Showing posts with label podcasts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label podcasts. Show all posts

Monday, May 01, 2017

Cyberflanerie: Granola Shotgun on "The Springfield Strategy," Kunstler Interviews Orlov, Rachel Laudan on the Mexico-Islamic Connection, RALPH Mag & More

Granola Shotgun on "The Springfield Strategy"
A few months back I started following Granola Shotgun by "Johnny," a self-described "amateur architecture buff a with a passionate interest in how we all live and occupy the landscape."  So far his posts have been consistently informative and thought-provoking. This recent one on what Johnny terms "The Springfield Strategy" struck my gong on multiple levels: the examples of taking major life-enhancing opportunities others miss; pattern integrity versus pattern corruption / decay; and finally the views of Springfield, Massachusetts itself. (Believe it or not, Springfield makes a cameo in my book in-progress on Far West Texas. Back in ye olde day, Springfield, sprung from the Agawam Plantation on the Connecticut River, pioneer settlement of my just-missed-the-Mayflower ancestor, was the original bleeding edge of the Wild West.)


amazon
A fascinating podcast: James Howard Kunstler interviews Dmitry Orlov on his book, Shrinking the Technosphere.

Orlov's Shrinking the Technosphere is brilliant... but I remain mystified as to why he makes no mention of the works of Kevin Kelly--who also discusses the Unabomber at length in the also brilliant What Technology Wants-- nor any reference to the ideas of psychonaut John C. Lilly.

Orlov now blogs his lengthy, occasionally consternating, always surprising, information rich, often hilarious, and beautifully written essays behind a Patreon paywall-- not a Trumpesque impediment; a buck a month gets you in. But caveat emptor: Orlov can get waaaaay-out metaphysical-- albeit not as far into outer asteroid-belt orbits as John C. Lilly--or, not yet, anyway.


Food historian Rachael Laudan delves deeper into the Mexico-Islamic Connection
(Having blasted apart the story of mole, which my Mexican husband is still recovering from, she's now talking about chicken.)

> See also Laudan's post on When Is the Easter Bunny Not a Bunny? (most assuredly not for vegetarians).


So having spotted the review of Dr. Thoman Cowan's Human Heart, Cosmic Heart, I dashed off an email to Lolita Lark, editor of RALPH mag and by response, ended up with a whole page there, including links to RALPH mag's reviews of my books. Good thing my ego has a tether! P.S. I haven't scrounged up any emu oil pills yet, but yes, I am rereading Cowan. And I'm all for Dr. Cowan's vegetable powders.

Artist and travel writer Jim Johnston looks at the Pinta la Revolución show at Bellas Artes for his Mexico City blog.
(I saw that show myself back in March, highly recommended.)

Not far from my recent stomping grounds in El Paso, landscape architect David Cristiani hikes Tortugas Mountain looking for cacti.

Poet and translator Patricia Dubrava on The Little Engine That Could.

David Allen's GTD blog on Making Use of Weird Windows of Time

How Tim Ferriss Became the Oprah of Audio. An insightful interview with the maestro of mass by Ryan Holiday for the Observer.

(And what of my podcasts, you might be wondering? Stay tuned. Marfa Mondays Podcast #21, which goes to Bracketville, Texas, will be posted shortly. I guess I could call it-- taking inspiritation from Greg Gibson's upcoming "bookectomy"--a podcastectomy. I have been working on it for too ridiculously long a time.)

And finally, just because, here in Mexico City is my writing assistant, Uli Quetzalpugtl, lifting his nose to the glory of the last of the jacaranda blossoms for this year.

Uli Quetzalpugtl with the Jacaranda, Mexico City, 2017.
Photo: C.M. Mayo

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




Monday, February 06, 2017

Texas Institute of Letters


I am honored to announce that I have been elected to the Texas Institute of Letters. Herewith the announcement on the TIL websitenew members for 2017 include a batch of very accomplished writers. On the website, whoo hoo, there's my name next to Larry McMurtry's! And there are Cormac McCarthy, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sergio Troncoso... it's a long list. 

Funny, Larry McMurtry has been on my mind of late because first, after I caught the bug for an Hermes 3000 typewriter,  I found out that he used (uses?) one; second, for an essay I'm writing about books I read his memoir, Books— an experience I would liken to the perfect BLT on the perfect afternoon. 

