Where do you like to vacation?
I enjoy
the New England coast line and the Atlantic Ocean. I own a house in Maine on
the Coast where I find relaxation and inspiration.
What is your most outstanding childhood
memory?
Probably
having no father; he died when I was two. I had two mothers – a mother and a
nanny – and I remember being sent away to boarding schools from age eleven on.
In effect, all unhappy memories.
In your opinion, what is the
most overrated virtue? Why?
Always telling the truth, and the expectation to be the all-American
boy.
What is the one thing other people always
seem to get wrong about you?
That they
see me as a “troublemaker” with a negative attitude. I only want to expose
untruths and misleading comments made by people.
If you could change one thing about the
world what would it be?
Relative
ongoing peace and security for all. This means mini-conflicts will always
exist, but no total global annihilations. To be strictly anti-war is too
idealistic and impossible to guarantee; so pacifists are purists – a world of
purists – would likely prevent any
reconciliations, negotiations, or compromises for peace.
What pet peeve do you have about other
people?
I dislike
dealing with dishonest individuals who live by some ideology as ‘true believers’
in a cause that directs their lives, yet disallows compromises and
reconciliations in viewpoints and behavior. I seek out ‘thinking people’ who
are open to discussions and possible changes, and are honest about their
motivations and intentions.
Is there any occasion when it’s OK to lie?
A lie is
OK if it stops harm to someone, especially a child or a handicapped person, and
it is also OK if it well serves your own self-interests without doing harm to
others.
Writing is hard work, do you have a
favorite place to recharge?
I recharge
the writing process by dropping it for a while. I go for a walk, watch TV, read
a book, take a nap, or meet with someone.
What do you find most challenging about
writing?
I find
writing a description of something can be difficult; the accurate use of the
best words. I often pick up with the last writing done, maybe rewrite it, and
add just a new paragraph or more right then and there. Using a thesaurus has
been helpful with new and different words and connotations to use.
Did your years as a teacher help you write this book?
As my
novel is about a college professor, my past years of college teaching provided
much data and experiences to refer to in the story. Having information to
impart about the undergraduate teaching profession was helpful.
Are the characters based on people you
know?
Many
characters mentioned in the novel are a derivative of someone I knew in the
undergraduate world, but I also had delight in simply fantasizing about
characters who were unknown to me in real life.
Shades of Learning is an interesting title,
does it hold particular significance?
The title
has many meanings, but probably most important is that it declares that ways
and means of learning are not just one approach, that they are a mixed
consolidation of many approaches, including different items to be learned, and
most importantly, that learning must come from the individual’s own directed
accumulation of information, distilled by that person into knowledge. In other
words, knowledge isn’t really taught by the professor, information is doled out.
A teacher can impart the knowledge of other thinkers, but the student’s
knowledge is only acquired by the student. So, Shades of Learning refers to the content, and variety of methods of
learning, and to the layers of subjects to be learned – academic or otherwise.
What is the genre if this book, and the
target audience?
This is a
semi-romantic novel about student-teacher relationships in a women’s college.
The main character is immature even as a professor, and this results in many
sordid relationships with students as he seeks to impart knowledge to his
students, and at the same time, develop personal relationships with them. The
audience for this novel are undergraduate and graduate students, professors and
other educators, and of course, alumni of higher education schools. Any person
who attended college would relate to the layers and tangles of events in this
book.
Do you have another book planned?
I am
working on political conspiracy novel set in Washington DC which involves the “disability
and removal” of the President by his Vice-President, who then becomes the
acting President under the 1967 25th amendment to the Constitution.
It seems this amendment may inadvertently be a legal precedence to enact a
regime change in the White House – that is if the Vice -President conspires to
declare the president disabled, and remove him from office.
Amazon buy link: http://www.amazon.com/Shades-Learning-James-Weaver/dp/1493534491
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