Novelist Willa Cather
I am between books having just finished Erik Larson's Thunderstruck, and Isaac's Storm. Both are historical non-fiction books and excellent, so I'm starving for a little fiction. As I've said before, great fiction gives excellent insight into being human. You can learn more about the business world from fiction than in reading best-selling business books.
The bookcase is holding a copy of Willa Cather's, A Lost Lady. I hate to admit that I've never read her books before. She's a Nebraska treasure and I used to live by the Willa Cather Library. I give it a try.
That's when I run across one of her characters describe the importance of strategic vision, a topic near and dear to me. She does it through the voice of one of her characters, Captain Forrester, the old road builder.
“Well, then, my philosophy is that what you think of and plan for day by day, in spite of yourself, so to speak – you will get. You will get it more or less. That is, unless, you are one of the people who get nothing in this world. There are such people. I have lived too much in mining works and construction camps not to know that.” He paused as if, though this was too dark a chapter to go into, it must have its place, its moment of silent recognition. “If you are not one of those, you will accomplish what you dream most.”
“And why? That’s the interesting part of it,” his wife prompted him.
“Because,” he roused himself from his abstraction and looked at the company, “because a thing that is dreamed of in the way I mean, is already an accomplished fact.”
Thank you Willa Cather. She captures why it's important to have a vision, while acknowledging that just having a vision isn't a guarantee. Very human.
(and a wonderful little story)
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