Showing posts with label Leo Tolstoy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leo Tolstoy. Show all posts
Thursday, November 19, 2015
Amy Gustine’s Library: A Post-Apocalypse Bunker of Books
Reader: Amy Gustine
Location: Toledo, Ohio
Collection Size: 800, give or take
The one book I’d run back into a burning building to rescue: Honestly? My current project, unless I was smart enough to back it up off site. I don’t own any family Bibles, signed first editions, or otherwise irreplaceable books.
Favorite book from childhood: The Trixie Belden mystery series.
Guilty-pleasure book: Dewey by Vicki Myron—nonfiction about a kitten abandoned on a bitterly cold Iowa night in a library’s book drop. Found in the morning nearly dead, Dewey is revived and becomes permanent guardian of the stacks and a community treasure. I’m a sucker for stories about animals who save us from ourselves. I say it’s a “guilty” pleasure because being brought to tears and laughter by a story about a cat seems like something I should feel guilty about—but I don’t.
More than anything else, books vastly expand our world and provide a refuge from it. Since I’m an introvert wary of received wisdom, they were no doubt my inevitable destination, but childhood circumstances probably paved the way. My sister and I split the week between our maternal and paternal grandparents, spent Saturday with Mom and Sunday with Dad. In essence I had six parents in four different neighborhoods. In addition, we attended a small, private school, which meant we had no neighborhood playmates. Because all my homes offered a single TV with three channels, there wasn’t much else to do but read. No matter—a book or two can easily be taken from house to house. Sometimes you find them just lying around. That’s how during grade school I came to work my way through James Michener, James Fenimore Cooper, Edna Ferber, and the first three of V.C. Andrew’s Dollanganger series (forbidden reading, but Grandma was busy making dinner). Prior to that I had been a big Trixie Belden fan (think a younger, more-awkward Nancy Drew). By high school I had found Salinger (Franny and Zooey was my favorite) and the Russians. Crime and Punishment still sits in my all-time top ten.
When I was fourteen my mom let me commandeer a wall of shelves in the guestroom. Then I went off to college, Mom downsized and my books slipped away. I regret losing the marginal comments. The few books I still have from that time are like reading old diaries, but better—they don’t reveal my crushes.
Like my mother, my inner HGTV-snob wants a house ready to photograph on short notice. Like my father, I take comfort in knowing that even post-apocalypse, I would have enough reading material to keep busy for decades. (Yes, I manage to ignore other apocalyptic challenges like food, clean water, and roving bands of cannibals). Fortunately, I have a home office, a living room and family room. The fiction lives in my office arranged alphabetically by author. My current obsession is with the brilliant Dan Chaon.
I also keep story anthologies, literary magazines, books about writing, reference books and research in my office, segregated on their own shelves but otherwise unorganized. Two shelves are dedicated to the to-be-read pile, roughly sorted by novels, story collections, and non-fiction. I’ve got some James Wood up there right now, Thrown by Kerry Howley, and Honor by Elif Shafak, a writer my exchange student from Pakistan turned me onto. When I was writing a novel with a Pakistani character, my research shelves held books on Islam, South Asia, and the Middle East. Now this area holds material for a project I’m not sure I’ll write yet, so I can’t reveal its contents. It might jinx me.
In front of the books sit mementos. The round wooden box was on my grandmother’s screened porch. As a child I always felt boxes with lids were going to have something wonderful and mysterious inside (they never did). Some of the other items are props I’ve used for writing projects, like the car, a replica of one a character owned, and the vase, a piece similar to a jar in my novel about Czech immigrants.
Some of the living room and family room shelves are arranged for looks, in vertical and horizontal stacks interspersed with tchotchkes and photos. There I shelve poetry and nonfiction very roughly arranged by topic and author, but also placed where they look good, or based on size, so the big books are on the bottom of the stack. I have oversized gardening books (lots of pictures) and several coffee-table books on cats (cue Dewey). I also have a set of Harvard Classics my mother gave me (most of which I haven’t read—sorry Cellini, you’re reserved for the apocalypse).
My favorite non-fiction topics are psychology, anthropology, ethics, religion and evolution. My favorite essayist is Alain de Botton. My favorite writer on religion is Karen Armstrong. The single biggest game changer I’ve read as an adult is Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond. I would love to see this adapted for young readers and made a standard high school text. (If the job comes available, somebody let me know.)
I borrow books from the library often, but when I read something I love, I allow myself to buy it. Buying a book I’ve already read used to feel indulgent, but I decided it was better than avoiding the library because I’m afraid of finding a book I don’t want to give back. Still, my tendency to feel crushed by clutter requires brutality. I can’t ask myself if I’d like to own a book (the answer is always yes; it’s a book isn’t it?). Instead I ask: Might I read this again, loan it to a friend, browse excerpts for inspiration, or use it to teach a class or write an essay? Because I insist on keeping the fiction alphabetized, when I find no room for a new novel or story collection, I subject nearby hangers-on to this litmus test. Sometimes a handy space opens; sometimes I sigh and start rearranging shelves.
Digital books serve my neat-nick impulse, make browsing annotations easy and assuage my fear of being caught somewhere without something to read, but they have so many failings. My iPad is always tempting me to check email or click over to “breaking news.” I can’t loan digital books to friends. I’m worried Amazon or Apple might take my books away someday. Once in a while, amid numerous in-process books and magazines, I forget that I was reading something digital because the book isn’t lying on my end table...So sad, but true. Also, digital books are just so....unbook-like. It might be asking too much that they smell and feel like real books, but why do they so often lack the same lovely cover art? Why don’t they include the dust jacket copy?
