July 2009

The Greatest Adventure Story: Part Two, A Movie

He's so cute when he's angry

He's so cute when he's angry

The other night, just after I read that Chabon essay about the Wilderness of Childhood, I watched This Is England on a whim and I was positively floored. It’s about a twelve year old boy in rural England in 1983 who becomes entangled with a twenty-something skinhead, who exposes the boy to a lot of violence and extremism. (The two main characters mirror each other perfectly: a child who is forced to act like a man and a man who can’t help but act like a child.)

The first thing that stood out to me was how beautifully it was plotted. Maybe I just picked up on this because my boyfriend has been reading John Gardner’s The Art of Fiction to me in any spare moment he finds, but we both couldn’t help but gush about how each scene was perfectly weighted to balance each plot line: the political context, racial tension, the boy’s romantic interest, the two main character’s back-stories and ideas about family and fatherhood.

Also, it’s acted beautifully, written beautifully and is somehow extremely funny, horrifying, engrossing, violent, and heartbreaking all at once. It’s the kind of movie that I feel is an education in plot and character development. It’s up on Netflix and you can stream it right now if you’re so inclined. I already want to watch it again.

What are some other movies that you feel have been beneficial/influential to your writing?

Craft Notes / 66 Comments
July 14th, 2009 / 5:57 pm

Literary Lessons from Metal Magazines: Early Man Reviews Books

 

If I sit in your lap, will you read to me?

If I sit in your lap, will you read to me?

I’m going to see if I can start a book club with Early Man. You know, go to their house, talk about books we read. That’s right! My own book club, with Early Man! Because those bitches from the PTA wouldn’t talk to me because I wasn’t “PTA” enough and wouldn’t invite me to their book club! (It was cool- I hung out with this Jamaican drug dealer named Ray whilst picking up our kids. Much more pleasant than talking to Cynthia/Satan, PTA President from the Devil’s Anus.) And you know what? After we talk about books, we’re gonna get really fucked up and screw! Wait,  that just slipped out. Anyway, here’s some excellent recommendations from Early Man- The 12th Planet by Zecharia Sitchin, anyone?

Uncategorized / 30 Comments
July 14th, 2009 / 5:37 pm

Brian Allen Carr is giving away a bunch of books as a contest for MLKNG SCKLS. Enter it. Meanwhile, I’m having a crazy sale at PGP for another hour or something. The first person to spend $4 on these here separated (without DVD) will get the DVD, too.

Uncategorized / 6 Comments
July 14th, 2009 / 3:00 pm

HTML Giant: The Game

invader_tattoo

Gene and I were chatting about Shotgun Ninja last night and found out that we both had the same secret desire. We both want to meet an indie video game designer and collaborate with them to make games. But how would we ever make this happen?

Well, we have a blog. We have readers. We may as well go ahead and ask.

Are you an indie video game designer? Would you like to collaborate with willing members of the HTML Giant team? Would you like to be the HTML Giant Gamemaster? Get in touch. I’m at

giantblinditems

at

g
mail

dot

com

Imagine: EVER, The Escape

[ ]

[ ]

[ ] [ ]

Or pr’s Baked Tennis All Stars.

Or BE SAM PINK: the game.

A Jello Horse’s Giant Turtle Rampage.

The Log of the S.S. Marie Unguentine Movie Tie-in Game.

An HTML Giant text adventure.

Etcetera.

Spread the word. We’re serious.

Behind the Scenes & Technology / 4 Comments
July 14th, 2009 / 11:54 am

READ THIS. It’s the nonfiction equivalent of TYSON V. SPINKS.

Art Garfunkel wants you to know how many books he’s read since 1968, the month and year which he read each book, and the number of pages each book was.

A thousand times yes. Bobby Digital drops some knowledge and his “singular philosophical code” on us October 15  with The Tao of Wu.

The Greatest Adventure Story

kids2Michael Chabon has a great essay in this week’s issue of The New York Review of Books about the inherent literary potential of childhood. Some of my favorite stories have children as protagonists or main characters, but I’ve been reluctant to wonder why that is, thinking that I probably like childhood stories because I am easily seduced by nostalgia. But no! Chabon articulates a more complex reason that childhood narratives are so appealing: “Childhood is, or has been, or ought to be, the great original adventure, a tale of privation, courage, constant vigilance, danger, and sometimes calamity.”

READ MORE >

Uncategorized / 40 Comments
July 13th, 2009 / 3:39 pm

The new issue of JMWW is now live. Some neat stuff in there, including an excerpt of something new by Madison Smartt Bell and an extremely frustrating (but hilarious) thing by Jamie Iredell. There might even be a thing in there by J. A. Tyler. See for yourself.

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