A master at the form on why, despite popular belief, good travel books are just waiting to be written:
The world is not as small as Google Earth depicts it. I think of the Lower River district in Malawi, the hinterland of Angola, the unwritten-about north of Burma and its border with Nagaland. Nearer home, the urban areas of Europe and the United States.
Theroux: The Places In Between
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Interview with George Saunders: Steer Towards The Rapids
Best advice on writing fiction I've read in a while: “Any monkey in a story had better be a dead monkey"
From the good people at BOMblog
George Saunders Interview Part One
George Saunders Interview Part Two
From the good people at BOMblog
George Saunders Interview Part One
George Saunders Interview Part Two
Great Book, Terrible Person
After V.S. Naipaul said some stupid things about women writers the issue of having a great book written by a terrible person has come up again. Dickens treated his wife terribly, but he wrote Great Expectations and A Tale of Two Cities. Hemingway was a drunk who harboured petty grudges and was married four times, but he wrote The Sun Also Rises. TS Eliot was an anti-Semite but he gave us The Wasteland. The list goes on.
The real question is whether it matters to the work. Of course what the indiscretion is and how long it was are two factors - it's hard to imagine any Nazi writers gaining any kind of credibility, but Gertrude Stein is still read, even though she made comments in support of Hitler. It's also interesting that this doesn't come up as much in the movie/TV/music/sports world - we almost expect an actor/athlete/rock star to behave in a certain way.
When Bad People Write Good Books - Salon
A Collection of Good Books by Morally Questionable People - Flavorwire
The real question is whether it matters to the work. Of course what the indiscretion is and how long it was are two factors - it's hard to imagine any Nazi writers gaining any kind of credibility, but Gertrude Stein is still read, even though she made comments in support of Hitler. It's also interesting that this doesn't come up as much in the movie/TV/music/sports world - we almost expect an actor/athlete/rock star to behave in a certain way.
When Bad People Write Good Books - Salon
A Collection of Good Books by Morally Questionable People - Flavorwire
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Famous Literary Spats
From the good people at Flavorwire:
In 2002, Whitehead gave us a hilarious and scathing review of A Multitude of Sins in The New York Times. He writes, “The characters’ sense of befuddlement comes to infect, but never to enlighten, the reader.” He later notes, “At the top of the story, the protagonist offers an Awkward Pang of Simmering Dissatisfaction, which sounds suspiciously like the A.P.S.D. offered by the character in the previous story.” For this, Richard Ford spit on him at a Poets & Writers party. Afterward, Whitehead said, “This wasn’t the first time some old coot had drooled on me, and it probably won’t be the last. But I would like to warn the many other people who panned the book that they might want to get a rain poncho, in case of inclement Ford.”
Famous Literary Spats
In 2002, Whitehead gave us a hilarious and scathing review of A Multitude of Sins in The New York Times. He writes, “The characters’ sense of befuddlement comes to infect, but never to enlighten, the reader.” He later notes, “At the top of the story, the protagonist offers an Awkward Pang of Simmering Dissatisfaction, which sounds suspiciously like the A.P.S.D. offered by the character in the previous story.” For this, Richard Ford spit on him at a Poets & Writers party. Afterward, Whitehead said, “This wasn’t the first time some old coot had drooled on me, and it probably won’t be the last. But I would like to warn the many other people who panned the book that they might want to get a rain poncho, in case of inclement Ford.”
Famous Literary Spats
Esquire's Big Book of Fiction - Adrienne Miller
Reads like a who-who of American fiction of the 20th century, with all the names you'd expect - Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Mailer, Carver, Ford, McCarthy, O'Conner, Wallace, Cheever, Barth, DeLillo. Some are good, others are great, and a few were added just to be inclusive. A book you can pick up at different times, turn to a story and read - one of my favourite kind of books.
Gary Shteyngart Super Sad True Love Story Trailers
Somehow, I missed these two trailers from Gary Shtenygart for his book Super Sad True Love Story.
Super Sad True Love Story - James Franco
Gary Shteyngart and Paul Giamitti Buddy Comedy
Super Sad True Love Story - James Franco
Gary Shteyngart and Paul Giamitti Buddy Comedy
The Pale King - David Foster Wallace
Somewhere in here is a great novel, amid these half-formed, half-written sections. It's about the IRS and boredom and how ordinary people doing ordinary things (processing tax forms) can achieve a level of heroism, a level of cool that mostly goes unrecognized.
The Pale King can't really be called a novel, more of a journal, and will be remembered more for what it could have been rather than what it is. It's a greatest hit album - if you like David Foster Wallace than you'll like this, but if you don't, this won't change your mind.
The Pale King can't really be called a novel, more of a journal, and will be remembered more for what it could have been rather than what it is. It's a greatest hit album - if you like David Foster Wallace than you'll like this, but if you don't, this won't change your mind.
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