November 2010

Geography Thursdays #13: ZIPScribble

What would happen if you were to connect all the ZIP codes in the US in ascending order? Is there a system behind the assignment of ZIP codes? Are they organized in a grid?

More here: http://eagereyes.org/Applications/ZIPScribbleMap.html

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November 18th, 2010 / 7:52 am

Barnes & Noble is running a 50% off all Criterion Collection releases; I think it ends on Friday. Be careful. I’m buying at least Antichrist, Last Year at Marienbad, and House. What will you get?

Web Hype / 26 Comments
November 17th, 2010 / 3:09 pm

DROWNING BEAUTIFUL

Look at this beautiful artwork by Jason de Caires Taylor.

(update: That first link seems a little overloaded, so here’s his website: http://www.underwatersculpture.com)

He creates people out of cement and puts them on the bottom of the sea.

Here’s a writer on the ocean floor…

i will not go on the internet, i will not check my phone

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November 17th, 2010 / 2:46 pm

I Knew That There Was Nothing Beyond It: An Interview with Ben Spivey

Earlier this summer, Blue Square Press released their first title, Ben Spivey’s Flowing in the Gossamer Fold. Told in a series of mostly short, alternatingly Lutz-real and dreamlike passages, the book contains an interior logic and realm of imagery somewhere on the cusp of no realm, fresh and familiar at the same time. Over the past week or so, I asked Ben about the book’s creation, his influence, and more about the future of this new press over email.

Let’s start at the beginning: How did Gossamer begin in you as an idea?

It began as a drowning feeling. When I was first thinking about Gossamer I knew I wanted to tell a story about a man losing everything he was comfortable with. I knew how I wanted it to end, in fact I had the last sentence written in the first draft, the line was never changed.

So your writing the novel was all movement toward that last sentence? How did the moves reveal themselves? Over what time?

I started writing the novel in February of 2009 and I finished it sometime around March of this year. The moves revealed themselves as pieces to a puzzle. I kept a Moleskine journal with me at all times, jotting down ideas. For that year I never stopped thinking about Malcolm. A lot of the time I put into the novel was spent arranging the scenes and the moments, moving and cutting chapters, paragraphs, sentences. The beginning was originally the middle. I was working toward that last sentence; I knew that there was nothing beyond it.

READ MORE >

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November 17th, 2010 / 2:08 pm

Forecast Peggy Cthulu Issue

1. Shya Scanlon’s Forecast has been launched at Flatmancrooked. “The year is 2212, the weather is out of control, and Seattle is being rebuilt with electricity generated from negative human emotion.”

2. Lindsay Hunter has a rad new freakstory at 52 Stories: Three Things You Should Know About Peggy Paula.

3. At Comics Alliance, “The Monsters of H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulu Mythos, As Drawn by Children”

4. New issue of Notnostrums.

Roundup / 7 Comments
November 17th, 2010 / 12:37 pm

You have to admit it’s pretty funny that you can get the NEW KEYHOLE journal (#10) for $8, or just $5 if “you think literary journals are boring or that reading in general is boring.”

I Like What The Hell Is Going On Over Here

Say hello to next month’s Zoetrope and a guy named Tim Maia. Hello.

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November 17th, 2010 / 1:55 am

Reviews

On Reading Leslie Scalapino’s The Dihedrons Gazelle-Dihedrals Zoom

I mentioned the difficulty of reading Leslie Scalapino’s wordfall, The Dihedrons Gazelle-Dihedrals Zoom, to Lindsey Boldt, who published the book with Post Apollo Press. She responded generously, saying

I agree that Scalapino’s work can feel very difficult, and this book I think feels especially daunting. Its prose is incredibly tangled and slippery to an almost maddening degree, which is what makes it so taxing but also so rewarding. I felt really anxious when I first sat down to read it and really fought to understand it on a sense-meaning level. I don’t think I’d faced such a literary challenge since college. I finally caved at some point and just let it turn into a sensory experience, which turned out to be really fun.

Certainly that’s an adequate and lovely review in itself, though it hardly matches the book’s blurbs: Fanny Howe calls it a “mystical vision” and Charles Bernstein said the book “is an ekphrastic implosion inside our severed human-body/animal-mind.” Talk about whoa! Michael McClure said the book comes from the “spagyric hinterlands of purest imagination,” and Etel Adnan called it our Divine Comedy but with “more humanity and more derision.”

So how is it that these syntactically dense word sets come to matter? READ MORE >

18 Comments
November 16th, 2010 / 7:28 pm