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Archives, March, 2010

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Reading is Hot

kang-diMaybe the key to raising and refining literacy is to treat it like blue jeans or beer and have beautiful people promote it. That’s the idea in China, anyway, according to this article (via PD_Smith), which focuses mostly on a 21-year-old beauty named Kang Di:

Kang was found during a campaign titled “finding the most beautiful book model on Beijing subway,” organized by the World Book Publishing Company and qq.com. So far, according to marketing department campaign organizer Xiao Kai, they’ve had over 100 successful applicants. Ten finalists will be culled from those on April 16, and of those, one “book ambassador” will be chosen on April 23 after a rigorous talent show, complete with a history and literature quiz.

Wu Hesong, director of the marketing department of World Book Publishing Company, told Lifestyle that the whole campaign is non-profit and aims to help “cultivate Beijingers’ good reading habits” by recruiting and presenting pretty women caught in the act of reading.

And how does Kang — who’s currently leading the competition — feel about the prospect of winning?

“I didn’t take it very seriously at first, but of course I’d like to win, because it’s an elegant and down-to-earth way to get famous and might be another window for a new career,” Kang said, laughing before she explained, “I mean, the image of a book model is healthy and quiet. It suits me and is also acceptable to my parents.”

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

No Accounting for Taste

thatcherMark Athitakis recently posted an interview with David Lipsky, whose book, Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip with David Foster Wallace, will be published in two weeks. Lipsky had been assigned by Rolling Stone to interview Wallace just after Infinite Jest had cannonballed into the cultural pool, and the two Davids spent five days together. The original piece never ran. Lipsky recounts to Athitakis some of the most entertaining, productive, and disappointing moments of the weeklong interview. In this funny (and, depending on your politics, disturbing or very disturbing) section, Lipsky talks about Wallace’s feelings for a certain Prime Minister:

And he was very funny about music (“I have the musical tastes of a thirteen year-old girl… I am a bonehead who listens to the radio”) and sharp about movies (“Tarantino is such a schmuck 90 percent of the time, but ten percent of the time, I’ve seen genius shining off the guy”), even about a pop star like Alanis Morissette: “She’s pretty, but she’s pretty in a sloppy, very human way. A lot of women in magazines are pretty in a way that isn’t erotic because they don’t look like anybody you know. You can’t imagine them putting a quarter in a parking meter or eating a bologna sandwich.”

And then the music talk led to this ministerial surprise. “The Alanis Morissette obsession followed the Melanie Griffith obsession. It was preceded by something that I will tell you that I got teased a lot for, which was a terrible Margaret Thatcher obsession. All through college: posters of Margaret Thatcher, and ruminations on Margaret Thatcher.” I asked if it was sexual. “Sensuous, perhaps. It more involved—having tea with Margaret Thatcher. Having her really enjoy something I said, lean forward, and cover my hand with hers.” It was such an extraordinary conversation I was happy to follow anyplace he wanted to go.

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Embracing Insomnia

cioranI didn’t know the New York Times has a blog entirely devoted to insomnia. It’s called All-Nighters.

The most recent post is by Gordon Marino, who explores the subject of sleeplessness in literature, especially in the work of E. M. Cioran (at left), the cheery, aphoristic philosopher who wrote books like The Trouble With Being Born, A Short History of Decay, and On the Heights of Despair. Marino:

Hordes of artists throw their arms around their melancholy as though it were the very taproot of their creativity. Kierkegaard, for instance, referred to his melancholy as his best and most loyal friend. Cioran felt a similar attachment to his insomnia. While he cursed his nocturnal suffering and used morphine, among other things, to try and knock himself out, he ultimately understood his long journeys into the sickly morning light as both crushing him and yet shaping his sensibilities. After all, isn’t wakefulness good? And sleeplessness a sort of wakefulness? “What rich or strange idea,” asks Cioran, “was ever the work of a sleeper?”

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

In the Ether

robert-binghamAndrew Adler remembers the writer Robert Bingham, who died 10 years ago at the age of 33. . . . Andrew W.K.’s performance as a judge (in the semifinals, no less) in the Tournament of Books has the event’s readers up in arms, or at least scratching their heads, and I can’t say I blame them. . . . Lorrie Moore has made the latest book-club choice for the New Yorker’s Book Bench. She calls her selection a “stunning novel-in-stories,” in which the writing is “informed by both the empirical and the lyrical, is heart-wrenching and gorgeous and its several voices are done indelibly and with unwavering authority.” . . . Creative Nonfiction gathers some memorable opening lines. (“The village of Holcomb stands on the high wheat plains of western Kansas, a lonesome area that other Kansans call ‘out there.’ ” –In Cold Blood) . . . At The Valve, Adam Roberts reads Podvig by Nabokov. (”The novel as a whole makes a salutary counterexample to those who think Nabokov’s schtick was an ‘aesthetics of cruelty’; for it is a novel about goodness, and beauty…”) . . . A belated happy seventh birthday to The Millions. Seven years on the Internet is a long time. . . . Open Letters has added another blog to its family: Novel Readings, written by Rohan Maitzen, an English professor in Nova Scotia. . . . Terry Teachout shares 10 books that influenced him. . . . A new book causes Gregory Cowles to wonder: “[I]f a brilliant and prominent novelist — a Nobel laureate, say — were to record his thoughts and observations in a blog, might it amount to literature?”

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Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Baseball Tips from a Memoirist

mulgrewIn a case of there being a first for everything, I recently purchased a book in exchange for fantasy baseball tips. The offer came from Jason Mulgrew, author of Everything Is Wrong with Me, a memoir that grew out of his blog. Mulgrew was raised in a rough Irish section of Philadelphia, and much of the book details the exploits of his father, Dennis, a blue-collar, hard-drinking guy with a penchant for living out tall tales. After relating one of them, Mulgrew writes, “Stories like this one are the kind of stories I grew up with. Many of them started with ‘I remember one time when we found this box of horse tranquilizers . . .’ and ended with ‘And that’s when I learned that it’s good to know Spanish in jail.’ ”

Mulgrew’s mother first saw Dennis at the famous Mummers Parade in Philly, where he was continuing to march and laugh and drink with friends despite having been stabbed in a fight and bleeding from the shoulder. She didn’t realize she married the same man until a few years later. Here I will yield to a blurb, this one from John Hodgman: “Jason Mulgrew’s wild, boozy, joyfully reckless, working-class Philadelphia of the 1980s and ’90s doesn’t just come to life; it is the sort of autobiographical landscape that would get up and walk across the country just to punch Lake Wobegon in the face.”