Worst of all, digital books don’t beg to be thumbed through by a bored kid. My office faces the street. One year on Halloween a teenage girl spied my shelves through the window. She commented that she had never seen so many books before. “And shelves...in a house,” she said with evident amazement. It reminded me how lucky some of us are to find James Michener lying next to Grandpa’s chair. As children, we often have only what is within reach inside the four walls of our home. If a book is in reach, the walls somehow both come down and fold protectively around you. That’s the greatest gift my six parents ever gave me.
Amy Gustine is the author of the story collection You Should Pity Us Instead from Sarabande Books (out February 2016). Her fiction has received Pushcart Special Mention and appeared in several publications, including The Chicago Tribune’s Printers Row Journal, The Kenyon Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, North American Review and Black Warrior Review. She lives in Ohio.
My Library is an intimate look at personal book collections. Readers are encouraged to send high-resolution photos of their home libraries or bookshelves, along with a description of particular shelving challenges, quirks in sorting (alphabetically? by color?), number of books in the collection, and particular titles which are in the To-Be-Read pile. Email thequiveringpen@gmail.com for more information.
Labels:
J. D. Salinger,
Leo Tolstoy,
My Library
Friday, December 5, 2014
Friday Freebie: When the Cypress Whispers by Yvette Manessis Corporon, The Stockholm Octavo by Karen Engelmann, Burial Rites by Hannah Kent, Fosse by Sam Wasson, The Leftovers by Tom Perrotta, Selections from Melville House's Art of the Novella series, HitRecord on TV, Rear Window & A Big Little Book!
Congratulations to Amy Morgan, winner of last week's Friday Freebie: Pickett’s Charge by Charles McNair, Sometimes the Wolf by Urban Waite, Three Bargains by Tania Malik, The Family Hightower by Brian Francis Slattery, and Big Little Man by Alex Tizon.
This week's "book contest" is a little something different, designed to assist you in your holiday gift-giving quandary (if, in fact, you find yourself in a quandary). This giveaway has a little something for just about every reader on your shopping list: some contemporary literary fiction, a biography, a set of classic novellas, experimental short fiction--and I'm even tossing in a couple of goodies from my personal collection, an Alfred Hitchcock Blu-Ray disc and a Big Little Book for the younger readers (and/or those who succumb easily to nostalgia). Here's what one lucky reader will win in this week's Friday Freebie giveaway:
When the Cypress Whispers by Yvette Manessis Corporon
On a beautiful Greek island, myths, magic, and a colorful cast of mortals come together in a lushly atmospheric debut celebrating the powerful bond between an American woman and her Greek grandmother. The daughter of Greek immigrants, Daphne has been brought up to believe in the American dream. When her husband dies in a car accident, leaving her with an inconsolable baby and stacks of bills, she channels everything she has into opening her own Greek restaurant. Now an acclaimed chef and restaurateur, she has also found a second chance at love with her wealthy, handsome fiance. Although American by birth, Daphne spent many blissful childhood summers on the magical Greek island of Erikousa, which her grandmother still calls home. At her Yia-yia's side, she discovered her passion for cooking and absorbed the vibrant rhythms of island life, infused with ancient myths and legends lovingly passed down through generations. Somehow her beloved grandmother could always read her deepest thoughts, and despite the miles between them Daphne knows Yia-yia is the one person who can look beyond Daphne's storybook life of seeming perfection to help her stay grounded. With her wedding day fast approaching, Daphne returns to Erikousa and to Yia-yia's embrace. The past and the present beautifully entwine in this glorious, heartfelt story about a woman trapped between the siren call of old-world traditions and the demands of a modern career and relationship. When Daphne arrives on Erikousa with her daughter, Evie, in tow, nothing is the way she recalls it, and she worries that her elderly Yia-yia is losing her grip on reality. But as the two of them spend time together on the magical island once again, her grandmother opens up to share remarkable memories of her life there--including moving stories of bravery and loyalty in the face of death during World War II--and Daphne remembers why she returned. Yia-yia has more than one lesson to teach her: that security is not the same as love, that her life can be filled with meaning again, and that the most important magic to believe in is the magic of herself.
The Stockholm Octavo by Karen Engelmann
Life is close to perfect for Emil Larsson, a self-satisfied bureaucrat in the Office of Customs and Excise in 1791 Stockholm. He is a true man of the Town—a drinker, card player, and contented bachelor—until one evening when Mrs. Sofia Sparrow, a fortune-teller and proprietor of an exclusive gaming parlor, shares with him a vision she has had: a golden path that will lead him to love and connection. She lays an Octavo for him, a spread of eight cards that augur the eight individuals who can help him realize this vision—if he can find them. Emil begins his search, intrigued by the puzzle of his Octavo and the good fortune Mrs. Sparrow's vision portends. But when Mrs. Sparrow wins a mysterious folding fan in a card game, the Octavo's deeper powers are revealed. For Emil it is no longer just a game of the heart; collecting his eight is now crucial to pulling his country back from the crumbling precipice of rebellion and chaos. Set against the luminous backdrop of late eighteenth-century Stockholm, as the winds of revolution rage through the great capitals of Europe, The Stockholm Octavo brings together a collection of characters, both fictional and historical, whose lives tangle in political conspiracy, love, and magic in a breathtaking debut that will leave you spellbound.
