* Fearing for his life, Orhan Pamuk is now living in exile in the United States.
* Exhibit B against Turkey's quest for EU membership: Writers in Turkey now require police protection.
* Salman Rushdie, a writer who knows a thing or two about living under siege, has begun a five-year stint at Emory University.
* Floyd Landis is planning to write a book - which, presumably, will not be entitled If I Did It.
Landis is writing a book about his upbringing in Farmersville, winning last year's Tour — the world's most prestigious bicycle race — and about the charges of doping he has faced since then.
The book, "Positively False: The Real Story of How I Won The Tour de France," which he is writing with Bicycling Magazine executive editor Loren Mooney, will go on sale in late June, two weeks before the start of this year's Tour de France.
* Thomas Keneally is profiled in The Hindu.
* Goldeneye, the Jamaica retreat where Ian Fleming wrote many of the James Bond novels, is getting a facelift. (We didn't know that Bob Marley briefly owned the estate, but then, the volume of that which we don't know exceeds the GDP of a medium-sized nation.)
* Booker Prize-winner Arundhati Roy is planning a return to fiction after a ten-year hiatus. So how embarrassed are we to admit that The God of Small Things is still sitting in one of our TBR bookcases? (Yes, we have TBR bookcases, five at present count.)
* The new independent publisher Dzanc Books has announced its first two titles.
* See how wrong we were? After complaining about the dearth of review coverage for the David Markson reissue, they just keep coming. Pop Matters is the latest one in.
By evidence of these novels, now lovingly repackaged by Markson’s publisher Shoemaker and Hoard, with a beautiful pulp cover, Markson could have become one of our best genre writers. He has Chandler’s wit and Hammett’s sharp-edged prose. And Fannin is a character one would like to keep up with; hell, I’d follow him anywhere. It seems by the end of Epitaph for a Dead Beat that one is just getting to know him, in all his world-weary, rumpled glory. But, if Markson had stuck with his detective stories we might never have had Wittgenstein’s Mistress, a novel I am convinced can change your life. Or Reader’s Block, This is not a Novel, and Vanishing Point, his novels with the novel left out (called discontinuous, non-linear, and collage-like, and labeled ‘seminonfictional semifiction’), books written in a manner that is pure Markson. Or Springer’s Progress, perhaps his most accessible novel and one of his most delightful, especially for fans of The Ginger Man and Elliot Baker’s A Fine Madness.
* Hugh Grant ... novel ... truly, the mind reels at the prospects.
* The film rights for Spark of Life, Erich Maria Remarque's stunning Holocaust novel, have been purchased.
Mark,
You've got a wrong link on the pop matters/Markson thing.
Posted by: Murray | February 14, 2007 at 10:07 AM
I've fixed it, Murray - thanks for the heads up.
Posted by: TEV | February 14, 2007 at 11:26 AM
I hope Hugh G has the sense not to publish under his own name. He is brighter than most of us realise, you know. Inside that very bored actor is an intelligent man screaming 'where is my real life'.
Posted by: genevieve | February 15, 2007 at 09:47 PM