Mulgrew revels in the scatological and sexual (well, sex-fantastical; he’s self-excoriating about the details of his real-life experiences), but he mostly avoids a juvenile tone in relating his family’s shenanigans. (The book is not The Paris Review, but it’s not exactly Maxim either. At its best, something like Esquire, I guess. And OK, sometimes Maxim-ish.) The book is conspicuously built from a blog, padded with comparatively soulless chapters on Mulgrew’s favorites songs or the rituals of the Catholic Church, and it has an abrupt, pretty creepy epilogue. But Dennis is an unforgettable character, and Mulgrew manages to convey warmth and affection for people who left him with not a few psychological hiccups. The book is decorated with hilarious photos, many of which will bring back strong memories for anyone raised in a 1980s suburb. Examples of them can be found here and here, and Mulgrew is holding a contest to find similar gems from readers.

Oh, the fantasy baseball. Mulgrew is also a baseball nut, and he creates annual rankings for fantasy players. After his “Fantasy Baseball Super Sheet” was popular at $5 last year, he decided to sell it for $10 this year. Or, he’ll send it to you for free if you can prove you bought the book.

Monday, March 29th, 2010

The Beat

A weekly roundup of notable reviews from other sources.

henry-houseLiesl Schillinger reviews The Irresistible Henry House, a “thoughtful novel” about a young man who was raised at a time when “human babies were used as guinea pigs on American campuses, imported from orphanages to home economics programs to help college students hone their mothering skills.” . . . Douglas Brinkley calls David Remnick’s new book about Barack Obama “a brilliantly constructed, flawlessly written biography,” for which Remnick “interviewed a telephone book’s worth of notable figures in Obama’s life.” . . . Lincoln Caplan reviews The Death of American Virtue by Ken Gormley, a new book with the “ambition of capturing the sprawling Clinton-Starr saga in a historical narrative, which, despite the book’s reproving title, stops well short of reaching an overarching judgment. Given his book’s massive heft and notable attention to detail, [Gormley] has succeeded in his aims more comprehensively than anyone else to date.” . . . Ange Mlinko on the latest collection of poems by Graham Foust, whose work “bears some earmarks of country (and rock) lyrics: drinking, driving and longing.” . . . Daniel Mendelsohn considers “three recent novels that not only revisit Greek stories but, far more interestingly, do so in a Greek way, playing with the texts of the past in order to create, with varying degrees of success, a literature that is thoroughly of the present.” . . . Speaking of the Greeks, the naturalist E. O. Wilson’s first novel is partly modeled on the Iliad and includes a significant section that takes place inside an ant colony. Margaret Atwood weighs in.

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Monday, March 29th, 2010

Monday Distraction

killersofthedreamLots of vintage book covers to explore at Alexander Budnitz’s site, including the deeply strange one at left. It’s from 1963 and was designed by George Giusti.

Speaking of book covers, my friend Patrick Borelli will be hosting his show “You Should Judge a Book By Its Cover,” during which he mocks terrible designs, in Brooklyn on April 13. He’ll be joined this time by the very funny Dan Kennedy and Julie Klausner, as well as award-winning designer Evan Gaffney. (It’s likely that Gaffney is also funny, but I can’t say for sure.)

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Books That Have Influenced Me

A list idea has been flying around: 10 books that influenced you most. The contributions so far have mostly been coming from political/economics bloggers, like Will Wilkinson, Matt Yglesias, and Tyler Cowen, who started it. But Jenny Davidson at Light Reading has chimed in (the top book on her list has been added to my wish list), and I think it would be fun to see other book bloggers tackle it. Plus, I’ve been trying to think of how to introduce more of my personal voice and experience to the blog here, and this seems like a decent step in that direction. My caveat is that “influence” is used broadly here. For political bloggers, I guess that verb makes more sense. So it’s inexact, but I have tried to use it as a rough guide; this is not simply my 10 favorite books, though a few of them would show up on that list. With that throat-clearing out of the way:

1. The Cricket in Times Square by George Selden
I don’t remember much about this one except that I cherished it, and I thought it was appropriate to start off with a book that influenced me to love reading in the first place.

2. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
I read this for English class during my junior year of high school, and up to that point I don’t think I had fully made the transition from enthusiastic young reader to adult reader. As much as anyone, Vonnegut spurred that transition, as I’m sure he’s done (and will continue to do) for many.

3. The Brothers K by David James Duncan
I read this novel about a family in the Pacific Northwest of the 1960s when I was 19. It deals with baseball, religion, Vietnam, family. It’s shaggier than most of what I read now, but in a good way, and I’ve never had a deeper emotional investment in a novel. Being 19 will do that to you, but Duncan also earned it. I wrote about it at greater length here.

4. The Varieties of Religious Experience by William James
The best thing I’ve ever read, and a book that can be considered a classic across several disciplines — psychology, philosophy, religion, and (weirdly but truly) self-help. There’s just no way to read James’ thoughts about the human condition — his sympathy for its trials and his faith in its consolations — without feeling profoundly comforted. This also sent me to the rest of James’ work, which is now, collectively, among my favorite things in the world.

5. Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
I’m a functional atheist (aspiring agnostic?), but like James, Robinson is a tonic for anyone, like me, who believes not only that spiritual experience can be investigated without recourse to personal or political strong-arming, but that it’s a necessary, rewarding investigation. Plus, Robinson is a lovely, exact writer, and anyone who writes can only hope to be influenced by her on that level.

6. Notes from Underground by Dostoevsky
This might be the least “influential” book on the list, reading it well after I had discovered existentialism. (Speaking of which, The Myth of Sisyphus should have made this list.) Sure, I’d like to write like Dostoevsky, but I’d also like to sing like Otis Redding and hit clean-up for the Yankees. This is just a great, timeless book.

7. All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy
No, this is the least influential. It’s just a rare novel that I’ve re-read, and even rarer, enjoyed and appreciated just as much each time. So maybe the influence part will become clear at some point. Perhaps I’m meant to live an ascetic, noble cowboy existence. But probably not.

