For those of you who didn't make it to town, the podcast of our BEA appearance - The Author-preneur (not our title) - is now available ... If we were over in London Town, we'd drop everything to go hear Geoff Dyer talking about punctuality. (We'd be on time.) ... Writing for Huffpo, Jane Smiley considers the "few essential truths about what writers do" as refracted through Solzhenitzyn, and at the Guardian, Donald Rayfield assesses his literary legacy ...Polish author Stefan Chwin avers that "Writing allows us to become better than we are" ... Julien Parme, a French novel we've been quite keen to read, is reviewed in the Independent ... Remembering Dostoyevsky in the Warsaw ghetto ... NPR profiles the literary-flavored band The Airborne Toxic Incident ... Evelyn Waugh and George Orwell face off in a new book ... David Haglund pays appropriate attention to developments on the Péter Esterházy front ... Condalmo catches us asleep at the switch and alerts us to Tom McCarthy's discussion of Tintin and the Secret of Literature ... An LA Times appreciation of the soon to close Acres of Books ... The essay Jim Ruland should have written: the literary legacy of NY Punk ... Sam Anderson is the latest high profile critic to take on How Fiction Works (though if he's going to quote n+1, he should also quote Wood's riposte: "it is easier to criticize that to propose") ... Without question, the most unpleasant part of getting published was asking for blurbs, though calling it "corrupt quid pro quo" strikes as us a bit overheated ... South Korean author Lee Chung-joon, who wrote "some 120 short and long stories over 40 years," has died ... Open Letters' August issue is now online ... and, finally, this just in from the Department of Now We've Seen It All ...
Hi, Just stumbled upon your blog. What a wonderfully eclectic mix of things that have interested you. I enjoyed the dip.
Posted by: Emerging Writer | August 06, 2008 at 11:19 AM