Burial Rites by Hannah Kent
A brilliant literary debut, inspired by a true story: the final days of a young woman accused of murder in Iceland in 1829. Set against Iceland's stark landscape, Hannah Kent brings to vivid life the story of Agnes, who, charged with the brutal murder of her former master, is sent to an isolated farm to await execution. Horrified at the prospect of housing a convicted murderer, the family at first avoids Agnes. Only Tóti, a priest Agnes has mysteriously chosen to be her spiritual guardian, seeks to understand her. But as Agnes's death looms, the farmer's wife and their daughters learn there is another side to the sensational story they've heard. Riveting and rich with lyricism, Burial Rites evokes a dramatic existence in a distant time and place, and asks the question: How can one woman hope to endure when her life depends upon the stories told by others?
Fosse by Sam Wasson
More than a quarter-century after his death, Bob Fosse's fingerprints on popular culture remain indelible. The only person ever to win Oscar, Emmy, and Tony awards in the same year, Fosse revolutionized nearly every facet of American entertainment, forever marking Broadway and Hollywood with his iconic style--hat tilted, fingers splayed--that would influence generations of performing artists. Yet in spite of Fosse's innumerable achievements, no accomplishment ever seemed to satisfy him, and offstage his life was shadowed in turmoil and anxiety. Now, bestselling author Sam Wasson unveils the man behind the swaggering sex appeal, tracing Fosse's untold reinventions of himself over a career that would spawn "The Pajama Game," "Cabaret," "Pippin," "All That Jazz," and "Chicago," one of the longest-running Broadway musicals ever. Drawing on a wealth of unpublished material and hundreds of sources--friends, enemies, lovers, and collaborators, many of whom have never spoken publicly about Fosse before--Wasson illuminates not only Fosse's prodigious professional life, but also his close and conflicted relationships with everyone from Liza Minnelli to Ann Reinking to Jessica Lange and Dustin Hoffman. Wasson also uncovers the deep wounds that propelled Fosse's insatiable appetites--for spotlights, women, and life itself. In this sweeping, richly detailed account, Wasson's stylish, effervescent prose proves the ideal vehicle for revealing Bob Fosse as he truly was--after hours, close up, and in vibrant color.
The Leftovers by Tom Perrotta
For those who've been enjoying the HBO series, here's your chance to check out the source material for The Leftovers. What if your life was upended in an instant? What if your spouse or your child disappeared right in front of your eyes? Was it the Rapture or something even more difficult to explain? How would you rebuild your life in the wake of such a devastating event? These are the questions confronting the bewildered citizens of Mapleton, a formerly comfortable suburban community that lost over a hundred people in the Sudden Departure. Kevin Garvey, the new mayor, wants to move forward, to bring a sense of renewed hope and purpose to his traumatized neighbors, even as his own family disintegrates. His wife, Laurie, has left him to enlist in the Guilty Remnant, a homegrown cult whose members take a vow of silence but haunt the town’s streets as “living reminders” of God’s judgment. His son, Tom, is gone, too, dropping out of college to follow a crooked "prophet" who calls himself Holy Wayne. Only his teenage daughter, Jill, remains, and she’s definitely not the sweet "A" student she used to be. Through the prism of a single family, Perrotta illuminates a familiar America made strange by grief and apocalyptic anxiety. The Leftovers is a powerful and deeply moving book about regular people struggling to hold onto a belief in their futures.
Selections from Melville House's
I'm a long-time fan of (and subscriber to) Melville House's Art of the Novella series. I have a shelf full of short(ish) works by Mary Shelley, Bram Stoker, Mark Twain, James Joyce, Kate Chopin, Willa Cather and dozens of others. Earlier this month, I was the recipient of some duplicate volumes which I already had in my collection; so, my abundance is your gain. Titles included in this Friday Freebie prize package are: The Alienist by Machado de Assis, Fanfarlo by Charles Baudelaire, May Day by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and The Devil by Leo Tolstoy. I hope you enjoy these classics as much as I do; and that maybe you'll think about subscribing to the whole series. It's always fun to receive a couple of novellas in your mailbox every four weeks.HITRECORD ON TV is a new kind of variety show. Join host Joseph Gordon-Levitt as he directs a global online community of artists to create eight episodes of television--all made collaboratively. Each installment focuses on a different theme and features short films, live performances, music, animation, conversation, and more. HITRECORD ON TV invites anyone with an internet connection to contribute, create, and develop art and media collectively through hitRECord.org, an online collaborative production company that brings together artists from all over the world to participate in the creative process, bridging cultural divides and false distinctions that separate professional artists from those who simply love to make art. Through hitRECord.org, 1,295 artists contributed their original artwork to all of HITRECORD ON TV's eight episodes. This nine-book box set is the official companion to the first season, taking fans deeper inside the show's themes and the making of the series as a whole. It comes with special download codes for all eight episodes and the complete soundtrack album.
Rear Window on Blu-Ray
Because I recently bought a Hitchcock DVD combo-pack that included Rear Window, I'm offering up this stand-alone disc to one lucky - Rear Window Ethics: An Original Documentary
- A Conversation with Screenwriter John Michael Hayes
- Pure Cinema: Through the Eyes of the Master
- Breaking Barriers: The Sound of Hitchcock
- Hitchcock / Truffaut Interview Excerpts
- Masters of Cinema
- Feature Commentary with John Fawell, Author of Hitchcock’s Rear Window: The Well-Made Film
- Production Photographs
- Theatrical Trailer
- Re-Release Trailer Narrated by James Stewart
Tom Beatty, Ace of the Service:
A Big Little Book
Hello, my name is David and I'm a Big Little addict."Hi, David!"