8. Darwin’s Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life by Daniel Dennett
I’ve always liked the construction of a good argument, and Dennett’s argument for evolution is beautiful to behold. That’s the first half of this book’s influence (not that I wouldn’t believe in evolution without it). The second half was unintended. In trying to strictly apply evolutionary theory to everything, including cultural artifacts like the arts, Dennett proved to me (again) that there are limits to any theory, and that sometimes rationalists can lapse into their own kind of religious, illogical fervor.

9. Losers by Michael Lewis
When I read it, this book was called Trail Fever. In it, Lewis tracked some of the fringier candidates during the 1996 presidential campaign. Lewis’ book influenced my nonfiction reading, in that it confirmed for me that I enjoyed: a) a sense of humor about things, even (especially?) serious issues, and b) an eye for telling, entertaining details, no matter how far off the beaten path. It also, more simply, turned me into a Michael Lewis fan.

10. The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract
Don’t judge.

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

John Warner Tells You What to Read Next

I find this hilarious, and pretty cool. In the most recent round of commentary at the Tournament of Books, John Warner takes up the question of how we choose what to read:

I think it’s an important and interesting question because of how limited we are in the number of books we can read in a lifetime. . . . The last two books I finished were Sam Lipsyte’s The Ask and Next by James Hynes. I read those because I loved their previous books. Their current ones delivered much the same pleasures as their last efforts. They were every bit as good as I hoped and expected, but I’d already tasted those flavors. Should I be forcing myself to be a bit more adventurous, to turn toward the unexplored territory, to occasionally pick pistachio over mint chocolate chip at Baskin-Robbins? . . . Sometimes I think we (meaning me) might be better off leaving the choice of what to read with someone or something else.

Which is why I’m thinking of starting a new free service for readers. I will choose your next book for you. In the comments, all you have to do is list the last five books you’ve read and I will tell you what to read next.

The hilarious (and cool) part is that he actually does this. Dozens of people have left comments with the last five books they’ve read, and he’s told every one of them what to read next. It’s like the literary equivalent of palm reading, except, you know, accurate. Head on over there and enjoy the fun.

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

“Hell is story friendly.”

tony-sopranoAt Powell’s, novelist James Hynes has a brief essay titled “In Defense of Unlikable Characters.” I have to agree with Hynes that the very idea of defending them seems a little strange, given how common they are in great literature.

I’m always a little taken aback and (I’ll admit it) a little defensive when readers of my books say that they find my protagonists “unlikable,” like it’s a bad thing. My usual response comes in one of two forms, which are mutually contradictory. The response I usually actually make is, “So what?” After which I proceed to make the same argument I’ve just made above: Is Macbeth likable? Is Ahab? Is Tony Soprano? (Well, actually, Tony sometimes is, but let’s not complicate things.) Literary characters aren’t necessarily meant to be role models, I argue, but truthful representations of lifelike people in all their warty glory. Not to mention that bad behavior is usually the hot little engine at the heart of every narrative. As Charles Baxter puts it, hell is story friendly. Who wants to read about Emma Bovary staying faithful to her husband?

I would add to Hynes’ argument that unlikable central characters can be especially welcome as engines for comedy. The first three examples that spring to mind are Lewis “Teabag” Miner in Sam Lipsyte’s Home Land, John Self in Martin Amis’ Money, and Ignatius J. Reilly in John Kennedy Toole’s A Confederacy of Dunces.

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Sound Check

As David Shields’ promotional work for Reality Hunger continues unabated, something dawned on me. In a recent interview on the Bat Segundo Show, Shields disparages a forthcoming novel by Myla Goldberg based on no more, he admits, than seeing the book in the publisher’s catalog. “[N]o offense to her; I haven’t read her work,” he says. “Well, I’ve read her earlier — I’ve read in and around her earlier books. And it seemed the way — frankly, the way in which the book can be entirely summarized as a narrative machine — seemed to me a very, that very fact meant it was, by definition, for me, a dead text.” There’s more, just as bad. And what dawned on me was that I can’t believe some interviewer of Shields hasn’t adopted the strategy of Elaine Stritch in a particular episode of 30 Rock. In the dialogue below, Colleen Donaghy (played by Stritch) is talking to Phoebe (played by Emily Mortimer):

Phoebe: I always thought it would be lovely to get married in the spring, just as the petunias start to bloom.
Colleen: Sorry, Phoebe, what?
Phoebe: I always wanted to marry in the spring, just as the petunias bloom.
Colleen: Just when the what?
Phoebe: Oh dear, is she hard of hearing?
Colleen: No, no, no. I can hear you. I just wanted to make sure you could hear you.

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Canon Commentary, Still

Every so often, someone will leave a comment about the “Fired from the Canon” feature that ran last summer. The latest two give a sense of the variety. The first person berated the site for its take on On the Road, and concluded: “Lists like this only further the destruction of literature.” I hope you agree that’s overstating the case. The second wondered why Tess of the D’Urbervilles (”slobbering piece of misogynistic soap opera crap”) and The Portrait of a Lady (”like dry toast with sawdust jam”) hadn’t made the list.

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

The Beat

A weekly roundup of noteworthy reviews from other sources.

