* The Guardian looks at what happens when contemporary authors get added to school reading lists.
Contemporary writers never used to feature on A-level syllabuses. For years, the nearest most candidates got to a living author were the poems that an elderly TS Eliot or WH Auden had published decades earlier. Even by the end of the 1970s, the most up-to-date fiction studied might be one of the novels published by William Golding in the 1950s. Nowadays things are different. This summer candidates were being examined on Zadie Smith, Julian Barnes and Louis de Bernières. Next summer it will be AS Byatt's Possession and Michael Frayn's Spies.
* Regular TEV Guest Review Daniel Olivas looks at Roy Kesey's Nothing in the World.
* Robert Birnbaum chats with Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie about "how to pronounce her name, what she wrote this book, indifference toward Africa’s problems, paternalism and colonialism, interest in current African writers— Uzodinma Iweala and Chris Albani and Helen Oyeyemi , the martyred Ken Saro-Wiwa, hopefulness, tribal animus, Negritude, Chinua Achebe, Nigerian universities, Africans in America and ,well you know, more."
* A memorial will be unveiled next month for Harriet Wilson, the first black woman know to have published a book in English.
* FiveChapters.com is back for week two with a new story by Jess Walter, called Period of Grace. Walter is a nominee for the 2006 National Book Award for The Zero.
* Apropos yesterday's Richard Ford post, the First Lady of Limn has her way with The Lay of the Land.
Indeed, there is something formulaic about this novel, as if Mr. Ford wanted to find storytelling equivalents to what happened in his two earlier Bascombe novels and ended up resorting to a series of artificial situations. Although there are some wonderful, deeply moving passages in “The Lay of the Land” that evoke what it is like to be a middle-aged, middle-class man at the turn of the millennium, these passages are buried beneath pages and pages of self-indulgent self-analysis and random ruminations about real estate in New Jersey — not the makings of a fitting follow-up to “The Sportswriter” and “Independence Day,” only the stale ingredients of an unnecessary and by-the-numbers sequel.
* Can you imagine an author signing 7500 pages?
* The excellent Words Without Borders has announced their latest book club - Etgar Keret's The Nimrod Flipout.
* What is a "poessay"?
When I was in public school in the 80s/90s we had a fair amount of contemporary lit on the schedule, but like the guardian article they all seemed like political choices. Though here it was all minority literature to give us diverse viewpoints or something.
Nothing wrong with that in theory, but it ended up being a bunch of books Harlod Bloom would probably put in "the school of resentment" most of which I've never heard mentioned again in literature discussions (ie not lasting).
Lots of great minority writers of course, but you can't expect the fools deciding what english teachers have to teach (been a while since public teachers got to pick themselves) to choose them.
Posted by: Tim | October 24, 2006 at 07:31 AM
So, um, plagarising "In Flanders Fields" qualifies as a "poessay?"
Posted by: Busta | October 24, 2006 at 07:30 PM