tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13593902.post1857876009456766036..comments2024-02-11T09:55:50.468-08:00Comments on The Eastside View: memoirCharles Sherehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10480432901356490235noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13593902.post-1201986967951400942017-08-10T12:31:14.096-07:002017-08-10T12:31:14.096-07:00A friend comments, in part (I wish we had a more p...<i>A friend comments, in part (I wish we had a more private means of communication):</i><br /><br />I read through about 1/3 of this a couple nights ago and then realized I needed to have a much better space of time to take it in. It's multilayered and deep. …<br /> <br />The one thing I noticed I was missing, though, is your own thinking about why you have been drawn to the forms and substance of expression that are often not very accessible to most people. I'm positive you have ideas about that, and it could be useful to others as they think about what shaped you and what is going on in their own lives - at any rate, I feel memoirs/biographies often do help in seeing things from a bigger point of reference. So glad you are doing this. <br /><br /><i>This sort of reflection begins to build in the next section of the memoir, which covers my years at KQED, roughly 1967-1972. Even then I did not "have ideas about that": such ideas only come now, almost 50 years later, as I write these things. </i>Charles Sherehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10480432901356490235noreply@blogger.com