Saturday, June 26, 2010

Back to our Roots

It's been a long time since I've been around. I've been so busy that today I feel like I'm floating. I always seem to have a mess of thoughts swirling around in my head these days.

When I came back to Newfoundland for the summer, I was reminded of coming back from South Africa. The cultural gap is smaller between Halifax and St. John's, but it's still present. When I was a circus coach in SA, I was galaxies apart from being here. Now, although I still live in Atlantic Canada, and although I'm just coaching at a recreational circus school while I finish up my degree, I still feel like this place moved on without me, and I without it.

Now we're together again, and I'm learning more than ever about my roots. Where I came from, where the world came from, and where my mother culture came from. Although I'm moving forward, I'm learning about the past.

Like always, though, I haven't forgotten about Ekhaya - about "home," about family, and about all of the things that built me out of nothing. I'm also becoming bigger from being in this place, and sometimes it's awful, and sometimes it's great.

But just like Ekhaya is always lurking at the back of my mind, I hope it's in the back of your minds, too. Manuscripts are going out, and the stories never die.

If you want to sample Ekhaya, you still can. Click this link, and read a sample chapter of Ekhaya, and do something great for the world. Meanwhile, this is Melissa, signing out.






Photo: Sarah DeVenne
MUA/Hair: Thyra Sanft
Studio: Aperture Studios
March 2009

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Photo-A-Day

Visit the Ekhaya facebook page for a photo-a-day of South Africa or circus... see what the book is all about!

Monday, April 12, 2010

Nelson Mandela Crash Course

So, when I was in South Africa, one of the things that made me feel like a highly uneducated human being was that, aside from knowing the name and recognizing the face, I knew absolutely nothing about the amazing person who is Nelson Mandela.



So, I went out and bought the 700-page unabridged version of Long Walk to Freedom, and read it cover to cover. First of all, I would recommend that you go with the 300-page abridged version, if you decide to follow my footsteps, because you'll avoid a lot of political rhetoric. But, if even 300 pages is too much, you should still take my advice and get a crash course in Nelson Mandela. Click the links below to learn a little bit more about an amazing man.

Biography of Mandela by the ANC, his political party
Mandela as one of Time Magazine's top 100 political leaders of the last century
Timeline of South African presidents throughout history
Nelson Mandela Foundation
Barack Obama's birthday wish to Mandela
Buy Long Walk to Freedom, the long version


Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Teaser, and some wonderfully talented people.

Recently, I did a photo shoot here in Halifax with local (soon to be local to Toronto) ultra-fantastic photographer Sarah DeVenne, spectacular hair and makeup artist Thyra Sanft, and my hugely talented coworker and contortionist Caitlan Anthony. We partied for a few hours last week at Aperture Studios, and
came out of it all with some spectacular shots. So, in celebration of inspiration, I'm offering you a teaser that doesn't appear in the Ekhaya sample chapter - eat your hearts out. And remember, if you want to see more, there's more to be had, and some amazing kids to benefit from it. Just visit the blog entry from January and follow the instructions. 


Photo: Sarah DeVenne
Hair/Makeup: Thyra Sanft
Studio: Aperture Studio
Subject: Melissa Marie Legge

The following is an excerpt from Ekhaya: A memoir of 21 years, circus, and South Africa, by Melissa Marie Legge.

It was at Wonderbolt, only short hours later, that I first lay my hands on juggling clubs. They were decorated Renegade Fatheads, words that meant next to nothing to me at the time, that felt like marbles in my mouth. I spent hours trying to learn how to wield them, and I willed my brain not to forget the rudimentary three-ball pattern that I had learned as an adolescent, standing over my bed. Little did I know how important these pieces of plastic and wood would become in my life. A few short years later, a set, my set, of white Henry’s juggling clubs would represent my entire relationship with the world of circus. Those simple objects embody the pain, the elation, the rush, the fear, the intimidation, and the confidence, all of it. It is so strange how much importance objects can have. And what do they mean? Nothing. Plastic. Tape. Wood. Metal. They are nothing.

They are everything. In years to come, I would work for hours and hours and hours and still miss the same trick. I would throw them to the ground, furious. I would pray that they would turn to glass and shatter. I would pray that they would turn to sand, to dust. I would clutch them as though the sun would fade if I let go. I would juggle for six hours on end. I would be inspired to the point of breathlessness. 