Yes, it's true: I like little books and I cannot lie. Over the past 10 years, I've been collecting these cool artifacts from the 1930s and 1940s, primarily those published by the Whitman Publishing Company. Those of you who aren't familiar with Big Little Books should check out this link. In the course of collecting BLBs, of course, I've acquired a few duplicates. This week, I'm including one of those, Tom Beatty, Ace of the Service: Scores Again, in the gift box in hopes you'll get a kick out of this "ace detective of the Secret Service" as he goes around kicking some Depression-era butt. The book itself is in decent (though not perfect) shape. It's perfectly suitable for reading and passing on to a new younger generation in hopes they'll get hooked on BLBs, too. (If anyone needs the number for a good Big Little support group, just let me know. I'm here to help.)
If you’d like a chance at winning the whole enchilada (all the books and the DVD), simply email your name and mailing address to
Put FRIDAY FREEBIE in the e-mail subject line. One entry per person, please. Despite its name, the Friday Freebie runs all week long and remains open to entries until midnight on Dec. 11, at which time I’ll draw the winning name. I’ll announce the lucky reader on Dec. 12. If you’d like to join the mailing list for the once-a-week newsletter, simply add the words “Sign me up for the newsletter” in the body of your email. Your email address and other personal information will never be sold or given to a third party (except in those instances where the publisher requires a mailing address for sending Friday Freebie winners copies of the book).
Want to double your odds of winning? Get an extra entry in the contest by posting a link to this webpage on your blog, your Facebook wall or by tweeting it on Twitter. Once you’ve done any of those things, send me an additional e-mail saying “I’ve shared” and I’ll put your name in the hat twice.
Labels:
F. Scott Fitzgerald,
Friday Freebie,
Leo Tolstoy
Thursday, October 16, 2014
Trevor D. Richardson's Library: A Rob Fleming Dilemma
Reader: Trevor D. Richardson
Location: Portland, Oregon
Collection size: 300-ish, plus a lot of comics
The one book I'd run back into a burning building to rescue: Early 20th-century printing of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, my favorite fictional character
Favorite book from childhood: The Time Machine by H.G. Wells
Guilty pleasure book: I don't really read things that I'm ashamed to admit, but the closest would have to be The Chronicles of Narnia because the religious symbolism is often a little heavy-handed.
I just moved to a new place and my books are still heaped about the living room in short towers. I keep thinking about Nick Hornby's High Fidelity. Rob Fleming (or Rob Gordon as played by John Cusack in the movie) has a fairly extensive record collection that is his crowning achievement. Throughout the story, he has this ongoing ritual that seems to be a coping mechanism for the drama or disappointment of his personal life: Rob can't stop rearranging his vinyl. In his search for the perfect system--having tried alphabetically by artist and then by album name and a bunch of others--Rob begins arranging the records in chronological order of when he purchased them. The process becomes a kind of catalyst for him to reflect on his life and it inspires some of the events of Hornby's novel.
Right now, I am sitting in my new domicile, facing with the same dilemma of Rob Fleming/Rob Gordon from High Fidelity. What is that ever-elusive perfect arrangement of one's own library? In my last place, the books were arranged by size at one point, then by color later on. They've been ordered alphabetically by title and then by author. They have even been ordered by genre ranging from “analysis of astrophysics” to “surrealist/psychedelic fiction.” As with many other elements in my own life--and the Rob Fleming in me can attest to this fact--none of it seems right quite yet.
Moreover, there is a reason why my library consists of 300 books instead of a couple thousand. I lend them out or straight up give them away more often than even I, myself, would like. It's difficult to explain the urge. I have the heart of a hoarder where my books are concerned, but I also have a strong desire to create the perfect library and sometimes there's a book here or there that just doesn't quite fit in. It's a bit like trying to fix your hair in the morning and, after fighting with that one unruly strand for several minutes, you finally decide to pluck it out. It is not easy--the hair and the book are a part of me--but they simply aren't falling in line and must be gotten rid of posthaste.
Today I am considering a Fleming-esque approach to my books. Not quite chronological, but still biographical in nature, I want to arrange things according to the many phases and various obsessions of my 29 years. I begin with the collection of Hardy Boys novels I have kept since elementary school. At the time of their discovery, my family had recently moved into a new house outside of Manteca, California, and I not only discovered the joys and horrors of a dank, eerie basement, but the leavings of the prior occupants. Among the boxes of creepy, dusty dolls and rusty bicycle parts had been almost the full collection of The Hardy Boys by Franklin W. Dixon. I made it the mission of my childhood to complete the collection and, despite having outgrown the series by quite a few years, I still keep an eye out for the final two I lack whenever I go book hunting.
Within this same category, I suppose I would have to include The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain. Yet this brings to mind an interesting question. Should the biography of my book collection be based solely on when I first read these books, or when I most loved them? If the latter, Tom Sawyer is still fairly current, where the Narnia books should have their place somewhere around my eighth grade year. A year of trial and uncertainty, following a move from California to Texas, in which I took comfort in the escape from our world into a world of fauns and lions and griffins and talking badgers.
This autobiographical library will not be an easy task.
And what of my comic books? I have some issues from the early nineties that should technically be squeezing themselves in between The War of the Worlds and The Jungle Book. When did Superman die again? 1992? What about when Bane broke Batman's back and Bruce had to stop wearing the cowl for a while? Surely these issues must land somewhere between the time I was devouring the writing of H.G. Wells and the time I had gotten really into reading the original stories that inspired beloved Disney films...
No, not an easy task at all. Perhaps I should go back to color-coding the covers and call it a day.
