscinski's Travels with Herodotus. The former is a classic of the Irish Renaissance published in 1907; the latter, the memoir / meditation of an extraordinary Polish international journalist of covering India, China, Africa, and more in the 1950s and '60s. Both these memoirs were written well before the advent of smartphones and social media and in many ways reading them--and on paper-- felt like... profound relief. I'll have more to say about smartphones, social media, and literary travel writing in next Monday's post.

Speaking of writing, I can scarcely believe it but in 2019 "Madam Mayo," this veritable Methusela of blogdom, will celebrate its 13th year. And it has been blinking & beeping on my "to do" list for nearly all of these many years to take my own advice and get off of this Google platform onto self-hosted Wordpress. [>>CONTINUE READING THIS POST ON THE NEW SELF-HOSTED WORDPRESS BLOG, MADAM-MAYO.COM]

Monday, April 11, 2016

With a Ker-thunking Clash of Gamelan Puggy Hooha: On 10 (TEN!) Years of Blogging

[Newspaper clipping courtesy of www.fodey.com]
The 10 year anniversary of this blog, long looming on the horizon, has arrived with a ker-thunking clash of gamelan hooha. At least in my own mind! And whether you've been with me this long or surfed in a split-second ago, my thanks to you, dear reader.

A shout-out to a few of my blogging friends who've been at this along with me lo these many (or almost these many) years-- you're on my blog roll and in my heart. (I'm waving at you especially, E. Ethelbert Miller and Leslie Pietrzyk.) 


Alas, most of the blogs that started back when have gone silent. What has kept me motivated for 10 years? To get a sense of what it's all about, draw some conclusions, and look to the future, in recent weeks I've been posting year-by-year lists of top original-to-this-blog content. (2015; 2014; 2013; 2012; 2011; 2010; 2009; 2008; 2007; and 2006.) And now, at last, I've arrived at five conclusions and aims going forward.



Five Conclusions and Aims for 2016 & Beyond


1. I started "Madam Mayo" blog in 2006 primarily to serve as a platform to announce and link to my work available in-print or elsewhere on the web. Such frankness may not sound too tewwibly chahming, I know. It's sort of like waving a wand over the top hat, then snatching away the silk handkerchief to reveal... a bean burrito. Not that my writing isn't yummy, if I do say so myself! But c
learly, it would behoove me to jazz up ye olde blog up with, say, more pugs. Oh! Here's a GIF of Uliberto Quetzalpugtl (b. 2014). I asked him if he wanted a bean burrito.





This still seems like a fine idea, I mean, both using my blog to point to my books and other writing available elsewhere, and to bring on the pugs. 






Katherine Dunn says she is "not sure pugs are real dogs, they are mystical little beasts." Here, here. And here's a video of my mystical little beasts Uliberto Quetzalpugtl and his little sister Washingtoniana Quetzalpugalotl:







And here are some of my books, all of which have to do with Mexico, two of which have a lot brown in their covers, and all which do happen to mention Mexican cuisine (but not bean burritos):




(P.S. If you're new to this blog and wondering why my books are all about Mexico, click here for the "secrets and surprises".)

Seriously, though, over the years I have come to see this blog as more than a mere platform. As I wrote on the eighth anniversary of this blog, I think of "Madam Mayo" not so much as a "platform" but as "a net that catches certain special fish-- the readers who care about the things I care to write about." 


2. Over the past decade the "top list-worthy" posts for this blog were the ones I wrote as exercises in clarifying my own thinking. Sometimes I was working out ideas that would appear in my books (as with this book review and this book review and this mash-up on Francisco Madero and Dr. Krumm-Heller); other times such posts were for my workshop students or just for myself

My personal favorite is this post. I reread it now and again, and try to take my own advice. 


So: I aim to continue blogging to clarify my own thinking... and to take my own advice. Hence, herewith another pug GIF! This one is of my writing assistant / aka mystical little beast Picadou (2000-2014) and her doting godfather, Mexican actor and James Dean-channeler Fernando Catorri







3. Several of the posts that made it into my top annual lists were written in a spirit of helpfulness and also, I confess, to save time with email. For example, after three writer friends asked me how I made my Kindles, I posted this; and after three asked me about editing their manuscript, I posted this and this; after three asked me about how to format a book I posted this. Yep, three's the charm. 


