* Russia is experiencing a dramatic decline in reading among a population which has prided itself as among the most literary in the world.
* Seattle's The Stranger interviews the excellent Deborah Eisenberg.
I first discovered you in an anthology of fiction from the New Yorker. But you're not published in the New Yorker anymore.
No. Uh, I...What the hell is wrong with them?
[Laughs] That's what I want to know. See if you can get it out of them. I wasn't published there. They wouldn't accept anything of mine. And then an editor named Gwyneth Cravens came. She responded to what I do, and she published everything I gave her, including all the things that had been rejected. Then she left, and nobody else there ever liked anything of mine again. So, that's my history with the New Yorker. But I think what I'm writing these days is a little complex, actually, for magazines.
* Minnesota Public Radio links to a their Banville radio interview. The interviewer is clearly out of his league but Banville makes the most of it. (Who knew he was ambidextrous?)
* Northern Irish poet Derek Mahon has been awarded the coveted David Cohen Prize for Literature.
* Robert Birnbaum's Book Digest is up at The Morning News today.
* Writing for the Guardian's book blog, Maxim Jakubowski holds forth on The Importance of Titles.
It's been more than two years since my last novel was published and I suspect that one of the reasons it's taken me so long to get the next one started is not writer's block or a life to live but the fact I could not settle on a title which just "felt" right to me and would justify a whole year or so of total immersion in its world.
* Russell Banks makes a university appearance.
* In The New Yorker, Arthur Phillips (in a brilliant match-up) reviews the latest Sándor Márai release from Knopf, The Rebels.
He published more than sixty books in his lifetime, almost half of them novels, and from the nineteen-twenties to the nineteen-forties he was considered one of Hungary’s leading literary men. As the Hungarian-American scholar Albert Tezla notes in an introduction to a memoir that Márai wrote in 1972, he was often described by critics and by himself as a “middle-class writer.” To American ears, it’s an odd distinction; our writers are either literary or commercial, but for him class identity was stronger. A character of his seems to be pronouncing an authorial credo when he says, “I am a bourgeois. I am deliberately so.” Márai took the label, and the responsibilities that he felt it entailed, very seriously. He considered that his class, at its best, embodied the highest European traditions: liberal democracy, enterprise and creativity, intellectual curiosity, and duty tempered with tolerance. After the First World War, though, he saw his class fail to live up to those ideals, and he blamed its selfish refusal to shape a democracy for Hungary’s interwar political troubles, and its slide toward Fascism. The middle-class writer’s task now was to write an obituary: “I see the whole [class] disintegrating. Perhaps this is my life’s, my writing’s sole, true duty: to delineate the course of this disintegration.”
* The Ian McEwan Long Lost Brother story continues to bubble up. McEwan has spoken publicly.
* Kopano Matlwa has won the EU Literary Award 2006/07, for her novel Coconut, which is excerpted here. (Thanks, Andie.)
* The British continue to be unimpressed with J.M. Coetzee's essay collection.
* Daniel Olivas has reviewed a biography of the Chicano artist Gronk for the El Paso Times.
* An excerpt from Our Holocaust, Amir Gutfreund’s Sami Rohr prize runnerup, has been posted at the excellent Words Without Borders blog.
"You are having fun for the first time in your career for the first time after fourteen novels? Does that mean the other ones were tough-going?"
ARGHHHHHHHHH! Damn East Coast Weather. I really had good questions for the man, including one I'm damn curious on concerning his imagery. But I'll interview him on the second novel, Mark. I promise.
Posted by: ed | March 27, 2007 at 01:04 AM
The Morning News 'tournament' of books is really sort of pathetic. A book by Kate Atkinson is in the finals? Really? Kate Atkinson? I understand that it's all in good fun, but if you're not going to read the books, don't accept the damn invitation.
Posted by: Philip McDibblesworth | March 27, 2007 at 02:30 PM
I'm gonna guess that your real name isn't Philip.
Posted by: stephan | March 27, 2007 at 07:33 PM