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What are you working on now? Embarking upon a
strategy planning conference with Michele Pariza at Creative Concepts,
to market my Tao book, Under the Plum Tree, The Tao of Everything, and
backlist book titles, Gold Rivers of Northern California, Haiku, Single
Woman Homesteader and Secret of the 2 Bar 4 Ranch.
AvantGuild Member of the Week: Marjorie Giles
Age: 79
Location: Dobbins, CA
What's the most helpful thing you've learned about freelancing/writing?
Get
a proper database system going that allows search for titles,
publication, accept, reject, contact, deadline, revenue, notes. I use
File Pro and keep a log of Inkwell products which include mss,
cartoons, fine art, criticism, freelance etc.
What's been the worst career advice you've ever received?
"Send money."
more after the break
How did you go about writing the Tao books?
The
Tao books were given to me by the trance mediium Marshall Lever, who
received teachings in private home world-wide. Students appeared by
word-of-mouth and attended weekly sessions in Paris, London, San
Francisco, Tokyo and elsewhere. I studied in San Francisco with private
readings. As a recognized writer, I was given transcripts of the
recorded lessons "to do with as (I) pleased."
I started with Shambhala about 30 years ago and they wrote that the
manuscripts needed more editing. Six years ago I as winding up a book
by a nuclear physicist who wanted to combine his Prebyterian-missionaries-in-China upbringing with nuclear or quantum
physics. I had worked with this man in the late 1940s and took the job
partly because I felt I owed him my life. As his first research
associate in the revival of biophysics, and the only biologist among
physicists, Ernie Pollard had touted my work all over academia and at
all his overseas presentations. So, when I got paralyzed with polio
while pregnant in 1950 at Yale, I had a creditable reputation. My late
husband then moved us to Stanford and where he abandoned me and our two
infants and I needed a job fast. Ernie sent me to Wendel M. Stanley, a
new Nobel laureate in viruses and authorized my work with him as a
Master of Science level. Stanley hired me for his own research and I
became marketable to anyone who wanted a Nobel prize.
As Ernie's book project ended, I felt increasingly
conscious of the Chung Fu manuscripts. I could hardly wait to get at
them. The
physicality of the prevailing pragmatism in science was stifling to me.
Nothing unseen was in there anywhere, no spirits, no recognition of the
intuitive sources scientists depend upon. Nowadays Fritjov Capra,
Feynman,Stephen Hawking and others are lapping at the gates of
spirituality but cannot bring themselves to perceive what's in there.
At least, now they're starting to talk to the Dalai Lama.
Source:http://www.mediabistro.com
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