Next, I move on to an obsession with classical literature that began in my adolescence. According to the biography of my library, this began with Sherlock Holmes, but rapidly spiraled into J.D. Salinger, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Melville, Tolstoy, Miller. I remember it well. Like so much of my literary life, the urge was inspired, or perhaps “caused” is a better word choice, by music.
Like some of the people in Rob Fleming's life, I had friends of that tribe who used their knowledge of music, particularly upcoming and underground stuff, as a kind of bludgeon to browbeat the people around them into some kind of submissive or subservient position. They were that brand of nerd, the loser, or slacker who realized that the music scene existing outside of Top 40 artists gave them power. I got as caught up in this wave as I was caught up in the wave of spiritual adrenaline that went with big tent revivals and the promises of Christ. All of which I have since, gratefully, recovered from. With music, it happened rather suddenly. I recognized the band that was “it” one month was suddenly “sell out” dross the next. The fickle nature of this scene left a bad taste in my mouth and I went in search of things that would last. This search took me backward in time to things that had been proven and were still going strong. I began to read old books, the ones that you find on a New York Times must-read list. And, as for music, I began listening to early 20th-century jazz, blues, and eventually folk.
Folk brought me to Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie, The Band, Pete Seeger, The Staples Singers, Neil Young and tons more. In literature, it brought me to Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and Ken Kesey. I suppose this will have to be the next shelf of my library, the next subcategory. On the Road, The Dharma Bums, Desolation Angels, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Howl, Sailor Song, Demon Box...this era became the next obsession.
It was at this stage in my reading life that I began to seriously consider pursuing writing as a career. The words of Ginsberg and Kerouac, Kesey and, eventually, Hunter S. Thompson, ignited something in me that never cooled. Following the track and history of the Beats, I found Naked Lunch and William S. Burroughs. Following Burroughs and realizing that so many of these people were all part of one community, largely featured in Kerouac's books, made me see all the interconnecting webs of that era in literature, music, and art. Bob Dylan was inspired by Kerouac. Hunter S. Thompson was inspired by Bob Dylan. Bob Dylan was inspired by Hunter S. Thompson. Ken Kesey was featured in Thompson's Hell's Angels during a chapter set at his La Honda estate. It was an endless cycle of influence feeding into and out of itself, influencing America in kind, and eventually influencing me.
My pursuit of writing, however, did leave me kind of jaded as I rapidly began to realize that there was very little else I cared about. I couldn't imagine myself doing any other job, for example, and my late teens and early twenties were troubled as I suffered unusually powerful growing pains as a struggling writer struggling with newfound responsibilities. I had staked a lot of myself on faith because of my time in Texas, but in studying literature and pursuing creativity, I began to feel an awakening that made things about that faith not quite sit right. By the time I was 20, writing was the only thing I believed in anymore. Books, that was it. I had no religion, no patriotism, no love of money, no passion for any career outside of telling stories, and, of course, no resources, finances, credit or anything else to my name.
This is when I found the writing of Chuck Palahniuk and, in the space of five months, I read everything he had ever written. The humor of destruction, the nihilistic poetry that made light of so many of our culture's sacred trusts, and the consistently poverty-stricken characters stubbornly maintaining their outsider status both in terms of their living conditions and their intellectual outlook on life, all resonated with me.
Even now, despite having since outgrown Chuck, I find myself thinking about my library in relation to this line from Fight Club, “I had a stereo that was very decent, a wardrobe that was getting very respectable. I was close to being complete.”
This library is a sculpture – take a title or two out, add a Norman Mailer book here or a Thomas Disch novel there, and I could be complete...
As for Chuck Palahniuk, Survivor was a particular favorite as it told the story of a guy brought up in a suicide cult who lacked the faith to take his own life when the call came. Growing up religious and grappling with my own agnosticism, it just felt right.
My wandering 20th year of life took me to a town called Denton, Texas, north of Dallas, where I wound up writing my first novel. In Denton, I met Shea, who loaned me his copy of Still Life with Woodpecker by Tom Robbins. My obsession with the writings of Palahniuk ended that day and I was now vehemently, even vigorously, centered on this new set of books. I read Woodpecker in two days. Then I spent the next week at the local bookstore, unable to afford a copy of anything larger than a Jehovah's Witness pamphlet, basically stealing a chapter here or a chapter there, reading Jitterbug Perfume on the fly. Since that time, I have gotten all of Tom Robbins' books and even had the pleasure of attending a reading of his autobiography, Tibetan Peach Pie, this past June at Powell's Books.
In Tom, I found something that made me realize how narrow and juvenile the vision of Chuck Palahniuk's books had been. I saw people, like me, with the same outsider perspective, the same distrust of society's values or disconnect from social norms, but instead of being miserable about it, they were filled with wonder and daring. I realized that, like Bob Dylan said, “When you ain't got nothing, you got nothing to lose.”
I turned a corner and began to explore America, not in search of answers or something new to believe in or really anything at all, but just to go because that's what Amanda from Another Roadside Attraction would do or because that's how the great king in Jitterbug Perfume managed to live forever.
The biography of my book collection is starting to look increasingly optimistic. Filled with this new vigor, I stopped seeing things as the next scene or the next historical moment I had to devour and began to just search for what I liked. I found Neil Gaiman and read four or five of his books. I started reading books about physics and math, getting a big kick out of a little known book called Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea by Charles Seife in which I learned about the tug-of-war between math and religion going back to when Time was still in diapers. Then, much later than I should have, I finally got around to Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and, embracing a lifelong love of science fiction, got into Philip K. Dick, Orson Scott Card, and tons more.