What's my connection with Texas? I was born in El Paso, and I am writing about that in a book in-progress on Far West Texas. Culturally I would describe myself as pre-Silicon Valley (I grew up there, but left before it became what it is today) and with the overlay of Chilangolandia, that is, Mexico City, where I have lived for most of my life. 

>> About that book in-progress on Far West Texas: Listen in any time to the podcasts apropos of this project here. Twenty podcasts have been posted to date; I will do 4 more to round it off at 24 podcasts. Stay tuned. The ridiculously delayed podcast about my visit to Bracketville is taking shape....

In case you missed them, here are a few of my Far West Texas podcasts:

PITMASTER ISRAEL CAMPOS IN PECOS
Listen here.

LISA FERNANDES, BARREL RACER AT THE PECOS RODEO
Listen here.

TREMENDOUS FORMS: 
PAUL CHAPLO ON FINDING COMPOSITION IN THE LANDSCAPE
Listen here.

GREG WILLIAMS ON THE ROCK ART OF THE LOWER PECOS CANYONLANDS
Listen here.



And a few of my recent book reviews on Texas topics:

The Comanche Empire
by Pekka Hämäläinen
Reviewed for Madam Mayo blog

Nut Country: Right-wing Dallas and the Birth of the Southern Strategy
by Edward H. Miller
Reviewed for Washington Independent Review of Books

The Pecan: A History of America's Native Nut 
by James McWilliams
Reviewed for Madam Mayo blog

Lone Star Nation: How Texas Will Transform America
by Richard Parker
For Madam Mayo blog

> All book reviews here.


P.S. If you're in the Washington DC area and find this of interest, I will be teaching a one day only workshop on literary travel writing at the Writer's Center on Saturday April 22 10 AM to 1 PM in Bethesda. More info about that workshop here.

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







Monday, September 12, 2016

Q & A at Madam Mayo Redux

This week I've been traveling in Far West TexasMarfa Mondays podcasts to resume shortly. Herewith, dear reader, may you find some fascinating Q & As-- some on Far West Texas, some not-- previously posted, but that you might have missed:

Shelley Armitage on Walking the Llano: A Texas Memoir of Place

Carolina Castillo Crimm on De Leon: A Tejano Family History

Paul Cool on The Salt Warriors

John Kachuba on The Savage Apostle

Karen Benke on Write Back Soon!

Sonja D. Williams on Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio, and Freedom

Roger Greenwald on Translating Poet Gunnar Harding

Stephan A. Hermann on Francisco I. Madero as Medium

Michele Orwin, Founder of Bacon Press Books, on Independent Publishing

Alan Rojas Orzechowski on Diego Rivera's Professor, Santiago Rebull


Plus you can find oodles more interviews on my Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project: Exploring Marfa, Texas & Environs in 24 Podcasts and my occasional series Conversations with Other Writers. Just to mention three faves:


Marfa Mondays # 9 Mary Baxter on Painting the Big Bend
Marfa Mondays #13 John Tutino on Looking at Mexico in New Ways
Conversations with Other Writers #7 Rose Mary Salum on Making Connections with Literature and Art

And if you want to read or listen to interviews with me about my books, you can find them all right here

Many readers have been asking me about my current book in-progress. No, it is not all interviews, but it will include excerpts from numerous interviews, very similar in style to my previous travel memoir, Miraculous Air: Journey of a Thousand Miles through Baja California, the Other Mexico.










= Related Content = 



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, February 01, 2016

February 2016 Newsletter: Podcasts, San Miguel Writing Conference, Maximilian and Carlota & etc


I have just sent out my February newsletter via the bananatastic Mailchimp.com. (One of the many things I like about Mailchimp.com: When you hit the "send" button you get the chimpy "high five.") 

> You can read my news about both super crunchy and brief podcasts, events and workshops, and more, right here

> If you'd like to get the next emailed newsletter, which will probably go out in March or early April, you are most welcome to sign up right here

I send out my newsletter every other month-ish, very ish, and do aim to make them packed with clickable wonders. 

> As always, your comments are welcome. Write to me here.









