* We are clearly not the only ones appalled by the LA Times Book Review's questionable grasp of, well, English. What she said.
* One of the best parts of going to the West Hollywood Book Fair is we get some all-too-rare face time with the mighty Tod Goldberg. For those who can't get enough of the Fucktard Slayer, he's got two pieces up over at E! Online - one on Richard Lange's short story collection Dead Boys, and another on the wonders of men, mastodons and Madden NFL ’08.
* Garth Risk Hallberg - one of the smartest voices in the literary blogosphere - is interviewed at enotes.
Me: Name one extremely well-respected author that you can’t stand, and one book you can’t stand by an author you love.
Garth: The second one’s easy. I thought Cosmopolis was lousy, and I love DeLillo. For the first: “can’t stand” is strong, but I really don’t like what I’ve read by Bret Easton Ellis, one of the brand-name-droppers I mentioned above. But I guess he already has detractors. Hmm…
* The essay heard 'round the blogosphere - Melvin Jules Bukiet's broadside at Brooklyn Lit, which has been noted everywhere from Ed to Paper Cuts.
According to Jeffrey Sharlet, a journalist/provocateur who helped inspire this essay, and Andi Mudd, a spectacularly unwondrous college student who assisted in researching it, The Lovely Bones and its ilk “deserve a public shaming.” That’s because BBoWs are escape novels, albeit garnished with intellectual flourishes. They’re kitsch, which Milan Kundera defined as “the translation of the stupidity of received ideas into the language of beauty and feeling [that] moves us to tears of compassion for ourselves, for the banality of what we think and feel.”
* Ruth Franklin's typically excellent consideration of Tadeusz Borowski is available for your reading pleasure at Powells. Anecdotal Evidence takes slight exception. (Thanks to Dave Lull.)
* We opted not to run any of the "Five under 35" coverage because something in our gut is whispering that this American fixation with youth is unhealthy. We do, however, link with glee to this profile of 90-year-old first-time novelist Millard Kaufman.
* Will M.G. Vassanji be the first author in history to claim three Giller prizes?
* Well, Naipaul's not dead yet but his intellectual obituaries are being written all over the place. At the Telegraph, TEV favorite A.N. Wilson gets Sir Vidia in the crosshairs and lets loose.
A French friend of mine, very charming and well read, found herself next to Naipaul at an embassy dinner not so long ago and was amused to discover that there were no great French novelists. Balzac? Stendhal? Zola? None of them passed the great Trinidadian's high standards.
Radio listeners heard Sir Vidia dismissing Evelyn Waugh while Naughtie gasped with sycophantic mock-horror. But for those of us who remembered Naipaul in his glory days – first as a novelist, then as a journalist and travel-writer of astute observation and sure touch – the broadcast, initially funny, turned sad.
* Salman Rushdie on the role of the writer: “However unimportant literature may seem, in the end it is literature that writes the history of our lives."
* Philip Pullman frets that the "real" Oxford is disappearing.
i couldn't help feeling that bukiet got up on the wrong side of the bed the day he wrote that essay. every time i thought he'd run out of ammunition, he let loose with a fresh round. the carnage was considerable.
ok, he had some good points, but ultimately i disagreed with his conclusion: "What is, is. The real is the true, and anything that suggests otherwise, no matter how artfully constructed, is a violation of human experience." but the human experience is fraught with our efforts to transcend the real, to make order out of chaos, to infuse meaning into tragic events. the impulse toward "artful construction" is simply part of who we are. can we take it too far? of course; that brings us into the realm of oozy sentimentality that bukiet rightfully deplores. but to imply that the only way to write about anything honestly is to make sure that the reader feels horrible at the end of the story about the tragedy-laden travesty known as "life" is just a little much. at least for me.
Posted by: grackyfrogg | October 02, 2007 at 11:06 AM