July 2009

Haut or Not: Ryan Call’s office

[Contributor Ryan Call teaches first year composition at University of Houston. He also teaches an introduction to fiction (the reading of/writing about, not the writing of) course as well.]

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Great, Ezra Pound has something to say about reading. Lay off the Latin Ezra and we’ll be just fine. And check out the 800-ish page “compact edition” of The Literary Experience. What exactly is a literary experience? Putting suntan lotion on pale Sylvia Plath? Removing lice from Tolstoy’s beard? Or just getting rejected by Paris Review? I need answers. Then there’s Ze “bro”ski, senior faculty at U. of Houston, who wants us to “think through theory,” which is like a kid going downhill on a bike with no brakes frantically writing out “3.1415926535…” And what the hell is Rhetorical Grammar? Would, its; — look some-thing like these? [hyperlink ryancall_asszit.jpeg] I bet Professor Call enjoys teaching Teaching One-to-one one-to-one to all those Sophomore girls one semester past that “not so fresh[man]” feeling.  It must be a good pedagogical life.

Rating: Not

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Haut or not / 10 Comments
July 17th, 2009 / 12:14 pm

It’s a cold day in Hell when I agree with every. last. word. of a Peggy Noonan column. Anyone down there want to shout back with a thermometer read? Here’s one of my many favorite parts of her take on the lately departing Mrs. Palin-

“The media did her in.” Her lack of any appropriate modesty did her in. Actually, it’s arguable that membership in the self-esteem generation harmed her. For 30 years the self-esteem movement told the young they’re perfect in every way. It’s yielding something new in history: an entire generation with no proper sense of inadequacy.

there is a new dispatch lit review up here featuring three stories by amelia gray.  amelia gray is reading in chicago this saturday i think at the book cellar.  come see people wearing cute glasses and tight jeans and shit.

LITERATURE

a man named court merrigan emailed me a few days ago and asked me to comment on his blog, in a post about twitter, because he knew i had started a twitter website where made up accounts are maintained. i am interested in what other people think. i am not trying to get an argument going or whatever, i just think it would interest me to hear from other people. the tone of the comments seems to change by the last one and i don’t know why people get so defensive. but whatever, i am interested in hearing from other people. here is the article and the comment thread that followed is after the break.

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Uncategorized / 19 Comments
July 16th, 2009 / 6:39 pm

I like Movies in Frames a lot

nocountrypulpdune

I’ve been really enjoying the hyper-abridged versions of films at Movies in Frames and find it very instructive, in terms of singling out visual vocabularies and narrative arcs. The featured movies are fairly popular, and I love comparing my memory or notion of the movie with images which have been edited/collated by others. (Some find themes or repetitions, while others seem to exploit differences.) Each chosen frame seems to mark an important or iconic point of the story, which when juxtaposed so severely next to each other, evokes an alternative story. I think the inherent quality of the cinematography is also implicated, as these are all still frames. It’s just nice to take a movie and slow it down, reduce it to its core. I like it a lot.

I Like __ A Lot / 6 Comments
July 16th, 2009 / 4:37 pm

HTMLG BFF Michael Kimball will be interviewed on All Things Considered about that postcard project thing tomorrow, Friday, July 17. I hope California has their budget balanced by then.

Wait, how do you come up with names for characters?

The Spoiler

the-sixth-senseRecently, Alice Hoffman had a bit of a blow-up over a bad review that gave away too many plot points. (Also, the review was not altogether positive.) So, she argues something like this:

“Critics, don’t spoil my plots. I control the release of information, and am careful about how things unfold.”

After I read Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, I read some of the critical reviews and author spotlights that came out with the book and they almost all gave away a significant piece of information about it—a piece of information that Ishiguro does not himself mention (though it is hinted at, of course) until page 80. At an author event, I asked Ishiguro about it, and his shrugged it off. He didn’t care. He argued something like this:

“The ‘mystery’ in the plot is not important, but instead the mystery of the characters is. The book is not about the idea that drives the plot, but the way the characters live in the world I have created for them.”

Is someone right here? I really don’t know. Is Hoffman suggesting that the pleasure of reading her book is primarily in following the plot? And that if we know what happens, we’ll be disinclined to read it? If Ishiguro doesn’t care about what the critics revealed about his book, why did he wait for 80 pages to reveal it himself? The revelation was, in my reading experience, a very powerful one. Is he wrong to be fine with a critic depriving a reader of that powerful experience?

Are these two unrelated situations that I am throwing together?

Craft Notes / 28 Comments
July 16th, 2009 / 2:29 pm

World Takes: Stories by Timmy Waldron

Word Riot Press recently published World Takes, a collection of stories by Timmy Waldron. Many of these stories appeared online in journals, including “Worry for the Well Rested” on pindeldyboz and “Things You Would Know About Paul if You Were His Friend” on eyeshot. And yet, buy the book for the ones that you can’t find online,  and to have this wonderfully shaped collection in its entirety. My philosophy about story collections is that  they are like albums more than novels. What story is chosen to go first, second, last and so forth, greatly shape the book. Often, there are a few “hits”.  Sometimes, there is filler. Many a poor collection revolve around only one or two good stories. This is not the case with Waldron’s World Takes.  Here is a collection perfectly shaped, with a strong punch of a first story, “Amanda”, that sets the dark, funny tone for the book.  READ MORE >

Author Spotlight / 37 Comments
July 16th, 2009 / 11:36 am

Interview with John O’Brien of Dalkey Archive Press over at Jacket Copy.

(via Josh Maday)

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