* Sheila Heti (Ticknor) wants to know your dreams ...
* Cees Nooteboom is one of those writers we don't know as well as we should, but we plan to rectify that with his latest, Lost Paradise, reviewed here by J.M. Coetzee.
* A number of prominent novelists have signed on to redroom.com, a sort of Facebook for novelists.
Novelist Amy Tan, author of "The Bonesetter's Daughter," blogs weekly there. Poet Ishmael Reed graces the homepage with an essay about boys reading in his Oakland neighborhood. And Terry McMillan, Maya Angelou and Maxine Hong Kingston all helped it get going.
* Things Fall Apart, fifty years later.
* As has been widely reported, Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union is set to be adapted by the Coen Brothers.
* Macadam/Cage publisher David Poindexter is profiled in the Press Register.
"There's a complete disconnect between literature and corporate culture," says Poindexter. "Corporations need a short-term payoff. They have to make shareholders happy by increasing profits every quarter. So corporate publishers need books that will make money this quarter." These books are rarely great works of literature. "Literature takes a long time to develop," explains Poindexter. "It's like growing trees instead of corn." In every way, he has positioned his own company so he can grow those trees. "After all," he observes, "what props up the New York houses are their backlists of great titles from the past, which were generated by the business model they've now discarded." Poindexter is attempting to put that model back into play.
* One of the more interesting of the 12,533 Peter Carey profiles recently popping up all over the place. (Thanks to Dave Lull.)
* Richard Yates, rediscovered yet again, this time in the Guardian.
We all agree, however, that Yates's hour has come. A Yates revival is currently under way and some sort of commercial recognition appears imminent. His seven novels are being reissued. Later this year, a film of Revolutionary Road (part-financed by the BBC), starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet and directed by Sam Mendes, will be released in America (and in January 2009 in the UK).
* And, finally, our NBCC co-panelist Veronique de Turenne can now be found blogging at LA Now. (Speaking of the LA Times, they also have Kareem's favorite books for your perusal.)
This is terrible. Not the reissue part, but the movie part. Terrible, terrible, terrible.
Posted by: Johnny Origami | February 21, 2008 at 06:10 PM
Indeed. The heart sinks. Though perhaps just because I recently saw "The Beach" for the first time.
Posted by: Sam | February 22, 2008 at 07:58 PM