Marlene Wagman-Geller

"As far back as I can remember, it was always on my bucket list, even before the term bucket list was coined,
to be a writer. It was a natural progression to want to go from reading books to writing one."
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It is Warm (1880)

It is Warm (1880)
Jun 01, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
    If anyone were ever entitled to indulge in a pity party, it would have been the woman who fate had locked in a world of silence and darkness. Yet, instead of dwelling on her misery, she dedicated her life to the spreading of light. She remains a testament to what a possessor of courage can overcome

Mrs. Blue-Eyes

Mrs. Blue-Eyes
May 31, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
      When one conjures the image of Francis Albert Sinatra, it is of a Jersey crooner with the velvet voice, the bruised romantic with shady Mob ties. The biography of the first modern pop superstar is the stuff of legend, as his second wife Ava Gardner and third, Mia Farrow. However, his fourth wife, like Sinatra’s trademark lyric, lived and loved her way.

The Stolen Hours

The Stolen Hours
May 30, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

In Waiting for Godot two hapless tramps struggle to find meaning in a landscape of existential emptiness. They embody “the dangling conversation,” to pretend to be connected to another, to drown out loneliness waiting in the wings. Their only hope is the enigmatic Godot-who remains a steadfast no-show. But the author, Samuel Beckett, did not suffer such soul-sucking alienation though succor from across the sea. 

The Seven of Us Can't Do (2013)

The Seven of Us Can't Do (2013)
May 24, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
Certain books have left their imprint on the face of the world; their authors were god-like in determining the destiny of humanity. Karl Marx’s The Communist Manifesto changed the socio-political landscape, Sigmund Freud’s The Interpretation of Dreams shed light on the subconscious, and Charles Darwin’s The Origin of the Species rattled religion’s cage. These 19th century men were the power players whose pages became the dice of destiny. A 21st century woman likewise launched a movement through the venue of words.

The Lady and the Tramp

The Lady and the Tramp
May 23, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
Charlie Chaplin’s character of the Little Tramp became an immortal icon for his deft portrayal of man’s tragicomic conflict with fate. The lonely fellow buffeted by life resiliently picked himself up again and again in the hope that the next encounter would turn out better. And what made the man behind the clown stop leaning on his famous cane and throw it heavenward was the love of his lady, whose story has slipped through the crack of time until now.

Where Rosemary Goes...(1968)

Where Rosemary Goes...(1968)
May 23, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
   The ancient Greek games originated in honor of the Gods of Mt. Olympus. After a hiatus of 1,500 years, the 19th century Frenchman Pierre de Coubertin resurrected the Olympics for countries to come together in sports rather than in war. In the 20th century, an American carried on the tradition of sprinkling the physical with the divine.

Any Other Man

Any Other Man
May 22, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

One of the most challenging jobs in the world is that of the evangelist: hand-wrestling the devil over souls. Fortunately, when it came to saving his own, the Reverend Billy Graham had his fellow crusader in Christ, his “soulmate and best friend.”

Beloved Infidel

Beloved Infidel
May 21, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
 F. Scott Fitzgerald pessimistically pronounced, “There are no second acts in American lives.” He based this on his own free-fall: from golden boy of the twenties to forgotten has-been of the forties. What eased the pain of latter years was the purveyor of a poisoned pen.    

THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN PEN

THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN PEN
May 20, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

  

Bond. James Bond. This was the classic greeting of the most dashing member of Her Majesty’s Secret Service. However, if people knew the biography of his creator, Ian Fleming, they might have thought of him as Bondage. James Bondage. And he was met, lash for lash, by his ladylove.

Madame Butterfly

Madame Butterfly
May 19, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
As Jell-O conforms to its mold, children often adhere to the values of their parents. However, in a 1950s love story which involved Julius Rosenberg, it was a Jell-O Box and a Remington typewriter which made a woman’s path stray far afield from what her family, or anyone else, ever envisioned.