Not long after, I wrote Dystopia Boy, my own addition to the annals of science fiction and a love note to everyone on my book shelf. I learned how to add danger to my voice by obsessing on Hunter S. Thompson for a while. I found humanity through Tom Robbins. I found music and poetry and that lowdown eloquence of the poor from listening to too much Bob Dylan and reading too much Kerouac. J. D. Salinger taught me how to talk in my writing rather than just speak. Palahniuk showed me how the incendiary can be hilarious. And my love of the classics held up the firm belief that if something is good, it is timeless, if the writer does his job right, it never suffers the fate of so many bands that my old friends liked for a minute and cast aside like autumn leaves the next.
Like Rob Fleming's vinyl collection, I can see my life in the literature I've consumed. I have often been a little behind the trends, but typically that's just because I want to make sure what I'm spending my time on is going to last. It's just another variation on the eternal question Tom Robbins asked all those years ago: How do we make love stay?
Trevor D. Richardson is the founder and editor of The Subtopian and the author of American Bastards, Honeysuckle & Irony, and Dystopia Boy: The Unauthorized Files from Montag Press. A West Coast man by birth, Trevor was brought up in Texas and has since ventured back west and put down roots in Portland, Oregon. His numerous short stories have appeared in magazines like Word Riot, Underground Voices, and a science fiction anthology called Doomology: The Dawning of Disasters.
My Library is an intimate look at personal book collections. Readers are encouraged to send high-resolution photos of their home libraries or bookshelves, along with a description of particular shelving challenges, quirks in sorting (alphabetically? by color?), number of books in the collection, and particular titles which are in the To-Be-Read pile. Email thequiveringpen@gmail.com for more information.
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Soup and Salad: Visiting Tolstoy's estate with hungover honeymooners, Owen King wrestles with titles, Leigh Newman fights fear, Being a better literary citizen, A book club directory
On today's menu:
1. Literary pilgrim Stephen Phelan takes us on a tour of a few writers' homes, including those which once belonged to the Brontes, George Orwell, J. G. Ballard, and this memorable day at Leo Tolstoy's country estate near Tula, Russia:
It's a gloomy, windy Sunday when I visit, and a long, muddy walk from the main road and through the sodden grounds to the mansion house itself. Inside, I tag along with a couple of hungover Scottish newlyweds--hardcore Tolstoy readers who pre-arranged a tour in English for the first day of their honeymoon. Scholar-in-residence Galina Alekseeva talks us through the interiors and contents: the aristocratic family portraits; the library that was later partly burned by occupying Nazis; the so-called "vaulted room" where Tolstoy wrote in the mornings, permitting only his wife, Sofia, to enter with his cups of tea. Beside this, the small cramped room where 5000 mourners came to kiss the hand of his corpse in 1910.
An odd custom has developed around Tolstoy's grave, a simple grass mound in the woods nearby: young couples go to lay flowers and ask the master's blessing for good luck and lasting love. The newlyweds forgot to bring a bouquet, so we just stand there in the cold rain, with the autumn wind stripping leaves off the surrounding oaks. The scene is so melancholy that we have to laugh, which strikes us as a suitably Russian response. We tell ourselves that Tolstoy would approve.
2. At The Weeklings, Owen King delves into the problematic issue of book titles. King's new novel, Double Feature, was originally called Reenactment, but his editor nix-nayed that title because Nick Flynn was just about to release his memoir The Reenactments. King polled a few of his writer-friends to see if they shared his titular frustration. Stewart O'Nan, Amber Dermont, Timothy Schaffert and others responded. If you'll recall, there was some eleventh-hour indecision on what to call Fobbit. I toyed with naming it "Soft Men, Hard Bullets" or, most embarrassingly, "Of Men and Marshmallows." I even went so far as to put out a call for help from blog readers; but in the end, my editor at Grove/Atlantic liked Fobbit enough to keep it. Thank God he did because I don't think I could have lived with a marshmallow book.
2a. Oh hey, I almost forgot: What I really wanted to highlight in Owen King's article was this spot-on perfect description of what it's like for a writer to live with a work-in-progress for years and years:
If you’ve never attempted to write anything of a novel’s length, imagine having a friend or relative visit you for roughly that length of time, for three or five or seven years. Imagine a person, a person with whom you are not enjoying anything like traditional sexual congress, leaving their little hairs and toenail clippings in your sink, sprinkling their droplets of pee on your toilet seat, cluttering your surfaces with their weird pocket stuff, sticking things in the wrong cabinets, being underfoot and distracting you constantly for three or five or seven years. Let’s be honest: even if it was your favorite cousin, and even though you sort of invited him, after a year or so, you would owe it to yourself to give, at minimum, tacit consideration to murdering this person. This is the unique affliction of writing books: the endeavor is such that you can never entirely stop thinking about it. Picture the houseguest that is your novel, day after day, chewing cereal with his mouth open, his butt cratering the seat of your favorite armchair, and you will begin to understand.
After your houseguest/novel does finally stomp all his dirty underwear down into his duffel bag, after his stupid buddy with the flatbed arrives to drag off the piece of shit four-wheeler that has been sitting dead in the middle of garage, after your houseguest/novel/ hemorrhoid finally has it together enough to decamp and set up in a place of his own – i.e. a publishing house – the relief you feel will likely open the gates to feelings of magnanimity. The memories of the good times – that one scene that clicked on the first pass, that passage that said so much more than your ever hoped – may become foremost, but it should be self-evident that such pleasure depends on the book being out the door. Here lies the major portion of the unhappiness that so often attends the editing of any novel: with the son-of-a-bitch finally gone, you don’t want him crashing on your couch again, not even for a weekend.
