[bookshare-discuss] Garrison Keillor, 5 books in collection and brilliant new movie

  • From: "Estelnalissi" <airadil@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 20 Jun 2006 21:28:08 -0400

Dear Friends who Enjoy Garrison Keillor,

If I'm the only Garrison Keillor fan on the Bookshare Lists, then please delete 
now, but there is encouraging evidence that some of you may be interested in my 
news. 

First off, there are 5 books by this mellow voiced, very shy, champion of 
Midwestern culture and folk, gospel, Celtic, jazz and blues music in the 
Bookshare collection.  They are, in case you don't already have enough to read, 

Happy To Be Here

Lake Wobegon Days

Leaving Home

Love Me

and

Me: Jimmy (Big Boy) Valente

This afternoon I saw the new movie, "A Prairie Home Companion." Don't miss it! 
Yes, some of it is visual, but the dialogue is so engrossing and the music so 
heartfelt with hilarious and tender lyrics, you won't feel you are missing 
anything  by not seeing the screen.

I expected it to be nostalgic, warm and fuzzy. I expected it to celebrate 
Keillor's enormous success in bringing grass roots humor and music to a portion 
of the American population, including myself, who were hungry for the 
companionship and talent Keillor orchestrated so brilliantly. I expected that, 
reailistically, the dear man was beyond his creative prime. 

The movie delivered dashes of what I expected on the first and second counts, 
but I was completely wrong on the third. It was no rehash of Keller's career 
and personal highlights. It was an ingenious interpretation of the truth, "To 
Every thing there is a season." Keillor went beyond collecting and cleverly 
presenting anecdotes on the colorful characters he has known. All of his jokes, 
tall tales, and music making and appreciation have taught him wisdom far 
greater than the sum of its inspirations. 

The appeal of The Prairie Home Companion is fading as American culture has made 
sweeping, fundamental, lightning fast changes. Baby Boomers are beginning to 
believe in their mortality and Keillor accepts the passing of his brain child. 
He has written a grand metaphor for death and change, understanding he can't be 
the one to write the metaphor for rebirth. He prepares us for his demise and 
the demise of the Prairie Home he made for us, with humor, grace and a personal 
detachment no one, no matter how much they love him, have been able to fathom. 

My friend, who'd heard his name and never heard his radio show or read his 
books, laughed and laughed during the movie, and liked the characters. The 
acting and music was wonderful. I laughed, too, but I also cried. Keillor 
touched my soul in unexpected ways. The Prairie Home Companion, the  radio show 
many scheduled their weekends so as never to miss, is a cultural phenomenon of 
decades.This movie, is a theatrical creation which will touch and inform 
humanity for centuries. 

Garrison, I feel wrenchingly wistful, but so very proud of you.

Always with love,

Lissi

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