The thing is, when three people ask me the same question, I can probably expect more of the same, and when my best answer is a more than a little bit lengthy, opinionated, and technical, the easiest thing for all concerned is for me to send my correspondent the link to my blog post. And of course I am delighted if any one else finds said posts of use and/or interest. Like I said, they were written in a spirit of helpfulness.


Since I've already tackled just about every question I can about writing and publishing, I aim to write more travel articles because the one question I keep getting is, what is there to see and do in Mexico City? (I do wish more people would ask me about Far West Texas.) 


(Why don't I publish more often in magazines and newspapers such as LA Times and WSJ as in days of yore? That's another post.)

4. Over the past decade I started up then phased out guest-blogs that followed what I called my super-simple "5 link format." A chubasco of lotus jpegs upon y'all, dear fabulously talented guest-bloggers! (See the archive of "Madam Mayo" guest-blogs here). But alas, it was too much trouble to seek them out, then edit and format them, so, sorry, dear reader, you will just have to settle for guest-appearances by my mystical little beasts. Here is Uliberto Quetzalpugtl demonstrating the Orphic Journey:







But seriously, albeit not via guest-blog posts, I aim to continue seeking out and featuring other writers whose work I admire. Over the past couple of years, and especially since 2014, I started running infrequent Q & As such as this one with historian Carolina Castillo Crimm and this one with historian Paul Cool and this one with writer and editor Michele Orwin. These are far more work to prepare, yet far more satisfying for me, for the other writer, and for my readers (so I am told). It's hard to say how often I'll feel comfortable doing these Q & As, but my guess is, probably every other month or so. 

(Yes, I am still running my Conversations with Other Writers podcast, but it's an unholy amount of work to edit audio, so for now I plan to post those on a more or less one-podcast-a-year basis.) 


5. Another type of post I started up and then phased out was what I call "cyberflanerie." In 2016 I'll let other blogs, such as Swiss MissBrain Pickings, and Marginal Revolution natter around with that sort of browsing and curating, fascinating fun as that is. My aim for 2016 is to fry the monster.



Five Things You Can Expect to Stay the Same at "Madam Mayo" in 2016


1. Look for posts every Monday, except when not, and oftentimes more often. 

2. Your emailed comments are ever and always welcome. But no, I won't be publishing comments on the blog itself. 
3. Look for occasional Q & As, book reviews and, at year-end, my top 10+ books read list.
4. Look for more posts about Texas, Far West Texas, and literary travel writing-- may this be the year I finish the draft of the book.
5.  My philosophy of blogging, that it is not so much a platform (although, yeah, it is) but "a kind of net, to catch the readers who care about what I care to write about" remains essentially unchanged from a couple of years ago. See Writers' Blogs (and My Blog Blog): Eight Conclusions After 8 years of Blogging, my talk for a panel on writers blogs at the 2014 Associated Writers Conference. 

And finally, know that you have my appreciation, dear reader. 











Your comments are always welcome.



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which goes out, la de da, every once in a while, to sign up, click here.

Monday, March 21, 2016

Top Posts of 2009, Year of The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire

As I approach the 1oth anniversary of this blog I continue going back over the years... So far I've made lists of top posts of 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010 and now... drumroll... 2009. 

2009 was the year that my novel, The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire, was published, and with a coast-to-coast and here-and-there-to-Mexico book tour I pretty much had my hair on-fire. I also posted fairly often over at my research blog for 1860s Mexico, Maximilian ~ Carlota, and while I did post frequently here at "Madam Mayo," it was mainly with snippets of news and links, nothing for a keepsake list. 


I note that in 2009 I continued to post on "Blogs Noted," which I suppose could be of passing interest for some academic sociologist writing, say, An Early History of Blogging. None of those posts make my top list for that year.  And, as you might expect, dear reader, many of said notable blogs have sunk into the netherworlds of Cyberlandia. I mean, they're dead.

And Twitter! Sometime in 2008 or 2009 I started this peculiar thing called "tweeting." I wasn't sure what to make of Twitter-- and here I am in 2016 and I'm still not-- but in 2009 I did write a snippet of an essay it about for Literal, entitled "Twitter Is".

