* We've contributed some picks for "The literature of atonement" for Jewcy - 'tis the season. The choices will be familiar to regular TEV readers but here's the intro:
I was recently called on the carpet by a Bel Air cantor when I told him that, despite my atheism, I still fasted on Yom Kippur. He asked why and, after some hemming and hawing that had to do with the memory of my deceased relatives, he said, "So you do it to feel good about yourself." The lesson being, for me, at least, that when it comes to atoning, motives count. I suspect I won't fast this year, but I might spend the day in the company of some more deeply felt literary atoners.
You can find the three titles in question here.
* The Telegraph wonders why, given the sales figures of the Booker shortlist, "anyone should bother to write literary fiction."
Up to 18 August the McEwan (published in April) had sold 99,660 copies whereas the Barker (May) had sold 499 copies. As for the other four: Mohsin Hamid's The Reluctant Fundamentalist (March) had sold 1,519 copies, Lloyd Jones's Mister Pip (June) 880 copies, Anne Enright's The Gathering (May) 834 copies and Indra Sinha's Animal's People (March) a mere 231 copies.
* LAPD Novelist Will Beall is profiled in the San Jose Mercury News.
* Ivan Doig has won the 2007 Wallace Stegner Award.
* Jeffrey Eugenides is off to teach at Princeton.
* Over at LA Observed's Native Intelligence, TJ Sullivan uses a Time Magazine article about an attempt to preserve Bukowski's bungalow as a a jumping off point for his ruminations on LA's poetry scene.
LA's poetry scene has deteriorated more with each death of an independent bookstore (as well as the demise of many independent coffee shops) during the past 10 years. And LA has lost something vital as a result. The city is lucky to have the many fine poets who continue to seek out venues, and especially the mom-and-pops that continue to allow uncensored performances. But they're still fewer and farther between.
* Apparently there's a Beatles Backlash out there. We didn't know about it but David Browne deconstructs it for TNR.
* How did we miss "How did we miss there?" parts one and two? Better late than never.
Far from the fame and glamour of the Booker and bestsellers is a forgotten world of literary treasures - brilliant but underrated novels that deserve a second chance to shine. We asked 50 celebrated writers to nominate their favourites. Introduction by Robert McCrum
* The Giller longlist has been announced.
* Stephen Elliott on writers' personalities versus writers' words.
The problem is not with the author's personality (or appearance), it's with the readers and critics who pay too much attention to it. Focusing on a writer for not "humping his ego" has the same effect as focusing on writers who are outspoken, or attractive; they're two sides of the same coin. What matters is the book, and the book has to stand on its own merit. What the author accomplishes, or doesn't, outside of the book is fine for the gossip pages, but it doesn't merit mentioning in a book review.
Re: Beatles bashing: merely one in a very long list of ugly symptoms of a surgingly brutal, wit-free, hyper-materialist death-culture that wouldn't recognize one of the finest flowerings of secular humanist creativity if the latter gave the former a bj, a hug and cabfare home. You kiddies just run along back to your assault-rifle standoffs, wall-to-wall porneaux and arctic-ice-melting SUVs...I've got some human-made *music* to enjoy...and a dying planet to lament. Bastards.
Posted by: Steven Augustine | September 21, 2007 at 03:34 AM