* FOTEV Jim Ruland makes his Los Angeles Times Book Review debut with this look at Ben Fountain's short story collection Brief Encounters with Che Guevara. He's no doubt breathing a sigh of relief that we don't grade the book review any more but we surely would have given him an A - nice job, Jim.
The real sorcerer at work here is Fountain, whose command of the arcana of European music and politics is nothing short of dazzling. "Fantasy for Eleven Fingers" is a powerful tale about identity. The story expertly straddles the line between fiction that illuminates the past and history too absurd to be believed that is familiar to anyone who has examined the offbeat exhibits at Culver City's Museum of Jurassic Technology. Though the hatred Anna endures is a prelude to the horrors of the 20th century, readers will not soon forget the prodigy's response. "Brief Encounters With Che Guevara" is an impressive performance from an author with a gift for reaching into the past and producing something compelling and new.
* Cuba's International Gold Crown Prize has been awarded.
* We've mentioned already that Tom Stoppard's The Coast of Utopia trilogy is coming to New York. And even though we've learned Ethan Hawke (whom we called The Anti-Christ of Acting in our college days) has a starring role, we still recommend it. New York Magazine takes note.
* Despite Russian reverence for Pushkin, his statue in Moscow's Pushkin Square is under siege.
* Laila is back from Bread Loaf and posting again. She's also noted in this coverage of a recent panel she participated in on Arab-American literature.
* Claire Messud's latest continues to draw attention, most recently from Slate.
* A.N. Wilson may or may not be a shit, but he should be flattered that a foe took such trouble to perpetrate this latest literary hoax at his expense.
* Derek Walcott believes that young writers in the Caribean need to be encouraged "to ensure that the literary tradition of excellence in the region continues."
* A Chicago Tribune writer is presently being detained in Sudan.
Visavis Pushkin, remember the Gogol statue in the park in Grushin's The Dream Life of Sukhanov? Next up, Gorky Parking Garage?
Posted by: nnyhav | August 31, 2006 at 10:31 AM