Jeez, there's an unusual amount of literary activity worth noting today and, since we're still not quite firing on all cylinders, we offer it in this handy digest form for you to do with what you will. (By the way, it's entirely possible if not downright likely that some of this material has already appeared during my absence on some of the better books blogs around town. If so, apologies in advance.)
* Orhan Pamuk is definitely having his Chang-rae Lee moment, popping up here there and everywhere. The Seattle PI decides to spend a moment with him, in which he touches on, unsurprisingly, the global state of affairs. He's also the subject of an AP feature picked up by the Nashua Telegraph. (Hey, Paul, when are you going to give up that copy of Snow?)
* Hemingway may have talked a good game but he couldn't really box for shit. At least, that's the line that the folks over at The Sweet Science are taking.
* There are few big name authors whom we dislike as thoroughly as we dislike poseur and hack Tom Wolfe. Unfortunately, with the release of his latest offense, he's quite in the news these days. (Apparently, a fledgling baseball career very nearly spared us all.) We should be pleased that Newsweek doesn't think much of the new book, but the "trite stuff" headline isn't anything to proud of either. (It should be pointed out that a close second in my Hated Author Sweepstakes is the execrable Neil LaBute.)
* Our Partner in Things Parisian, Sam Jones, has posted a great recap of a recent Aleksandar Hemon reading.
* Good things in LRB just now: Theo Tait reviews the new Naipaul, which he calls "astounding amalgam of smut and snobbery, distaste and slavering fascination." And Judith Butler remembers Derrida.
* Laura Demanski reviews Lawrence Thornton's Sailors on the Inward Sea - the premise of which is "that the great modernist writer Joseph Conrad based his recurring character Marlow – who narrates “Lord Jim” (1900) and “Heart of Darkness” (1902) – not on his own life (which would seem to be simply par for the course) but on somebody else’s" - and finds it a "mesmerizing read." (Bugmenot required but worth it.)
* It's an interesting one-two punch: The Korea Times talks to both the author AND the translator of The Pager, which won the Grand and Commendation awards in the 33rd Korea Times translation awards in 2002.
* The accolades for Stephen Greenblatt's Shakespeare biography Will in the World continue, the latest coming from the Sunday Times. We assume his recent excellent "essay" in NYRB on the making of Hamlet is actually an excerpt from same.
* The whole undimmed-political-relevancy-of-Graham-Greene thing seems impossible to resist. The latest entry comes from the op-ed pages of the Boston Globe. (Elsewhere, the Australian speculates on Greene's elusive nature.)
* We always thought there were only five basic plots. (We know for a fact there are only two in Hollywood.) Apparently, there are seven.
* Yann Martel is (God help us) branching out into music. We wonder whose tunes he'll steal.
* And finally, Saddam's literary aspirations are nothing compared to the Serbs. (Although for sheer ridiculousness, it's hard to beat this Pravda item about the discovery of, um, real hobbits.)
Isn't Pravda wonderful? I love the way that they ape the Weekly World News on the assumption that's what decadent Westerners want to read. They struggled a bit with the "hobbits" though, probaby unsure as to whether to stick to the truth or make it sound like that had made it up.
By the way, welcome home!
Posted by: Cheryl Morgan | November 01, 2004 at 04:34 PM
Thanks particularly for the Judith Butler-Derrida link. I've just forwarded it to the students in my grad seminar but spaced out on crediting your site--sorry...
Further miscellaneous thoughts: (1) Tom Wolfe is described in the Guardian headline as (I'm possibly misremembering) "arguably the greatest living American writer"!!! surely not?!?! (2) I share your Neil LaBute prejudice. Top hated author of mine too. Surely hostility towards women et al. can't be explained away as "exposing corrupt tendencies in contemporary society from a Mormon perspective." (That's not a quote from anything in particular, just my paraphrase.) (3) Be skeptical about virtues of Greenblatt's Will in the World. From what I've seen, Anthony Holden's more even-handed review in the Guardian (http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,1323716,00.html) says it better.
Posted by: Jenny D | November 01, 2004 at 09:18 PM
How Neil LaBute ever got into the New Yorker is one of life's enduring mysteries. Welcome home, babe.
Posted by: Jimmy Beck | November 02, 2004 at 08:26 AM