Wednesday, January 27, 2016

A Conversation with Solveig Eggerz, Author of the Novel Seal Woman

The complete transcript is now available of my podcast conversation with Solveig Eggerz about Seal Woman, her vividly poetic historical novel of Iceland. I highly recommend her novel, and am heartened to see that since our conversation, Seal Woman has been reissued in a handsome new edition from Unbridled Books.

A couple of quotes from the conversation:



"Iceland is really just the setting. For me, there's this particular phenomenon that's going on and it could have occurred anywhere, really. It's the notion of carrying within you everything that has happened to you in the past, and bringing it into a new environment, and then having to deal with your daily life while being haunted by everything that you're carrying around inside of you. Now, since publishing this here and doing a lot of book talks here in this country, I have sort of learned what the story is about in psychological terms because people have told me that they, too, have experienced this notion of carrying something around inside you. I have people telling me how they carry Iowa inside themselves all their lives, even though they never were in Iowa, but their mothers were."
"[W]riting a novel is way more important than publishing a novel. [Laughs] I'm working on a third novel now and just solving the riddle of how these characters interact and how this is all going to work out, that is my big task. Publishing?... I don't think people should be writing with publishing in mind. If you only have publishing in mind, then you're going to be losing a lot of the experience of really producing something that you are happy with yourself. The gap between these two is huge." 

You can also listen in anytime to the podcast of this conversation here. 

> More podcasts and transcripts from my Conversations with Other Writers are hereThe latest in this occasional series is my conversation with historian M.M. McAllen about her magnifcent narrative history of 1860s Mexico, Maximilian and Carlota. A transcript of that podcast will be available shortly. Other podcasts in this series include conversations with Rose Mary Salum, Sergio Troncoso, Sara Mansfield Taber, Michael K. Schuessler, and Edward Swift.

Meanwhile, I am working on podcast #21 in the projected 24 podcast series, Marfa Mondays
, exploring Marfa, Texas and environs, which is apropos of my book in-progress about the Trans-Pecos. Listen in to any one or all of those 20 "Marfa Mondays" podcasts here

P.S. My every-other-monthly-ish newsletter with updates on podcasts, publications and upcoming workshops is going out to subscribers soon. I welcome you to sign up here. It's an automatic opt-in /opt-out anytime via mailchimp.com, and yes, it is free.



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















Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Podcasting for Writers: To Commit or Not (Or Vaguely?)

(This is a guest-blog for Women Writing the West.)


Now that I'm working on my 54th podcast, I'll admit, I love podcasting almost as much as writing. Starting back in 2009 I've podcasted many of my lectures, readings, and other events for my books, plus I created and continue to host two podcast series, "Marfa Mondays" and "Conversations with Other Writers." It remains just as awesome to me now as it was with my first podcast that, whether rich or struggling, famous or new, we writers can project our voices instantly all over the world, while making them available to listeners at any time.



But first, what is a podcast? I often say it's an online radio show. But the truth is, it's a much wilder bouquet of possibilities.



A "podcast" is just an online audio (and, less commonly, video) file. It could be of a deeply probing interview; of a bunch of kids singing "Kumbaya"; or of say, you reading your epic poem about belly dancing in the grocery store. It could be a single file—your reading at your local bookstore on March 17, 2015, or, say, a radio show-style series of interviews with fellow horror novelists, one posted each Saturday upon the toll of midnight. 


There may be an eye-crossing number of ways to categorize these things, but if you're writer thinking about getting started with podcasting, I would suggest that you first clearly identify the level of commitment you are willing to make to your listeners who— lets hope—are going to be eager for your next podcast.

 
My podcasting assistant checks out the
PORTA-BOOTH
1. No Commitment 

This would be a single, stand-alone podcast. Such is my first, which is simply a recording I made of my lecture I gave at the Library of Congress back in 2009 about the research behind my novel, The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire.

> Listen in to my lecture for the Library of Congress here.


2. Intentionally Vague Commitment
I call my podcast series "Conversations with Other Writers" an "occasional series" because, as I state on the webpage, I post these "whenever the literary spirits move me and the planets align." Right now, that's about once a year... maybe. By the way, I just posted the eighth podcast in this series, a conversation with historian M.M. McAllen about a mind-blogglingly transnational period in Mexican history.

>Listen in to this Conversation with M.M. McAllen here.