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Lots of Razorwire

Today has been an interesting day in the development of this book. I am full of doubt. I feel like there is no interest, and like I have no support, for something that I worked so incredibly hard on. I feel like I wasted a year of my life, and like I should just burn the project.

But, I was looking at the photos and videos today. I remember the faces, the landscapes, I remember how far it was from everything here. I had forgotten how noisy it could be. I had forgotten how the rawness in Cape Town made me feel soft and fuzzy in comparison - the opposite to how I feel here.

That, and I will never forget that these stories need to be told. It hurts me to think that I would have failed in telling the stories that I promised to share.

It's bleak outside - cold and frozen and bits of ice falling from the hard, gray sky.

I guess the bottom line is, if you want to read Ekhaya, now's the time to let me know.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Back-Burning. Alternate Title: Throw me a punch.

Hey, sportsfans.

I know, it's been a while. It's amazing how fast a month can rush past you when your life is filled with essay writing and drama, isn't it? Well, as an update, it turns out that no circus, big or small, is without drama and confusion, and all writing consumes your life, no matter what you're doing it before. As a side note, if you ever want to talk about Victor Hugo, quiz me on uses of the subjunctive in Spanish, chat about pre-1958 revolution Iraq, discuss comic books (especially X-Men Noir), see the Vagina Monologues, or just generally be crazy academic, I'm your lady.

Or, if you're looking for someone to abuse a little, I can be your punching bag, too. After getting a little criticism for a recent attempted journalistic project, followed by a fair amount of criticism from the first few people featured in the book to check out Ekhaya, followed by a third rejection by a literary agent, I am all over it. Turns out, it's all well and good taking criticism, until it's from the people who you know and care about. Throw a punch at me, I dare you.

Also, I'm reading an absolutely dreadful book right now. The kind of book that makes you wonder whose bright idea it was to invent the English language, I mean, really. And it's totally depressing, because somehow, somehow, crap like that gets published... but anyway...

So, Ekhaya has taken the back burner as a pursue other worthy projects (ie, academic excellence, forays into romance and idealism, and uninhibited protest of the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver)... but if you're one of the people who have said to me over the past few weeks, HOW'S THE BOOK GOING?!... well, find out for yourself. That's all I'm saying.

Sample chapters of Ekhaya are now available for purchase, with a small donation, part of which goes to help people in need. Check out the previous entry for details.

Over and out, Sportsfans. See you on the flip side.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Sample Chapters Available For Purchase

Welcome back, sportsfans!

So, in this edition of the Ekhaya times, I am opening up a new offer. I've had a lot of people asking about the book, how things are going, what the whole deal is about... so now's your chance. The deal is this.

The manuscript is roughly 130 typewritten pages long, single-spaced font. Typical printing cost, roughly $13 to $15 CAD. Shipping on a document that size, about $7. Minimum cost to send that document to ONE publishing company... about $20. Here's the catch. If I don't manage to secure an agent for the book, how many publishing companies will I have to send the manuscript to before I find one that will take it?

If you click on the Donate button below, you will be prompted for a $5 donation. Out of this $5, half will go straight into my bank account to help pay the costs of promoting my manuscript. The other half will be put in a separate account which will then be forwarded to my friends at Obs House in South Africa. This money, for them, can be used to do anything from buying toiletries and clothes to having the small treat of a chocolate bar or a trip to the townships to visit their families. Keep in mind that the current exchange rate is one Canadian dollar (or 0.96 USD)  to 7.17 South African rand, so every bit counts!

ALSO, in exchange for the donation that you're making to the promotional fund, if you send me your Email address, I will send you you an electronic 25 page sample chapter of Ekhaya - the same sample that is being sent to literary agents across the country right now.

IN SUMMARY: One $5 CAD donation buys you a sample chapter of Ekhaya, a yet-unpublished manuscript, and makes a small donation to help some people who are far away, but who definitely deserve it! And don't forget to include your Email address! You can Email them to me here, or leave them in a comment at the bottom of this page!

Click on the Donate button below to make your $5 donation now!








OR, if you don't feel like $5 is enough, click on this second button to enter your own donation amount! As with the $5 donations, half will go to South Africa, and the other half into the promotional fund for Ekhaya!







Thank you so much, in advance. You don't know how much of a difference this will make in my life, as well as in the lives of others. And don't forget to contact me with your Email addresses! You can Email them to me here, or leave them in a comment at the bottom of this page!

All my love, sportsfans.
Over and out.