The Last Word (1501)

The Last Word (1501)
May 19, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

     Kings are subject to grand gestures, sometimes of a romantic nature. Legend holds that when Queen Amytis grew homesick for the lush landscape of her native Media, her husband, King Nebuchadnezzar II, commissioned the Hanging Gardens of Babylon in his desert kingdom. When Mumtaz Mahal died giving birth to their fourteenth child, Shah Jahan immortalized his wife with the world’s most magnificent mausoleum. King Edward VIII, urged to give up his mistress, Wallis Simpson, instead relinquished the British throne. Another crowned head changed his country’s religion to legalize his obsession.

Fade Away

Fade Away
May 18, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
John Milton wrote in Paradise Lost, “They also serve who only stand and wait.” Ever since Penelope steadfastly wove on her loom waiting for Odysseus to return, the warrior’s wife has served in the typical role of the women who worry at home in shadow, waiting for their men to come back. But that has not always been the case. In contrast, a 20th century warrior wife accompanied her General, Douglas MacArthur, humanizing the man behind the five stars.

Herr Wolff

Herr Wolff
May 17, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
Lord Byron wrote, “Man’s love is of man’s life a thing apart/Tis a woman’s whole existence.” This sentiment epitomized Adolf Hitler’s relationship with his consort who had the rather unenviable distinction of being the partner of the man history has dubbed evil incarnate. 

The Fearess Girl (1967)

The Fearess Girl (1967)
May 17, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
  Wall Street is named after an actual wooden stockade built by the Dutch when New York was Nieuw Amsterdam, erected to protect their trading post from the British. Wall Street became synonymous with finance in 1792 after twenty-four prominent merchants, in powdered wigs and waistcoats, founded the New York Stock Exchange to bet on foreign battles, elections, and cockfights. One hundred seventy-five years later, Muriel Siebert scaled the rampart when she became the first woman securities trader.

A Bumpy Ride (1941)

A Bumpy Ride (1941)
May 16, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
Upon hearing the word “president,” the image that is conjured is of a man wearing a dark suit and tie standing in the Oval Office. In sharp juxtaposition, during World War II, Bette Davis assumed the same mantle as the Chief Executive when she held the position of the first female President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science.

Called Home

Called Home
May 15, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

   “Because I could not stop for Death-He kindly stopped for me-The Carriage held but just Ourselves-And Immortality.” Emily’s immortality rests on her poetry, her legacy enshrined by The Emily Dickinson Museum.

Special Place in Hell (1937)

Special Place in Hell (1937)
May 15, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

   The word secretary sometimes carries negative connotations; it conjures an image of a subordinate female whose job description entails typing, bringing coffee, taking shorthand. These Girl Fridays combined the requisite traits of self-efficiency and self-effacement, the unsung minions. In contrast, when secretary bears a capital letter, it denotes a pinnacle of power. 

The White Horse Girl and The Blue Wind Boy

The White Horse Girl and The Blue Wind Boy
May 14, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
Frank Lloyd Wright, the world’s most famous architect observed, “Less is more.” When it came to romance, however, his maxim was ‘more is more.’ Unfortunately, he was never able to achieve in his relationships the transcendent beauty of his buildings-until Wright, finally met, well, Mrs. Wright.

The Hand that Rocks the. Cradle (1914)

The Hand  that Rocks the. Cradle (1914)
May 14, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

Mothers have always been sacrosanct: the Roman Catholic Church has a cult of the Virgin, beloved nursery rhymes are associated with one named Goose, and Whistler painted an iconic portrait of his. Hence, it was only fitting that a day be set aside to honor mothers; however, it came with a bizarre twist.

Life's Leading Lady

Life's Leading Lady
May 12, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
Alfred Hitchcock’s place in the pantheon of great film directors rests on a secure niche of psychological thrillers, thanks to classics like- ‘Psyyyy-cow,” (as he pronounced it) which led generations to shudder when showering at a motel. He is one of only two movie directors whose faces are as familiar as some of the actors who starred in his films (the other is fellow working-class Londoner Charlie Chaplin). Hitchcock’s renowned silhouette in his movies depicts his enormous girth, but lost in his towering shadow was his partner, Alma Reville.