OK, so the links have been piling up while we were transcribing the Andrew Sean Greer interview, and now they're starting to spoil and this nasty smell is coming out of my inbox, so it's time to pass them on to you before the health department shuts this place down. Excuse the dump form but (a) there are a lot of them and (b) my agent wants to know why the hell am I not done with the rewrite yet but somehow daily updates materialize here? So here's what we've got today, and more orderly offerings will follow this week.
First off, Maud has begun a series of author interviews on their writing habits. Collect the whole set! We're immediate fans - love the idea and the execution. We'll be checking 'em out regularly. (We suggest the title "Making Book")
So, apparently, there's this new literary genre called The New Weird. It must be so, because they're saying so over at Oxford. Although we're inherently suspicious of anything that so self-evidently states "a fresh literary genre that is kicking conventions" - isn't that, after all, precisely what "fresh genres" are meant to do?
Stephen King and Richard Russo will be judging a high school fiction contest in Maine.
The Weekend Australian writes up the Spanish sensation The Shadow of the Wind, and weighs its chances of English language success. With its Cemetery of Forgotten Books, it sounds suspiciously Borgesian.
Reuters reports that Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat hospital has been fined in the death of two patients, one of whom may have been Olivia Goldsmith.
The Scotsman reviews the authorized biography of Stephen Spender.
The Guardian excerpts an essay (already linked pretty much everywhere else) by Monica Ali on the uses of enchantment.
In a grisly and sad development, the 13-year-old son of Russian author Ivan Belyanin has been murdered by kidnappers.
Always big news, an untitled Kingsley Amis poem has been unearthed. Here's the poem:
UntitledThings tell less and less:
The news impersonal
And from afar; no book
Worth wrenching off the shelf.
Liquor brings dizziness
And food discomfort; all
Music sounds thin and tired,
And what picture could earn a look?
The self drowses in the self
Beyond hope of a visitor.
Desire and those desired
Fade, and no matter:
Memories in decay
Annihilate the day.
There once was an answer:
Up at the stroke of seven,
A turn round the garden
(Breathing deep and slow),
Then work, never mind what,
How small, provided that
It serves another's good
But once is long ago
And, tell me, how could
Such an answer be less than wrong,
Be right all along?
Vain echoes, desist
Nigerian police briefly detained Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka but released him without charging him. The Bush Administration can learn something from Nigeria.
It was only a matter of time: Blog Fiction. (For what it's worth Ed and I have been discussing these possibilities offline.)
Recent book fair activity suggests that the Chinese are "crazy for books".
David Kipen rounds up the latest crop on California literary magazines, including Swink, whose founder Leelila Strogov is the subject of our next Q&A.
AP interviews Tobias Wolff for another discussion about Old School.
No memoirs for German chancellor Gerhard Schroder. He's thinking about writing a crime novel set against the backdrop of the Iraq war.
America's largest undergraduate writing prize has gone to Angela Haley of Baltimore's Washington College.
G.K. Chesterton on England v. France.
The much-rejected Shanghai Dancing has won the NSW Premier's Literary Award.
And finally, Word Theatre informs us that "Due to unforseen work conflicts for a couple of our actors, we have decided to postpone the May 20th show in our series, "Life After Birth: Musings on Parenthood..." until Saturday night, September 18th at M BAR. So mark your calendars and put your babysitter on alert 'cause this is one show you won't want to miss!"
More coherence tomorrow, we promise.
Just got back from our school's three-day trip to Boston and saw the headline for 5/18 ... Ah, Goop Melange -- one of our old faves from the Odd Couple. Sad news, of course, about Tony Randall; glad you thought to immortalize him via what was actually a entree created, of course, by the noted sports columnist Oscar Madison.
GC
Posted by: gabe | May 19, 2004 at 07:57 PM