3. At the 49 Writers blog, Leigh Newman (Still Points North: One Alaskan Childhood, One Grown-up World, One Long Journey Home) fights off the black ball of fear, and finds that it's not unlike surviving a plunge in a plane, pulling your dog out of wave-battered rocks, or falling from a raft into Class 4 rapids.
4. Every so often, I read a piece of writing which brings me up short, slapping me in the face with the reminder that I can be a better person. The recent essay "Writer Friends: the Rules of the Community" by Jennifer Niesslein at The Virginia Quarterly Review is one such article. Niesslein says we can all be better citizens of whatever community in which we reside if we would just set ourselves aside and look outward to others. It's kind of like that Michael Jackson anthem "Man in the Mirror."
We don’t know what it is about publishing that makes some writers lose both their minds and common sense, but many of us have been victim to another writer’s bad manners. The more successful among us have felt the weight of other writers trying to ride our coattails. The rest of us have endured conferences where other writers try to establish their importance, aren’t interested in an actual conversation, and vampire the energy from the room. We’ve spoken with writers who drop the phrase “my agent” so many times, one might suspect the two were lovers.I read this and fall into soft contemplation, knowing I have probably been guilty of some of this--especially in the past year. It's like another writer friend of mine once confessed to me, "I hope you never have to live through the experience of having a couple of books published and having no one interested in anything you have to say, because it's an awful place. And of course it conjures up all kinds of exaggerated ideas about what people think of you, and what they might be doing to perpetuate your misery. All imaginary, of course. And of course, the worst thing about it is that you occasionally give in to the desire to express feelings that are based on these imaginary slights, to the complete bewilderment of those on the receiving end." May we all be so self-aware.
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Remember this book club in Lost? They read Stephen King's Carrie. "It's not even literature," one member complained, "it's popcorn." |
Labels:
Fobbit,
Leo Tolstoy,
Soup and Salad,
Stewart O'Nan,
The Writing Habit
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Trailer Park Tuesday: Anna Karenina and Keira Knightley's Bulldog Underbite
Welcome to Trailer Park Tuesday, a showcase of new book trailers and, in a few cases, previews of book-related movies. Unless their last name is Grisham or King, authors will probably never see their trailers on the big screen at the local cineplex. And that's a shame because a lot of hard work goes into producing these short marriages between book and video. So, if you like what you see, please spread the word and help these videos go viral.
(With apologies to Mr. Leo Tolstoy:) All period-drama movie trailers are alike; but each eye-popping, brain-dazzling movie trailer is eye-popping and brain-dazzling in its own way. Into a summer already crowded with spidermen, batmen and All the President's Vampires, we get a fresh blast of cinematic promise. Anna Karenina, directed by Joe Wright and written by Tom Stoppard, is scheduled for release in November and if the two-and-a-half-minute trailer is any indication, we're in for a real treat, Keira Knightley's underbite aside. My feelings for Miss Knightley are....complicated. She has the kind of facial beauty I should fall for--bowl-of-cream complexion, pert nose, black-jellybean eyes--but....but yet, I'm distracted by her mouth. It wasn't until five movies had gone by and I reached Pride and Prejudice (also directed by Joe Wright) that I realized what was bugging me about her performances. It was her underbite which gives her mouth a steely determination as fierce as any bulldog's chomping at the script. This is especially troubling when it comes to her role as Anna K. I could be proved wrong come November, but I just don't know if Keira Knightley is right for the role of the insecure, unstable wife of Count Alexei. Maybe I'm just stuck on the perfection of Greta Garbo's performance in the role and maybe KK will be great as AK. We'll see. One thing of which I'm pretty confident, however, is the beautiful staging of the movie. From the stylized, theatrical scenes we're given in this trailer, I'm expecting great things to come from Wright's camera. Horses thundering across a stage, dancers frozen in a tableau, drawing room doors opening onto an outdoor pond with ice skaters--this is the freshest of cinematic dreams. Wright is, after all, the maestro behind the incredible five-minute, one-take, Steadicam tracking shot near the end of Atonement (whose script Knightley didn't chew up too badly). So, I'll be going to watch Anna Karenina for the visionary beauty and will do my best to ignore Keira Knightley's bulldog mouth.
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Soup and Salad: Rejection Sucks, Daniel Woodrell, Inside Denis Johnson, Other People, The writer as entrepreneur, Shann Ray plants seeds of atonement, The Radium Age of science-fiction, Reading during Hurricane Irene, Short Stories vs. Novels: Round 22
On today's menu:
1. Leslie Pietrzyk is sick and tired of rejection: "In the end, I DO NOT believe that, like cream, all good work rises to the top. I’m convinced that a lot of good work simply gets lost or set aside or overlooked or forgotten; many good writers simply give up." It's a nice Howard Beale-ish rant, one that eventually erupts from every writer who's sick and tired of getting return SASEs (Old School) or assembly-line emails ("Though we enjoyed your work very much, in the end we..."). But after the red clears from our faces and the veins stop throbbing, it's time to get back down to the business of writing, submitting, writing, submitting, et cetera--all the while, watching out the window to see if we can see our ship come in.

2. Daniel Woodrell is one writer whose luxury liner has finally pulled into port after he's spent most of his career writing off the radar of most readers. While I wasn't as enamored with it as most critics, I was still happy to see the movie version of Winter's Bone do so well at the box office, catapulting Woodrell to a larger audience. This year has already seen the repackaging of three of his earlier novels into a handsome trade paperback called The Bayou Trilogy; and now, his new collection of short stories, The Outlaw Album, has just been released. Joey McGarvey has an excellent review over at The Millions which further convinces me this is the must-get book of the year:
3. I love studying and discussing the Process of writing--dumping the nuts and bolts out onto the table and sorting them according to size and shape--that's why I thought these scans of Denis Johnson's notes for Train Dreams were especially cool, including the enigmatic "Eagl Scout" on one notebook page. Most of the handwriting is hard to decipher, but that just lends itself to the impression Johnson was in such a rush to get everything out of his head and onto the page that his pen couldn't keep up with his thoughts.
