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Cathy Day

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Cathy Day

Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author


Born
in Peru, Indiana, The United States
Website

Twitter

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Influences
Sherwood Anderson, Andre Dubus, Alison Baker, William Faulkner, Stuart ...more

Member Since
October 2007

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Cathy Day was born and raised in Peru, Indiana, which is best known as a circus town, but is also the birthplace of Cole Porter and the Spanish hot dog. She is the author of two books. Her most recent work is Comeback Season: How I Learned to Play the Game of Love (Free Press, 2008), an immersion memoir about life as a single woman set during the Indianapolis Colts 2006-2007 Super Bowl season. Her first book was The Circus in Winter (Harcourt, 2004), a fictional history of her hometown. She teaches at Ball State University. (Note: she only writes the occasional review on Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ. Mostly, she uses Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ to keep track of the books she's reading for research and for pure pleasure.)
...more

Career Talk

went up four years ago. Wow.

Remember when I was blogging all the time? Boy, I really had a lot to say.

Then I got caught up in administrative work and lost the digital sharing spark. I suppose I didn’t have enough fire left at the end of the day to share with you. And most days, I couldn’t talk about what I was working on.

The last four years of my professional life:

After serving a

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Published on January 06, 2022 20:10
Average rating: 3.67 · 1,715 ratings · 269 reviews · 9 distinct works â€� Similar authors
The Circus In Winter

3.64 avg rating — 1,584 ratings — published 2004 — 18 editions
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Indy Writes Books: A Book L...

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4.09 avg rating — 74 ratings — published 2014
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Comeback Season: How I Lear...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 47 ratings — published 2008 — 9 editions
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PANK 9

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4.63 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2013
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Walking on Water and Other ...

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 1996 — 2 editions
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Wiltshire Marriage Patterns...

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The Southeast Review

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Story Magazine: Winter 1999

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More books by Cathy Day…
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by Deesha Philyaw (Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author)
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Hill William
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After the Ivory T...
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Cathy’s Recent Updates

Cathy Day liked a quote
Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner
“We have a few old mouth-to-mouth tales; we exhume from old trunks and boxes and drawers letters without salutation or signature, in which men and women who once lived and breathed are now merely initials or nicknames out of some now incomprehensible affection which sound to us like Sanskrit or Chocktaw; we see dimly people, the people in whose living blood and seed we ourselves lay dormant and waiting, in this shadowy attenuation of time possessing now heroic proportions, performing their acts of simple passion and simple violence, impervious to time and inexplicable.�
William Faulkner
Cathy Day is currently reading
The Secret Lives of Church Ladies by Deesha Philyaw
The Secret Lives of Church Ladies
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Cathy Day rated a book it was amazing
Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
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Bill Furlong Walks Away from Omelas/New Ross
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Hill William by Scott McClanahan
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Cathy Day and 9 other people liked Kathleen's review of Small Things Like These:
Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
""As they carried along and met more people Furlong did and did not know, he found himself asking was there any point in being alive without helping one another? Was it possible to carry on along through all the years, the decades, through an entire l" Read more of this review »
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Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
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Homing by Sherrie Flick
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Not in Love by Ali Hazelwood
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God Emporer of Dune by Frank Herbert
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Slow Dance by Rainbow Rowell
Slow Dance
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Quotes by Cathy Day  (?)
Quotes are added by the Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ community and are not verified by Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ.

“At the college where I teach, I'm surrounded by circus people. We aren't tightrope walkers or acrobats. We don't breathe fire or swallow swords. We're gypsies, moving wherever there's work to be found. Our scrapbooks and photo albums bear witness to our vagabond lives: college years, grad-school years, instructor-mill years, first-job years. In between each stage is a picture of old friends helping to fill a truck with boxes and furniture. We pitch our tents, and that place becomes home for a while. We make families from colleagues and students, lovers and neighbors. And when that place is no longer working, we don't just make do. We move on to the place that's next. No place is home. Every place is home. Home is our stuff. As much as I love the Cumberland Valley at twilight, I probably won't live there forever, and this doesn't really scare me. That's how I know I'm circus people. ”
Cathy Day, The Circus In Winter

“When I was little, my mother told me there are basically two kinds of people in the world: town people and circus people. The kind who stay are town people, and the kind who leave are circus people.”
Cathy Day, The Circus In Winter

“Maybe every town in America transmits that radio signal, and on certain nights when the weather and the frequency are just right, we can all hear our hometowns talking softly to us in the back of our dreams.”
Cathy Day, The Circus in Winter

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“A man, to be greatly good, must imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of another and many others; the pains and pleasures of his species must become his own. The great instrument of moral good is the imagination.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley, A Defence of Poetry and Other Essays

“I have an idea that the only thing which makes it possible to regard this world we live in without disgust is the beauty which now and then men create out of the chaos. The pictures they paint, the music they compose, the books they write, and the lives they lead. Of all these the richest in beauty is the beautiful life. That is the perfect work of art.”
W. Somerset Maugham, The Painted Veil

“Being alone is not the most awful thing in the world. You visit your museums and cultivate your interests and remind yourself how lucky you are not to be one of those spindly Sudanese children with flies beading their mouths. You make out To Do lists - reorganise linen cupboard, learn two sonnets. You dole out little treats to yourself - slices of ice-cream cake, concerts at Wigmore Hall. And then, every once in a while, you wake up and gaze out of the window at another bloody daybreak, and think, I cannot do this anymore. I cannot pull myself together again and spend the next fifteen hours of wakefulness fending off the fact of my own misery.

People like Sheba think that they know what it's like to be lonely. They cast their minds back to the time they broke up with a boyfriend in 1975 and endured a whole month before meeting someone new. Or the week they spent in a Bavarian steel town when they were fifteen years old, visiting their greasy-haired German pen pal and discovering that her hand-writing was the best thing about her. But about the drip drip of long-haul, no-end-in-sight solitude, they know nothing. They don't know what it is to construct an entire weekend around a visit to the laundrette. Or to sit in a darkened flat on Halloween night, because you can't bear to expose your bleak evening to a crowd of jeering trick-or-treaters. Or to have the librarian smile pityingly and say, ‘Goodness, you're a quick reader!â€� when you bring back seven books, read from cover to cover, a week after taking them out. They don't know what it is to be so chronically untouched that the accidental brush of a bus conductor's hand on your shoulder sends a jolt of longing straight to your groin. I have sat on park benches and trains and schoolroom chairs, feeling the great store of unused, objectless love sitting in my belly like a stone until I was sure I would cry out and fall, flailing, to the ground. About all of this, Sheba and her like have no clue.”
Zoë Heller, What Was She Thinking? [Notes on a Scandal]

“There are moments when one has to choose between living one's own life, fully, entirely, completely-or dragging out some false, shallow, degrading existence that the world in its hypocrisy demands.”
Oscar Wilde, Lady Windermere's Fan

“Scandal is gossip made tedious by morality.”
Oscar Wilde, Lady Windermere's Fan




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