ian-mcewan-solarA long version this week that continues after the jump. . . . Reviews of Ian McEwan’s latest have been mixed, but the most thorough I’ve seen so far is Thomas Jones’ in the London Review of Books. He says the book is genuinely funny, but that it also suffers from the “tyrannical predictability” of its plot. . . . Hilary Mantel reviews James Shapiro’s look at the controversies, ranging from highly unlikely to ludicrous, surrounding the authorship of Shakespeare’s work: “It’s a tale of snobbery and ignorance, of unhistorical assumptions, of myths about the writing life sometimes fuelled by bestselling authors who ought to know better.” . . . Second Pass contributor Alexander Nazaryan reviews a tour of Germany by Simon Winder. He’s not impressed: “Getting around Hitler is a nice thought, but it might be a bit late for that. Part history and part travelogue, Germania is too scattered to succeed as either. ‘Every attempt has been made to avoid a mere sequence of dreary dynastic events,’ Winder assures, but wrapping one’s mind around a nation that bequeathed to us both the Final Solution and Oktoberfest requires more than a breezy conversational style that, at its worst, comes off like a Wikipedia entry edited by a cantankerous Midlands comedian.” . . . The great Jill Lepore on a recent spate of books about settling for marriages, marriage troubles, and marriage counseling. . . . Eric Puchner says it’s all well and good that young story writers like Wells Tower and Nam Le get praised, but let’s not say they’re “saving” the short story when veterans like Richard Bausch are around: “Bausch, the author of nearly 20 books, many of them story collections, has been writing quietly beautiful stories for close to three decades, and I’m happy to say he’s never been better.” . . . Clive Cookson reviews four books about SETI, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence: “The authors take markedly different approaches to the subject, so there is little overlap between their four books. However they are all mainstream scientists; there is nothing here about UFOs or alien abductions.” . . . Jonathan Eig reviews a new book about Fred Harvey, a now-forgotten figure whose life was a “Horatio Alger tale written in mashed potatoes and gravy”: “In many of the dusty railroad towns out West in the late 1880s and early decades of the 1900s, there was only one place to get a decent meal, one place to take the family for a celebration, one place to eat when the train stopped to load and unload: a Fred Harvey restaurant.” . . . Ana Marie Cox reads Emily Gould’s new memoir. Better her than me. “Gould is a member of a generation that has grown up confusing irony with tragedy, nonchalance with acceptance, a pose with poise, self-dramatization with self-awareness. That confusion is especially maddening because I sense that Gould is interested in figuring out those distinctions, but she shows little concern beyond realizing that a distinction exists.”

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Monday, March 22nd, 2010

An Interview

Jacob Silverman kindly asked me a few questions about The Second Pass—and online book culture generally—and the results have been posted at the Virginia Quarterly Review’s blog.

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

The Cherry & the Pit

A continuing series that highlights books recently acquired by publishing houses for future release. Each post features a book we’re looking forward to, and a book we’re . . . not.

The Cherry:

Robert Graysmith’s Black Fire: The True Biography of the Original Tom Sawyer, the dual narrative of the investigation to stop an arsonist who burned 1850s San Francisco to the ground six times in 18 months (the most devastating series of fires in American history) and the story of Mark Twain’s firefighter friend who was there.

The Pit:

Ron Kincaid’s practical guide to prayer, challenging readers to change their lives by offering prayers God is more likely to answer—based on a prayer journal the author has kept for over 30 years.

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Friday, March 19th, 2010

A Nation of Little Teddy Bears

jaron-lanierMichiko Kakutani has written a wide-ranging piece about “the contentious issues of copyright, intellectual property and plagiarism.” For her foundational texts, she uses two recent books, both of which take “A Manifesto” as their subtitle. She begins with David Shields’ Reality Hunger (I’m working on a review of that one, but it might take a while to itemize all the ways it irritated me), and moves on to Jaron Lanier’s You Are Not a Gadget. I’m in a particularly cranky mood about the culture lately, so Kakutani’s depressing take appealed to me:

For his part Mr. Lanier says that because the Internet is a kind of “pseudoworld” without the qualities of a physical world, it encourages the Peter Pan fantasy of being an entitled child forever, without the responsibilities of adulthood. While this has the virtues of playfulness and optimism, he argues, it can also devolve into a Lord of the Flies-like nastiness, with lots of “bullying, voracious irritability and selfishness” — qualities enhanced, he says, by the anonymity, peer pressure and mob rule that thrive online.

Digital culture, he writes in You Are Not a Gadget, “is comprised of wave after wave of juvenilia,” with rooms of “M.I.T. Ph.D. engineers not seeking cancer cures or sources of safe drinking water for the underdeveloped world but schemes to send little digital pictures of teddy bears and dragons between adult members of social networks.”

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

The Tech Drums

This post by designer Craig Mod about the future of printed books vs. digitized books is visually pleasing, and reasonably stated:

I want to look at where printed books stand in respect to digital publishing, why we historically haven’t read long-form text on screens and how the iPad is wedging itself in the middle of everything. In doing so I think we can find the line in the sand to define when content should be printed or digitized.

This is a conversation for books-makers, web-heads, content-creators, authors and designers. For people who love beautifully made things. And for the storytellers who are willing to take risks and want to consider the most appropriate shape and media for their yarns.

And it has drawn many responses. I still can’t help but think that the most impassioned e-book advocates are getting ahead of themselves. Not because I’m a Luddite, or not just because of that. Mostly because I lived through the tech revolution in music, and it was much more seamless and less contested than this at every stage. Cassettes replaced LPs quickly when I was a kid. And CDs, though they shared space with cassettes for a few years, weren’t welcomed with a lot of hand-wringing about wanting to preserve cassettes. The reason for this seems obvious—when you listen to music, the delivery system is invisible. It only matters in so far as it produces good sound. The benefits of, say, breadth of accessibility on an iPod doesn’t have a corresponding disadvantage. It sounds like many people understand the pleasures of holding and interacting with a book, but the tech parade (the lucrative tech parade) keeps beating the drum, hoping that the louder it gets the more inevitable all these changes will be. And they may be right. I just don’t think it’s at all clear that in this case technology represents a significant improvement.

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Icebreaker

The opening sentence of Suttree by Cormac McCarthy:

Dear friend now in the dusty clockless hours of the town when the streets lie black and steaming in the wake of the watertrucks and now when the drunk and the homeless have washed up in the lee of walls in alleys or abandoned lots and cats go forth highshouldered and lean in the grim perimeters about, now in these sootblacked brick or cobbled corridors where lightwire shadows make a gothic harp of cellar doors no soul shall walk save you.

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Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

In the Ether

big-starMichael Chabon writes about the music of Big Star. (“Power pop is a prayer offered by atheists to a God who exists but doesn’t hear.”) . . . The six finalists for Oddest Book Title of the Year have been announced. I’m betting on Governing Lethal Behavior in Autonomous Robots. . . . This list of reviewer clichés (in the form of a Bingo card) has been making the rounds. I’m sure I’ve been guilty of some, but I would never, ever use the word “unputdownable.” That is awful. I’ve probably used “readable” a couple of times, but I hate that, too. Doesn’t it just mean “capable of being read”? It’s like those beer ads that trumpet “drinkability.” I would hope the stuff is drinkable, as a bare minimum. . . . Laurie Abraham discusses the year she spent watching couples in therapy as research for her new book. (“[T]here are aspects of our culture that make it seem like marriage is the only way to find emotional sustenance in life.”) . . . The most beautiful bookstore in the world? . . . 10 books to help celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. . . . C. Max Magee judges between Lorrie Moore and Marlon James at the Tournament of Books, and the (always entertaining) peanut gallery reflects on the contest.

