* The Washington Post enters the blogosphere with Short Stack. To their debut list of books to read when your marriage is on the rocks, we'd add Hanif Kureishi's devastating novella Intimacy.
* Arthur Phillips champions another Hungarian writer, Gyula Krúdy.
* We come to bury Naipaul. The critical obituaries continue. (Thanks, Andie.)
Granted, life is a mixed condition. But the 2001 Nobel laureate in literature has spent two-thirds of his writing career proving that genius and idiocy, insight and corrosive racial prejudice, discontent and utter complacency, mumbo jumbo and an equal hatred of mumbo jumbo can thrive in the mixed compartments of a single human being.
* The Huffington Post offers a recap of the New Yorker appearance by Junot Diaz and Annie Proulx.
* What writers are reading. Notables from David Remnick to Edmund White share their current load with the Globe.
* Much good stuff in this Sunday's New York Times Book Review, but the best books piece of the day was Charles McGrath's appreciation of Edmund Wilson for the Arts & Leisure gang.
The latest inclusion in the Library of America, that clothbound hall of literary fame, is two big volumes of Edmund Wilson’s critical writings. It’s about time, considering that the Library of America was Wilson’s idea in the first place. He modeled it after the French Pléiade series, insisting back in the 1960s that the texts be readable and accessible, without a forest of footnotes, and it was he who chose the volumes’ pleasingly compact format. Wilson also thought that the library ought to be highly selective, and he would not be amused to learn that he got in only after the likes of Philip K. Dick and H. P. Lovecraft, about whose work he once wrote, “The only real horror in most of these fictions is the horror of bad taste and bad art.”
* Michael Ondaatje interviewed in the Hindu. We'd probably add these profiles to our linkatorium (below) but this nugget caught our eye:
What’s the last thing you read that blew the top of your head off?
I read Coetzee’s The Master of Petersburg… the one about Dostoevsky. Really amazing. I think he’s wonderful … such a personal grief book. Everyone thinks he (Coetzee) is a cold fish, but the emotion in that book is devastating.
* Newsweek has decided that Tolstoy is worth your while.
* OK, Henry Miller we get but when did John Steinbeck become a "literary bad boy"?
* And, finally, another Writers room - this one belonging to Andrew Motion. Are we the only ones who find the closed laptop ... interesting?
Am I mistaken, or is The Post championing suicide for wives in unhappy marriages? Sheesh. The last thing I'd want to read if my husband and I were on the rocks is "The Awakening." Or "Madame Bovary." Or "Anna Karenina."
Posted by: Kati | October 08, 2007 at 02:27 PM
Oh, and the dates in the margin for Galway and Ha Jin should be for November, not October.
Posted by: Kati | October 08, 2007 at 02:37 PM
Okay, it's Tuesday now, but I have taken delivery of a bookcase that would brighten up Mr. Motion's den.
Freaking beast, it is. 4ft by 212 cm. Magnifique, and full of Oz and other fiction tonight. Do I feel smug or do I feel smug? There is a copy of Intimacy up there, too.
Posted by: genevieve | October 09, 2007 at 05:37 AM
Speaking of blogosphere, I have noticed that more and more authors are turning to the web to promote and or publish their works. What are your thoughts. Personally, I like the idea of independent authors being able to move away from big publishers. One such suggested resource to use is http://nothingbinding.com/. Well worth the visit.
Posted by: melissa | October 11, 2007 at 03:14 AM
By the way, great article on Wilson. His book Memoirs of Hecate County is a treasure.
Posted by: melissa | October 11, 2007 at 03:20 AM