(Follow me @cmmayo1)


Another milestone: In 2009 I was beginning to realize that I could use blog posts (and essays on my webpage) to lighten my email load-- such was my motivation for writing "To All The Many People Who Ask Me to Read Their Manuscript" . Several more how-to posts, qua answers to frequently asked questions,  appear on this blog in subsequent years.


And 2009 was also the year I started podcasting-- a joy of a learning curve I am still climbing in 2016.

And, so I see, I was beginning to ramp up with running guest-blogs (I no longer run them; more about that anon.)


Such are my observations for 2009. Herewith ye olde posts:



December 11, 2009

December 2, 2009

September 10, 2009

(Not much writing in this one, but favorite photos)
July 22, 2009

July 4, 2009

May 25, 2009

March 17, 2009

February 27, 2009

January 2, 2009


+ + + + + + + + + + + + +



Selected Guest-Blogs




Monday, March 14, 2016

Top Posts of 2010

Over the past couple of months, bit by bit, I've been going back into "Madam Mayo's" archives, compiling yearly lists of the top original posts in preparation for this blog's 10th anniversary. The plan is, with the yearly lists in hand, to draw some conclusions about both this blog and blogging as a genre, looking back and looking forward. So far I've posted lists of the top posts for 2015,  2014, 2013, 2012, and 2011. Herewith the list of top posts in 2010.

I note that in 201o so many things we take as fixtures in the digital landscape were still disconcertingly new: book trailers, ebooks, social media, and of course, blogging itself. 

This list is relatively brief, for that year I was crazy-busy promoting my novel, The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire and its Spanish translation (and apropos of that, also posting over at my other blog for researchers of 1860s Mexico, Maximilian ~ Carlota). Alas, 2010 was also the year that my dad passed away.


November 15, 2010

October 28, 2010

August 30, 2010

June 21, 2010

May 21, 2010

May 4, 2010


April 6, 2010


February 14, 2010

+ + + + + + + + + + + + +

Selected Guest-blogs of 2010




Joanna Smith Rakoff on 5 Favorite Books of New York Stories



> Your comments are always welcome. Write to me here.

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Top Posts in 2012 (The Year the World Did Not End and Anyway I Kept on Blogging)

What is this "Madam Mayo" blog all about? Dear reader, it has been nearly 10 years since I started blogging and I am still poking at that question. As "Madam Mayo" evolves, one thing I do know: while the majority of my posts point elsewhere on the web, to my books, articles,  guest-blog posts, and podcasts, I continue to post here every Monday and oftentimes more often, and on many an occasion it is original content. 

Having listed the top original posts for 2015, 2014 and 2013, I hereby continue to mosey on back towards the Big Bang of March 2006 with this list of top posts of original content for 2012.

That year my posts were mainly short and link-rich, in the style of economist Tyler Cowan's "Marginal Revolution" or designer Tina Roth Eisenberg's "Swiss Miss"-- two blogs I continue to follow. I was still running guest-blogs-- a fashion that has since faded among writers with a book to promote (and that would include myself). I also note my deepening fascination with podcasting. Not reflected in this selection is that in 2012 I was occupied with reading and researching Metaphysical Odyssey into the Mexican Revolution: Francisco I. Madero and His Secret Book, Spiritist Manual, and with producing my two podcast series, Conversations with Other Writers and the Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project, about which I did blog and often. 


December 31, 2012

August 15, 2012

May 17, 2012

Monday, January 25, 2016

Madam Mayo's Top Posts in (Yes) 2013

Stay tuned for Marfa Mondays podcast #21, it's almost ready. (And listen in anytime to the 20 posted so far on either podomatic or iTunes here.

Back on December 28, I posted the top posts for 2015 and on January 18, the top posts for 2014. Herewith, with tops posts for 2013, I continue to work my way backwards.


(2013 was heavy on posts about Francisco I. Madero and Spiritism, the subject of my book, Metaphysical Odyssey into the Mexican Revolution, which was published in 2014. In 2015 and 2016 you will find relatively more posts on Far West Texas, the US-Mexico border, and Texas in general-- Far West Texas being the subject of my work in-progress.)




December 30, 2013

December 18, 2013

November 11, 2013

September 25, 2013

September 11, 2013

August 19, 2013

August 12, 2013

July 22, 213

May 20, 2013

April 29, 2013

April 8, 2013

March 13, 2013

March 6, 2013

February 4, 2013

February 1, 2013

>Your comments are always welcome. Write to me here.