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Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

A Selection

From The Bostonians by Henry James:

She knew him because she had met him in society; but she didn’t know him—well, because she didn’t want to. If he should come and speak to her—and he looked as if he were going to work round that way—she should just say to him, “Yes, sir,” or “No, sir,” very coldly. She couldn’t help it if he did think her dry; if he were a little more dry, it might be better for him. What was the matter with him? Oh, she thought she had mentioned that; he was a mesmeric healer, he made miraculous cures. She didn’t believe in his system or disbelieve in it, one way or the other; she only knew that she had been called to see ladies he had worked on, and she found that he had made them lose a lot of valuable time. He talked to them—well, as if he didn’t know what he was saying. She guessed he was quite ignorant of physiology, and she didn’t think he ought to go round taking responsibilities. She didn’t want to be narrow, but she thought a person ought to know something.

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Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Satan-I-Am

greeneggsandhamAfter publishing Alexander Nazaryan’s interview with Donald Pease, whose new book is a look at the life and work of Dr. Seuss, I became curious. I wondered if any Seuss book had gotten one-star reviews on Amazon. The vast majority of people love him, but surely there are souls out there who can’t stand him? Well, there are a few, but most are simply the conspiratorial type, like the person who says Horton Hears a Who is really about abortion, or the over-parenting type, like the person who argues that Oh, the Places You’ll Go! has “no sense of family, love, or other type of support.” But the blue-ribbon review is for Green Eggs and Ham. It’s impossible to tell if it’s in earnest or not, but it’s pretty great either way. The headline is “I shudder at the message this story sends to our children.” And the review:

If you’re searching for a literary example of peer pressure, look no further than Dr. Seuss’s subtly horrifying Green Eggs and Ham. The “hero” of this tale, Sam-I-Am, spends the entirety of the book trying to force green eggs and ham upon a nameless skeptic. The “villain” turns down the offer several times, but Sam-I-Am persists, going so far as to follow him home in order to make him try the green eggs and ham. He uses several textbook methods of peer pressure, including the famous, “You’ll never know that you don’t like it if you don’t try it.” He refuses to respect the man’s right to say no, and badgers him incessantly until he caves under the pressure.

What disgusts me most about the end of the story is that once the man tries the green eggs and ham, he loves them and is simply another addition to a pool of addicts. Dr. Seuss’s tragic allegory for the rising drug use among young people that plagued his time period is brilliant, but certainly not appropriate for young children. Sam-I-Am is too easily twisted to become a hero, opening the antagonist’s mind to new things, rather than a metaphor for Satan as I believe was originally intended.

In conclusion, do not read this book to your children unless you are willing to explain to them that people like Sam-I-Am should be avoided at all costs, and that they should never follow the path of the story’s antagonist.

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

One of These Things is Not Like the Others

sparkscyrusIf, like me, you’ve been waiting with not much patience for Nicholas Sparks and Miley Cyrus to find a project worth working on together, wait no longer. That project is the movie The Last Song, an adaptation of a Sparks novel that hits screens later this month. This article started my day with a good laugh. Sparks bristles at his books being called romances. Then Cyrus calls The Last Song “melodramatic.” And then it gets really good:

Sparks says: “I’m going to interrupt you there. There’s a difference between drama and melodrama; evoking genuine emotion, or manipulating emotion. It’s a very fine eye-of-the-needle to thread. And it’s very rare that it works. That’s why I tend to dominate this particular genre. There is this fine line. And I do not verge into melodrama. It’s all drama. I try to generate authentic emotional power.”

But, well, he always does kill someone by the end of his tales, usually to maximum handkerchief effect.

“Of course!” Sparks says. “I write in a genre that was not defined by me. The examples were not set out by me. They were set out 2,000 years ago by Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides. They were called the Greek tragedies. A thriller is supposed to thrill. A horror novel is supposed to scare you. A mystery is supposed to keep you turning the pages, guessing ‘whodunit?’

“A romance novel is supposed to make you escape into a fantasy of romance. What is the purpose of what I do? These are love stories. They went from (Greek tragedies), to Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, then Jane Austen did it, put a new human twist on it. Hemingway did it with A Farewell to Arms.”

Yes, it’s a pretty straight line from Sophocles to Austen to Hemingway to Sparks. If by “pretty straight” you mean “crooked beyond comprehension.” Today’s song is dedicated to Mr. Sparks:

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Get a Job

The new issue of the lovely Lapham’s Quarterly is out, and the subject is Arts & Letters. Included on the web site is a letter from Norman Maclean to an editor at Knopf that ends with this:

I can now only weakly say this: if the situation ever arose when Alfred A. Knopf was the only publishing house remaining in the world and I was the sole remaining author, that would mark the end of the world of books.

The site also features a chart detailing the day jobs of writers like Kafka and Trollope. Which brought to mind the conclusion of this recently read blog post:

Let’s be frank. Freeing authors of fiction from the bonds of real-world drudgery has had some negative consequences. It’s allowed too many to take themselves more seriously than they deserve. It’s provided opportunities for gross self-indulgence and solipsism. It’s sharpened authorial susceptibility to flattery that weakens the writer’s ability to see and hear the world everyone else still inhabits. And it’s encouraged the cultivation of personal eccentricities that might have added charm and savor to their work if nurtured in open air and clean soil, but which turn the hot house of writerly isolation into a little shop of horrors. Maybe it’s better to remove entirely the temptation to write for a living. Maybe it’s better to write for pleasure, or out of compulsion. If dear old Updike, for example, had been required to teach forty hours a week at a school for underprivileged boys, he might only have written half as many books as he did. But, after all, there were some we could have done without.

