With its second appearance at the Mountain Bar in Chinatown, Jim Ruland's Vermin on the Mount reading series has proved itself a worthy addition to L.A.'s burgeoning literary scene. (And yes, we'd say this even if Jim wasn't a TEV Guest Blogger Emeritus.)
Despite a dark, drizzly November night, a crowd of about sixty or so made the trek to Chinatown to hear the latest writers getting the Vermin treatment. (Attendees included Swink editor Leelila Strogov and LA Weekly contributor and blogger par excellence Josh Bearman.) And the appreciative crowd got its money's worth (yeah, we know it was free). As contributor Sean Carswell blurted out during his reading, "I love this crowd!"
Jim's found a way to keep readings from stretching out into the dull and ponderous by keeping it light and lively, finding writers of talent who can also read beyond a monotone. The first reader. Scott O'Connor, has been interviewed here before. He offered a lively reading of the opening of his novella Among Wolves. O'Connor has an actor's timing (and baritone) and the audience enjoyed this twisted tale of a boy who suspects his parents have been replaced by imposters.
Next up was Boing Boing editor and NPR/Wired contributor Xeni Jardin who read a marvelous story called Ten Parabolas, about a trip up in the "Vomit Comet." It was a lovely, beautifully written tale flotation and gravity, in which "each return to gravity comes with a kind of grief." Our favorite line of the story: An astronaut's advice to the Comet passenger - "Trust your data, not your senses." We hope to see this story in print somewhere soon.
After a break - Jim wisely spaces the readings apart with drinking/smoking breaks provided - Sean Carswell took the stage with the hilarious story Framing Invasion, which tells the take of a punk rock carpenter's revenge on a car dealership for its insidious jingle. Carswell seemed to recite the tale from memory, more monologue than short story but his enthusiasm and energy were infectious and the audience thoroughly enjoyed lines such as: "Classic rock torments me."
Rounding off the evening was Swink contributor Rachel Resnick (Go West, F**ked up Chick) who read from a work in progress set in India for an upcoming issue of Black Clock. Unfortunately, she read the piece with an irritating affectation the unnecessarily marred what seemed to be a well-written and moving story.
Despite the political gloom in the air, JIm confidently predicts a resurgence of "hardcore political punk." Whether his musical predictive powers are to be reckoned with remains to be seen. But the Vermin series deserves a place on your list of L.A. Literary Happenings of Note.

Hey--thanks for posting this. What's with the devilish eyes on Jim, though?
Posted by: MG | November 08, 2004 at 06:44 AM
Figured it was in keeping with the Vermin theme ...
Posted by: TEV | November 08, 2004 at 08:39 AM