We're expecting a bit of a gradual slow down around here this week (like everyone else) as the holidays draw near but first we've got this load o' links that accumulated during last week's Display of Notables.
* Tales of the Public Domain Parasite.
* The ultimate stocking stuffer, The Complete New Yorker DVD collection is reviewed in the Boston Globe. (We did not have the same problems the author did getting the software installed but merely note that it's a loooooong initial install.)
* We thought this to be exceptionally well stated. Nothing more to add.
* We wanted to like Time Was Soft There, we really did. After all, it has us written all over it - a memoir of a sojourn at Paris' Shakespeare and Co, it caught our eye the minute it turned up. But we found the writing alternately bland and portentous and couldn't make much headway with it. Down in Palm Beach they do seem to like it a bit more than we did.
* As was widely noted last week, the Pamuk trial has been delayed. It's a mystery how Turkey thinks its European aspirations can be taken at all seriously with shennanigans like this, and The Observer calls on Turkey to own up to its past - a lesson Europe could not have survived without learning itself.
* As the centenary of his birth approaches, the Scotsman makes the case for elevating Powell above Waugh. (Apparently, it's something they're struggling with.)
* The Chronicle looks at the latest from John Barth.
* About a year ago we got to sit down and chat (off the record) with NYTBR Sam Tannenhaus, and what he told us about the procedures at the Book Review is pretty much to the letter what they say it is. Although we think the biggest credibility gap comes not from the occasional pimping of friends' work efforts (hey, we've done it ourselves) but in naming Prep one of the year's five best novels. Now that will toss your cred right out the window, gentlemen. (And this piece valuably reveals just who selected the unsigned top ten.)
* Newsday interviews John Banville. (He told us the albino story first ... )
* PopMatters asks the question: Is Philip Roth the best living American writer?
* Clive James - not everyone's cup of tea, we know, but someone we appreciate - looks at his literary education sentimentale which is dotted with "sludge" ...
* The blog world continues to inject new and interesting life into the usual end of year best book recitations, with Ready Steady Books' excellent symposium, and Syntax of Things' take on underrated writers - to which we contributed the names John McManus, Lydia Millet and Jim Ruland.
* Robert Birnbaum unleashed a new interview while we were occupied last week, this one with Marc Estrin, in which the two discuss "audio books Bread and Puppets theater, Senor Wences, Charles Dickens, the Dalai Lama, Brahms, Alban Berg’s Wozzeck, Mahler and Das Lied von der Erde, fin de siecle Vienna, Alexander Gershenkron, Leonard Bernstein, Arnold Stange, the Mozart Requiem, the Edenic aspects of Vermont, Congressman Bernie Sanders, Unbridled Books, Hans Christian Anderson and many, many of my personal opinions."
* We've always been very impressed by Lindsay Waters, executive editor for the humanities at Harvard University Press, and this essay written for The Chronice of Higher Education, in which he examines ways of bringing a bit of heart back into the moribund study of literature, furthers our already high opinion of him.
* Finally, like the rest of the blogosphere, we join in wishing Terry Teachout a full and speedy recovery!
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