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November 04, 2008

Comments

Leslie

Almost missing an event is totally my recurring nightmare!! I started feeling queasy as I read your account...glad it all worked out in the end.

lesley

oh, the anonymity of the internet! i'm a faithful TEV reader and was at the panel on character-driven fiction (which was wonderful, by the way) and i never realized that was you! well done and thanks for coming!

Jack Pendarvis

The Ransom Center!!! They let me PICK UP AND HANDLE letters by James Joyce! I think they are crazy. And they run the greatest place in the world. I have a small personal connection there, too, like your Stoppard letter. They have several boxes of papers from my good old late mentor Eugene Walter. It was weird seeing them. They had his personality all over them. Seeing people's papers gives you a pretty electric feeling. Can't wait to see your pictures and find out everything you picked up and handled. It seems wrong, doesn't it? Everybody should go to the Ransom Center, the happiest place on earth. Thanks for pointing out how accommodating they are. I bet a lot of people don't go because they think it will be hard to get in.

Tim

First, let me just say how honored I am to comment after Jack Pendarvis. Totally a big fan.

I'm an Austinite and I'm so proud that the Ransom Center is in my city. I remember going to a Modernism exhibit they had there a while back and seeing Man Rey photos and drafts from Eliot, Hemingway, and Pound. So awesome.

I missed you at the festival, but I got to see Mr. Greer, ZZ and Ann Packer, as well as the incomparable Richard Price. Love the blog, and glad to hear you enjoyed Austin.

ed

Vote again. And again? Who the hell do you think you are, Sarvas? The Great McGinty? :)

Karen

I attended the Character Driven Fiction session where you apologized profusely for huffing and puffing and I think you did a great job! Probably the best moderated panel I saw all weekend at the Texas Book Festival. I have to say though, I was worried about you at the beginning, since it did seem to take a while for you to catch your breath. Have you considered a regular cardiovascular exercise regimen? ;-) (Just giving you, a perfect stranger, a hard time.) I enjoyed hearing you speak also on the Death Becomes Me panel and am very glad to know about your blog. Thank you!

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TEV DEFINED


  • The Elegant Variation is "Fowler’s (1926, 1965) term for the inept writer’s overstrained efforts at freshness or vividness of expression. Prose guilty of elegant variation calls attention to itself and doesn’t permit its ideas to seem naturally clear. It typically seeks fancy new words for familiar things, and it scrambles for synonyms in order to avoid at all costs repeating a word, even though repetition might be the natural, normal thing to do: The audience had a certain bovine placidity, instead of The audience was as placid as cows. Elegant variation is often the rock, and a stereotype, a cliché, or a tired metaphor the hard place between which inexperienced or foolish writers come to grief. The familiar middle ground in treating these homely topics is almost always the safest. In untrained or unrestrained hands, a thesaurus can be dangerous."

SECOND LOOK

  • The Bookshop by Penelope Fitzgerald

    Bs

    Penelope Fitzgerald's second novel is the tale of Florence Green, a widow who seeks, in the late 1950s, to bring a bookstore to an isolated British town, encountering all manner of obstacles, including incompetent builders, vindictive gentry, small minded bankers, an irritable poltergeist, but, above all, a town that might not, in fact, want a bookshop. Fitzgerald's prose is spare but evocative – there's no wasted effort and her work reminds one of Hemingway's dictum that every word should fight for its right to be on the page. Florence is an engaging creation, stubbornly committed to her plan even as uncertainty regarding the wisdom of the enterprise gnaws at her. But The Bookshop concerns itself, finally, with the astonishing vindictiveness of which provincials are capable, and, as so much English fiction must, it grapples with the inevitabilities of class. It's a dense marvel at 123 pages, a book you won't want to – or be able to – rush through.
  • The Rider by Tim Krabbe

    Rider_4

    Tim Krabbé's superb 1978 memoir-cum-novel is the single best book we've read about cycling, a book that will come closer to bringing you inside a grueling road race than anything else out there. A kilometer-by-kilometer look at just what is required to endure some of the most grueling terrain in the world, Krabbé explains the tactics, the choices and – above all – the grinding, endless, excruciating pain that every cyclist faces and makes it heart-pounding rather than expository or tedious. No writer has better captured both the agony and the determination to ride through the agony. He's an elegant stylist (ably served by Sam Garrett's fine translation) and The Rider manages to be that rarest hybrid – an authentic, accurate book about cycling that's a pleasure to read. "Non-racers," he writes. "The emptiness of those lives shocks me."