I’m still debating the significance of things.
I forget how old I was when I finally realized how strange it was that my grandparents slept on opposite sides of the house.
I once knew a woman who was like Billie Holliday in her trying to cut back on the booze – in that she was not cutting back.
Whenever I hear it asked, “Where is the next Hemingway, the next Fitzgerald?” the narcissist in me says, “Look no farther.” But that’s only when the writing’s going well.
What I’ve been writing lately sounds like it was written on a laptop, by a laptop.
One of the best young writers in America is an electrician on the U.S.S. Rhode Island. Another is studying winemaking at UC Davis.
We will be present at the revival of American letters. We will have been on the ground floor for the longest time.
yes! i think there's a line between confidence and egotism and what plagues writers like keith gessen is that they're more obsessed with their own fame as people while it sounds like you're trying to attain a certain level of respect based on your work. i respect that a lot. it's refreshing. donald hall wrote a great essay called "on poetry and ambition" that speaks about having ambitions beyond simply getting awards and trying to write a poem as good as keats. good luck, i look forward to following your career. may i ask who the other two writers you mention are?
Posted by: rive | August 20, 2008 at 06:23 PM
Thank you. I'll have to look into that Hall essay you mention.
The other two writers are Johnny Walton and Tom Shapland. In 2004 Shapland won an Associated Collegiate Press diversity story award. And Walton's letters are like Neil Cassady's.
Posted by: Zachary Amendt | August 21, 2008 at 09:21 AM