Monday, March 15th, 2010

The Beat

A weekly roundup of noteworthy reviews from other sources.

family-britainBenjamin Schwarz was an outspoken fan of David Kynaston’s Austerity Britain, the first book in a project called Tales of a New Jerusalem, which uses primary sources to tell the story of Britain from 1945 to 1979. Now, Schwarz reviews the second volume, Family Britain: “Kynaston has again written a masterpiece. More vividly and profoundly than any other historical work I’ve read, Tales of a New Jerusalem captures the rhythms and texture of everyday life and the collective experience of a nation. At once fine-grained and panoramic, witty and plangent, the books masterfully shift focus from deliberations in Whitehall to gossip in the back garden, from sweeping social changes to the hilarious but sad routine—the misguided attempts to please, the self-effacing apologies, the miscues—of a Cheshire family’s teatime.” He also spends a majority of the review writing about a new documentary film, Of Time and the City, which depicts Liverpool during the same time period. . . . Saul Austerlitz reviews a book about Vincente Minnelli, Mr. Judy Garland and a director with more feeling for furniture than people. (“At times, the sets took precedence over the actors; one wag dismissed his 1955 psychiatric drama The Cobweb as The Drapes of Wrath.”) . . . A new book charts the history of the punch line that doubled as a car: the Yugo. . . . The Wall Street Journal reviews three news books about troubled marriages and the different ways people try to fix (or end) them. . . . Eric Ormsby says that Holy Warriors by Jonathan Phillips has “a cool, almost documentary power” and is “the best recent history of the Crusades.” . . . The Times (London) judges that Alex Butterworth’s new book is “exhausting” and “perhaps more dizzying than it needs to be,” but worthwhile nonetheless: “[I]n this rich and passionate account of the world’s first international terrorist campaign — as conducted by anarchist zealots between the Paris Commune of 1871 and the first Russian Revolution of 1905 — the disquieting echoes of our own times are impossible to ignore.”

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Friday, March 12th, 2010

In the Ether

wyndham-lewisCy Fox spent 50 years building a collection of work by writer and artist Wyndham Lewis. He then donated it all to the University of Victoria in British Columbia. A look at the collection and the renewed interest in Lewis. (Via Books, Inq.) . . . The top 13 novels about drugs. Commenters at HTML Giant rightly point out that Jesus’ Son is missing; though it might just be that it doesn’t qualify as a novel. . . . In a world of Dancing with the Stars and Jersey Shore, it’s worth remembering that some people are deservedly famous, and Michael Lewis is one of them. Robert Birnbaum praises his “unerring sense of story, his investigative skills, and clear, concise reportorial prose,” and recommends his latest, The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine, about the financial crisis. . . . John Gall writes about designing the paperback cover for Up in the Air in the wake of September 11. . . . A historical, almost tactile-through-the-screen pleasure: a very large gallery of book trade labels. (“Booksellers, binders, printers, publishers, importers, and distributors of books used to advertise in this way their part in bringing the book to market.”) . . . The Tournament of Books is off to a wild start. First, the book-club-ready narrative satisfactions of Barbara Kingsolver and Kathryn Stockett beat out the edgier credentials of Bill Cotter and John Wray, respectively. And now, Richard Russo loses to a book the judge hasn’t even finished. . . . I didn’t know that Milkweed was reissuing Ken Kalfus’ debut collection of stories, Thirst. That’s good news.

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Friday, March 12th, 2010

NBCC Wrap

Just a few impressions from last night’s NBCC awards ceremony: The Oscars could learn a thing or two from this event. Every year, it’s quickly paced, full of charming speeches, and quickly paced. Scheduled to start at 6, this year’s festivities got going a little later than that and were over by 7.

Joan Acocella accepted the Nona Balakian Citation for Excellence in Reviewing, and ended her brief remarks with, “If you think your situation [reviewing books] is tough, consider dance reviewing, which is the other thing I do.” Joyce Carol Oates, introduced by her Princeton colleague Edmund White, was gracious and funny in accepting the Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award. I imagine she would make a terrific dinner guest.

Three of the six category winners were not on hand, but Autobiography winner Diana Athill, 92, managed to make a memorable appearance even while absent. Her editor at Norton, Tom Mayer, read some of the delightful e-mails he received from her in the days leading up to the ceremony.

Blake Bailey, winner for Biography, emphasized the cooperation he received from John Cheever’s family, and how they spoke of Cheever with both “deep affection and withering objectivity,” an ideal combination for a biographer.

Hilary Mantel was not there to accept the latest accolade for Wolf Hall, but she sent prepared remarks that included the news that a sequel to the novel is “underway.”

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

NBCC Winners Announced

I just left the ceremony for the National Book Critics Circle Awards, and the winners were:

General Nonfiction: The Age of Wonder by Richard Holmes
Autobiography: Somewhere Towards the End by Diana Athill
Biography: Cheever: A Life by Blake Bailey
Criticism: Notes from No Man’s Land by Eula Biss
Poetry: Versed by Rae Armantrout
Fiction: Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

More thoughts on the proceedings tomorrow.

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Books in Buffalo

John Eklund, a field rep based in Milwaukee for three university presses (Harvard, MIT, Yale), recently wrote a wandering blog post that’s right up my alley. He begins by wondering where the Midwest technically (and spiritually) begins and ends; makes a stop in one of my favorite towns, Ithaca, and pauses for a mention of the great Collegetown Bagels; and ends with a consideration of Buffalo and the book culture there. Reading it made me want to visit smallish Northeastern (or Midwestern) towns, which I’m always sort of in the mood for anyway, and browse through a bunch of bookstores I’ve never seen.

Eklund share this moment from a dinner with the owners of Talking Leaves, a store in Buffalo:

Mention of a customer who had died recently reminded me of stories I’ve heard all over the place–the reliable art book customer, or Churchill customer, or hardcover fiction reader who first retired to Arizona but continued to faithfully order books, but then eventually, inevitably, left the scene. There’s fear that these serious book buyers which every store needs to survive are not being replaced in sufficient numbers.

(A sad ironic twist on a Milwaukee version of this story I’m familiar with: a bookaholic customer with great taste and deep pockets shopped the store daily for years. When she died, her daughter sold back her library, and now her cherished collection is back on the bookstore shelves, disaggregated and marked down, but at least with a shot at a second life.)

I’ve added his blog, Paper Over Board, to the Links page.