3. Meaningful but Capped Commitment
This would be my "Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project," 24 podcasts to run from January 2012 – December 2013, apropos of my book in-progress on Far West Texas. Not all but most of these are of interviews, and although I have posted 20 so far, my self-imposed deadline of December 2013 did not hold, alas. For reasons too complex to go into here, in the middle of this project, I went and wrote a biography. And that's OK. I may be slow, but with only four more podcasts to go, I'll get there soon enough! 


> Listen in to all 20—so far— of the "Marfa Mondays" podcasts here.



4. High Commitment
This would involve high production values, a regular, strictly respected, and ongoing schedule, and surely necessitate and perhaps even command fees from listeners by way of "memberships." Into this last straight jacket of a category I quake to venture, for I really do love writing more than I love podcasting.


P.S. I'll be giving the mini-workshop on podcasting for writers in English y también un taller en español at the San Miguel Writers Conference this February. Check my workshop schedule here.

+ + + 


C.M. Mayo’s books include Metaphysical Odyssey into the Mexican Revolution, which won the 2015 National Indie Excellence Award for History, and the novel The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire, named a Library Journal Best Book of 2009. An avid podcaster since 2009, she is also the author of the ebook, Podcasting for Writers & Other Creative Entrepreneurs. www.cmmayo.com



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





Monday, January 04, 2016

A Conversation with M.M. McAllen about MAXIMILIAN AND CARLOTA: EUROPE'S LAST EMPIRE IN MEXICO

Happy New Year! Just posted: A Conversation with M.M. McAllen, which is number 8 in my occasional podcast series "Conversations with Other Writers" about her magnificent narrative history Maximilian and Carlota: Europe's Last Empire in Mexico, published by Trinity University Press in 2014.

My blurb: 

"A deeply researched book about a period of Mexican history that, while vital for understanding modern Mexico and its relations with the United States and Europe, is of perhaps unparalleled cultural, political, and military complexity for such a short period."

William H. Beezeley, coeditor of The Oxford History of Mexico says:

"A thorough, complete history of Mexico's second empire. The author leaves nothing untouched."

And Luis Alberto Urrea says:

"M.M. McAllen has written an important book that not only reads like a novel of fantastic inventions but is key to understanding the soul of Mexico today."

> Listen in to this podcast any time here.

I'll be posting a complete transcript shortly.

>Visit M.M. McAllen at her website www.mmmcallen.com

> Listen in to all the other Conversations with Other Writers and/or read their transcripts here.

Yes, I am still doing the Marfa Mondays Podcasting project, apropos of my book in-progress, World Waiting for a Dream: A Turn in Far West Texas. Stay tuned for podcast #21 in the 24 podcast series.





(includes a note on my panel with M.M. McAllen)


(books, podcasts and more)





Monday, November 30, 2015

2015 Kindle Update for "Miraculous Air: Journey of a Thousand Miles through Baja California, the Other Mexico"

I've posted a few updates on the website for Miraculous Air-- new excerpts, interviews, etc. Plus there is an all-new cover for the Kindle edition, this one featuring the painting "Sunrise Over the Sierras," by Michael Cope, an American artist and founding owner of the Galería de Todos Santos in Baja California Sur, Mexico. (Plus, I corrected a few stray typos and such.)

Here is the all new cover for the Kindle edition:





To get the Kindle, click here.

By the way, if you already own the Kindle edition, simply ask amazon customer service to update your copy. (It isn't automatic, alas, but if you email their customer service, as has been my experience, they will update it for you lickety-split.)


Here is the previous Kindle cover from 2011:




(It's main virtue, methinks, is that it skips ye-olde-cardon-cactus-by-the-sea.)

And here is the paperback edition cover, available from Milkweed Editions (2007):




It features the charming painting by Aligi Sassu of the Angel of Loreto carrying the Santa Casa, the house of the Virgin, to Loreto, Italy. Our Lady of Loreto is the patron saint of Baja California, and of aviators.

And here is the hardcover, published by the University of Utah Press (2002):






The audio edition is in production, as is a Spanish edition. Want to be notified when they are available? I invite you to subscribe to my free monthly-ish newsletter. Sign up here.

> Read excerpts

> Read interviews about this book

> Read reviews

> Listen to a podcast or two ("Hell, I Knew It Was Paradise" and "Like People You See in a Dream")



Your comments are always welcome. Write to me here.