* Beyond Baroque lives to fight another day - or another twenty-five years, to be precise, thanks to the efforts of the L.A. City Council.
Just hours before the Venice literary arts center's lease was to expire, the council voted 11 to 0 to extend it for 25 years.
* Two histories of England, one by Dickens, one by Austen.
* Fine advice for those who don't subscribe to the whole "if you can't say something nice, don't say anything" mindset.
* Adelaide Writers' Week is reaping the benefits of the Coetzee effect.
The 25th Writers' Week is heating up meteorologically and intellectually. One element in its success is the South African-born Nobel Prize winner J.M. Coetzee, now an Australian citizen, Adelaide resident and member of the advisory committee. "We think the Coetzee effect is working," said the committee's chairman, Rick Hosking. "He gets around. He knows everyone. He can say he'll give someone a ring. Some writers are coming because they've spoken to him."
* Samantha Hunt's The Invention of Everything Else is reviewed kindly by the Kansas City Star.
* Apparently, Julian Barnes has a memoir out about his family, and the Guardian has it under review.
* Writers like Brecht, Pushkin and Voltaire are no longer to be included in the standardized English exams known as "A-levels".
The dumping of the pantheon of foreign literary greats – together with a wider down-grading of literature – has driven some of Britain’s leading academic schools, including Eton and Winchester, to abandon foreign language A-levels. It has also sparked accusations that the education authorities are “amputating” Britain from its European cultural heritage.
* Award-winning Israeli translator and author Aharon Amir has died at the age of 85.
* Garth Risk Hallberg on Helen DeWitt, c/o Open Letters Monthly.
* Michael Dirda looks at Roberto Bolano's Nazi Literature in the Americas.
One of the pleasures of Bolano lies in his subtle humor: He'll mention "an irreproachable style, worthy of Sholokhov" -- and expect the reader to recognize the sarcasm. Irma Carrasco's sonnets are described as "fearlessly probing the open wound of modernity. The solution, it now seemed to her, was to return to sixteenth-century Spain." Actual writers repeatedly interact with imaginary ones. Many leading figures of Latin American literature -- Adolfo Bioy Casares, Manuel Mujica Lainez, Ernesto Sabato and Osman Lins, among others -- are regularly vilified. Juan Mendiluce Thompson scornfully describes Borges's stories as "parodies of parodies," adding that his "lifeless characters were derived from worn-out traditions of English and French literature, clearly in decline, 'repeating the same old plots ad nauseam.' " The joke here, of course, is that Borges's stories are precisely these things. In a way.
* Benjamin Black gets a Hot Type nod.
* Artforum on the poetry of Frank O'Hara.
* Another day, another James Wood interview, this one from the Albany Times Union. Money quote:
“The New Republic was more like writing for an academic journal,” he said. “Very occasionally (at The New Yorker) in making a reference to a writer you have to back up slightly and just explain who it is…. I think that’s a modest adjustment to make for the price of getting the reader to come along with me.”
* Don't forget that Daniel Menaker's Titlepage goes live today.
* We'd send you to the current Boldtype even if they didn't have a fine Michael Chabon interview, if only because they note the superbly weird (and weirdly superb) Blackstock's Collections: The Drawings of an Artistic Savant, which we should have alerted you to ages ago but, well, you know how disorganized it gets around here. Better late than never.
* And, finally, for those who missed Antonio Skarmeta's recent Columbia lecture, fear not: The whole thing is up on YouTube.
thanks for posting the very sad news that set texts by classic European authors are to be axed from modern language A-levels in England. So literature is no longer about Kafka and Camus, but writing essays of 240-270 words on a topic "which does not have to be literary". It makes you wonder if people will still be reading novels in the future...
Posted by: PD Smith | March 03, 2008 at 01:30 AM
The article on Adelaide is a very 'Sydney' one. Adelaide Writers' Week is the oldest writing festival in Australia, and reputated to be by far the best. (Not all of it is free, either.)Snitchy stuff.
Posted by: genevieve | March 03, 2008 at 01:52 PM
Aargh, reputed of course.
Nice round-up, Mark. I am going back to Amitavar Kumar's blog now.
Posted by: genevieve | March 03, 2008 at 01:54 PM