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Translation Winners Announced

noa-weberThe winners of this year’s Best Translated Book Award were announced last night at beautiful Idlewild Books in Manhattan. Chad Post, the director of Three Percent, which organizes the prize, and Open Letter Books gave a brief but spirited introductory speech. He struck a note of enthusiasm, saying that the award was conceived three years ago because, while it’s true that a relatively very small number of books are translated, it’s worth celebrating the ones that are in addition to bemoaning the ones that aren’t.

The fiction winner, in a contest that Post described as heated, was Gail Hareven’s The Confessions of Noa Weber, translated from the Hebrew by Dalya Bilu. A brief description from the publisher:

Acclaimed author Noa Weber has a successful “feminist” life: a strong career, a wonderful daughter she raised alone, and she is a recognized and respected cultural figure. Yet her interior life is bound by her obsessive love for one man—Alek, a Russian émigré and the father of her child, who has drifted in and out of her life.

Trying to understand—as well as free herself from—this lifelong obsession, Noa turns her pen on herself, and with relentless honesty dissects her life. Against the evocative setting of turbulent, modernday Israel, this examination becomes a quest to transform irrational desire into a greater, transcendent understanding of love.

Winner of the poetry prize was Elena Fanailova’s The Russian Version, translated from the Russian by Genya Turovskaya and Stephanie Sandler.

Congratulations to both. More winners tonight, as the National Book Critics Circle awards are announced at The New School in New York. The ceremony is open to the public.

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

The (Most) Popular Crowd

With a year under the site’s belt, I invite you (if you’re relatively new around here, or even if you’re not) to scroll through the up-to-date index and sample some reviews. If you’re interested in what’s been most popular around here, the most visited individual post by far is “Fired From the Canon,” last summer’s argument against several well-regarded books. Most people took it in the open-to-counterargument way it was intended, but it also rubbed several people wrong. Second-most popular is Natalia Antonova’s moving but sharp-eyed take on reading (and loving) Lolita as a survivor of childhood abuse. Rounding out the top five are my skeptical take on Jonathan Safran Foer’s Eating Animals, our list of books that deserve to be read 100 years from now, and Deborah Shapiro’s smart, very funny review—from the earliest days of the site’s existence—of Eve Babitz’s memoir of Los Angeles.

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Happy Birthday to Us

1-candleThe Second Pass launched a year ago today. I wanted to thank everyone for reading and getting the site off to such a great start. At the risk of turning this into an Oscar speech, I also have to thank Jennifer Maas for all her hard work; Strath Shepard for his dedication and his brilliant design; Charles Hunt for his generosity and encouragement; and all the site’s contributing writers, whose collective work I would put up against anyone’s online or in print.

In order to celebrate, I asked several friends of the site to write about their favorite out-of-print book, and that feature has been posted on the Backlist today.

I hope you’ve enjoyed the year, and that you’ll continue to read and to spread the word. Remember, if you make purchases at Amazon after linking there from The Second Pass, a percentage of your purchase will help support the site. The bottom of every review features links to Amazon pages, and they’re often embedded in blog posts, too. If a book is rare and you need more options—as you might, for instance, if you want any of the books mentioned in today’s Backlist feature—there are many great places for used books online: AbeBooks, Alibris, and Biblio, to name three.

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

In the Ether

indyJ. D. Salinger didn’t care for Raiders of the Lost Ark. . . . I agree with almost every word of Levi Asher’s take on the e-books “revolution,” and whether it will ever happen in full. A small piece: “The sensory/physical equation of music listening is really very different from that of reading. An MP3 player disappears when you’re listening to music. But a book does not disappear—not in the digital or the print realm.” . . . The web has already covered this news thoroughly, as the web tends to do, but let me add my congratulations to Lorin Stein for being named editor of The Paris Review. Smart choice by a smart magazine. . . . A database of 337 20th-century bestsellers, with “an extremely detailed description of the book’s history; a mini-essay on its reception; images of covers, page layouts, and even some ads; and more.” (Via The Millions) . . . The first match of the Tournament of Books is in the, er, books, and we’ll have to wait for our first upset. . . . Peter Straub writes at length about the genre wars, including this:

[J]ust for beginners, let’s admit that literary fiction is a genre, too, shall we? Expectations guide its readers, that of respect for consensus reality and the poignancy of seemingly ordinary lives, of sensitive character-drawing and vivid scene-painting, of the reversals and conflicts characteristic of the several sub-genres of literary fiction: the academic novel, the comic novel, the adultery novel, the comic academic adultery-novel, the experimental novel, the novel of foreign travel or inward journey, of unexpected encounter, of breakdown, of alcoholism, of youth, of middle age, of a hundred different things so well-known and encoded that the fonts used for the titles and the authors’ names tell you as much as the flap copy.

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Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

David Foster Wallace Doodles on Cormac McCarthy’s Face

suttreeThe Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin is home to the collected papers of Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Norman Mailer, Doris Lessing, James Salter, and many others. Now it’s also home to the archive of David Foster Wallace. The press release announcing the news says:

The archive contains manuscript materials for Wallace’s books, stories and essays; research materials; Wallace’s college and graduate school writings; juvenilia, including poems, stories and letters; teaching materials and books.

Highlights include handwritten notes and drafts of his critically acclaimed “Infinite Jest,” the earliest appearance of his signature “David Foster Wallace” on “Viking Poem,” written when he was six or seven years old, a copy of his dictionary with words circled throughout and his heavily annotated books by Don DeLillo, Cormac McCarthy, John Updike and more than 40 other authors.

The Center already offers a great preview of the material online, including an essay by Molly Schwartzburg about Wallace’s Infinite Jest-related annotations in a book about cinema; a partial list of the words Wallace circled in the dictionary; and a great selection of the insides of his books, including a hilarious copy of Suttree by Cormac McCarthy, in which Wallace not only wrote on the inside cover “set-up is slow — does not set stage” but mischievously drew eyeglasses, a mustache, and fangs on McCarthy’s author photo.

Monday, March 8th, 2010

The Beat

A weekly roundup of noteworthy reviews from other sources.

chang-rae-leeJames Wood writes about realism and David Shields’ recent “manifesto” about, among other things, his distaste for conventional fiction, before settling into a review of Chang-Rae Lee’s latest novel, The Surrendered—“a book that is commendably ambitious, extremely well written, powerfully moving in places, and, alas, utterly conventional.” . . . Pagan Kennedy reviews Marilyn Johnson’s new book about librarians in the digital age: “This is one of those books, in the vein of Mary Roach’s Stiff (about human cadavers), that tackle a big topic by taking readers on a chapter-by-chapter tour of eccentric characters and unlikely locations. Given Johnson’s attractions to wild tangents, the journey often dissolves into a jumble. It is a testament to her skill as a writer that she remains fascinating, even in the throes of A.D.D.” . . . Stephen Burt reviews a collection of the great Kay Ryan’s poetry: “If you are the sort of reader who underlines witty, widely applicable remarks, you may underline something on every page. You may even get tired of underlining: Sage, mordant general claims about life are almost the only kind of poem she writes.” . . . Christopher Tayler with a long look at the five volumes of memoirs by Clive James, culminating in a review of the newest, which covers James’ years in TV. . . . Ian McEwan’s latest, Solar, will be published in the U.S. at the end of this month. Early reviews from the UK are quite positive. Peter Kemp says that “sizzling lucidity distinguishes this enormously entertaining novel about rationality and unreason,” which is “a comedy every bit as brilliant as its title might suggest.”

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Monday, March 8th, 2010

Set to Crow

The Tournament of Books is upon us. Today, Kevin Guilfoile and John Warner assume their usual seats in the peanut gallery and start things off with a preview. Guilfoile says, “I finished better than half of this year’s contenders, and if I can inject some early optimism into the proceedings, I personally found this year’s field to be very strong. It might not have as many novels coming in with as much hype as we had in past years, but there’s a lot of parity here.”

The competition proper starts tomorrow, when Morning News editor Rosecrans Baldwin judges a match-up between Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann and Miles from Nowhere by Nami Mun.

Enjoy the action.

Monday, March 8th, 2010

The Pit & the Pit

A continuing series that highlights books recently acquired by publishing houses for future release. Each post features a book we’re looking forward to, and a book we’re . . . not.

I too often allow a lack of cherries to keep me from posting a new entry in this series. So I’ll occasionally post a couple of pits; they’re more fun, anyway.

The Pit:

Dena Harris’ Who Moved My Mouse?: A Self Help Book For Cats (Who Don’t Need Any Help), which addresses the low self-esteem issues facing cats across the globe, and includes A Cat’s Conversations with God, and Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff, But Feel Free to Freak Out Over Anything That Moves Suddenly or Without Warning.

Another Pit:

Marilyn Brant’s The Grand European, the story of a conservative young woman’s journey of self-discovery as she travels abroad with her adventurous aunt’s sudoku-and-mahjong club.

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Saturday, March 6th, 2010

Polls Close Sunday Night

polling-stationJust a quick note for the weekend: It’s not too late (but it’s almost too late) to vote at 3 Quarks Daily for the site’s Arts & Literature Prize. You can only vote once, but if you haven’t yet, go to this page. There are many fine nominees, so please vote your conscience. But of course, I strongly recommend choosing Carlene Bauer’s review of Flannery: A Life of Flannery O’Connor by Brad Gooch. (You can read it here.) You’ll find it near the end of the list of nominees (10th from the bottom), under “The Second Pass: Mary Flannery, Quite Contrary.”

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

A Seriously Funny Man

de-vriesI just finished reading The Blood of the Lamb, a singular novel by Peter De Vries first published in 1961. It tells the life story of Don Wanderhope, a Chicago native raised in a strict Dutch Christian Reformed family. These biographical details, as well as Don’s most severe trials—culminating in his young daughter contracting leukemia—mirrored De Vries’ own.

De Vries was mostly known as a comic writer—of some two dozen or so novels, all of which were out of print when he died in 1993. (Lamb and Slouching Towards Kalamazoo are the only two now back in circulation, from The University of Chicago Press.) After De Vries’ second novel was published (Lamb was his sixth), Kingsley Amis called him “the funniest serious writer to be found on either side of the Atlantic.”

Even Lamb is remarkably funny. Halfway through, I was already recommending it to a friend, who took it from my hands on the subway and rightly pointed out that it’s not easy to convince someone a book is funny when its copyright page recommends shelving it under “Sick children — Fiction” or “Children — Death — Fiction.” Fair enough. But it really is funny. And when it’s not, it’s powerful on the subjects of family and faith.

Unsurprisingly, I’ve been finding more fans of the book online, like Patrick Kurp, and “Nige,” who wrote:

[T]here always seemed to be in [De Vries’] better writings a strong tension between his fascination with religious questions and his easy way with a reductive witticism. He was raised in the Dutch Christian Reformed Church, and yet his wisecracking often sounds distinctly Jewish, in the key of Woody Allen. In the end, it was the wisecracking that won out, as De Vries turned out comedy after comedy…

I’ll be on to Kalamazoo next — and I’ve already seen that Strand has copies of several of his out-of-print books.

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

In the Ether

pm-douceIn 1975, a woman named P. M. Doucé, believing a psychic who told her she was “the conduit for the posthumous creations of none other than T. S. Eliot,” self-published a book of poems called Incredible Alliance. . . . The Rumpus interviews Sam Lipsyte on the publication date of his new novel, The Ask. (Second Pass review coming soon-ish.) Find out about whom Lipsyte hilariously says, “He’s doing groundbreaking blurb work.” . . . Meredith Blake summarizes the history of opinions about Eva Braun, Hitler’s boo, and looks at a new book that “tackles some of the more persistent Braun myths head-on.” . . . The Believer has announced the list of finalists for its annual book award. . . . An art student designed four lovely covers for Jules Verne novels. . . . The book world’s version of March Madness, the Morning News’ Tournament of Books, is right around the corner. (My choice for best first-round matchup: Wells Tower vs. Nicholson Baker.) To get us ready, Andrew Seal crunches some stats from past tourneys for clues to this year’s possible results. . . . The Los Angeles Times is granted a rare visit with John McPhee. . . . This has nothing to do with books, but it seems worth noting that the recent earthquake in Chile may have shortened the average day on Earth by 1.26 milliseconds.

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Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Icebreaker

The opening sentence of High Lonesome by Barry Hannah:

Since he had returned from Korea he and his wife lived in mutual disregard, which turned three times a month into animal passion then diminished on the sharp incline to hatred, at last collecting in time into silent equal fatigue.

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