4. Have you heard? Brad Listi of The Nervous Breakdown now has a weekly podcast called Other People in which he talks to "people who write stuff, people who write books, people who sit there all day long staring at a flashing cursor, people who write even though they're deep in poverty, people who continue to try to write books even though the books they're trying to write are eluding them, people who quietly endure the monumental frustration of trying to put the words in the right order." The first episode was a conversation with the never-boring Jonathan Evison who may or may not be wearing pants during the phone interview. Subsequent podcasts feature Victoria Patterson, Blake Butler, Emma Straub, Greg Olear, Jessica Anya Blau and other, um, people. Click to the site, cock an ear, enjoy!
5. Though New West seems to have gone the way of the tumblin' tumbleweed (a moment of silence, please, for the dearly departed), books editor Jenny Shank isn't letting the grass grow under her feet. She's started contributing to PBS' Media Shift, including a nice piece on how authors need to be their own entrepreneurs in a "Brave New Book World." She writes:
6. Jenny also has a good (though rather short) interview with Shann Ray (American Masculine) in a recent issue of High Country News. Here's how the conversation kicks off:
7. HiLowbrow has 10 classic examples of dustjackets and "boards" (the paper- or cloth-covered stiff cardboard forming a book’s covers) from what they call the Radium Age of science-fiction (1904-1933). As a collector of vintage books, I'm drawn to these dustjackets in ways that are inexplicable and perhaps best left private. I love them all, but I'm especially turned-on by the board art of The Panchronicon, the 1904 novel by Harold Steele Mackaye. I want me one of them there airships!
8. I'm behind in catching up on the backlog of email and so a few "Soup and Salad" items have been sitting in my Inbox for well over a month. Here's one from the Reader's Quest blog which I've been meaning to tell you about: "Reading During Hurricane Irene."
9. And here's another must-read from back in August: Josh Rolnick's "My Life in Stories" from The Millions:
1. Leslie Pietrzyk is sick and tired of rejection: "In the end, I DO NOT believe that, like cream, all good work rises to the top. I’m convinced that a lot of good work simply gets lost or set aside or overlooked or forgotten; many good writers simply give up." It's a nice Howard Beale-ish rant, one that eventually erupts from every writer who's sick and tired of getting return SASEs (Old School) or assembly-line emails ("Though we enjoyed your work very much, in the end we..."). But after the red clears from our faces and the veins stop throbbing, it's time to get back down to the business of writing, submitting, writing, submitting, et cetera--all the while, watching out the window to see if we can see our ship come in.

2. Daniel Woodrell is one writer whose luxury liner has finally pulled into port after he's spent most of his career writing off the radar of most readers. While I wasn't as enamored with it as most critics, I was still happy to see the movie version of Winter's Bone do so well at the box office, catapulting Woodrell to a larger audience. This year has already seen the repackaging of three of his earlier novels into a handsome trade paperback called The Bayou Trilogy; and now, his new collection of short stories, The Outlaw Album, has just been released. Joey McGarvey has an excellent review over at The Millions which further convinces me this is the must-get book of the year:
In Woodrell’s superb new collection, The Outlaw Album, characters are fueled by desperation, anger, and (one suspects) a sense of humor either incomparably keen or completely nonexistent. How else could you explain the book’s first sentence, found in a story called “The Echo of Neighborly Bones”?: “Once Boshell finally killed his neighbor he couldn’t seem to quit killing him.” After burying his neighbor in a makeshift grave, this Boshell makes a habit of stopping by whenever he’s feeling blue. Nothing takes the edge off a rough day, or soothes the memory of his wife’s tears, as well as going at the rotting corpse with a heavy stone or a blunt hatchet.
3. I love studying and discussing the Process of writing--dumping the nuts and bolts out onto the table and sorting them according to size and shape--that's why I thought these scans of Denis Johnson's notes for Train Dreams were especially cool, including the enigmatic "Eagl Scout" on one notebook page. Most of the handwriting is hard to decipher, but that just lends itself to the impression Johnson was in such a rush to get everything out of his head and onto the page that his pen couldn't keep up with his thoughts.
4. Have you heard? Brad Listi of The Nervous Breakdown now has a weekly podcast called Other People in which he talks to "people who write stuff, people who write books, people who sit there all day long staring at a flashing cursor, people who write even though they're deep in poverty, people who continue to try to write books even though the books they're trying to write are eluding them, people who quietly endure the monumental frustration of trying to put the words in the right order." The first episode was a conversation with the never-boring Jonathan Evison who may or may not be wearing pants during the phone interview. Subsequent podcasts feature Victoria Patterson, Blake Butler, Emma Straub, Greg Olear, Jessica Anya Blau and other, um, people. Click to the site, cock an ear, enjoy!
5. Though New West seems to have gone the way of the tumblin' tumbleweed (a moment of silence, please, for the dearly departed), books editor Jenny Shank isn't letting the grass grow under her feet. She's started contributing to PBS' Media Shift, including a nice piece on how authors need to be their own entrepreneurs in a "Brave New Book World." She writes:
I live in Colorado, and I've never met my agent or my editor, who live in New York. There have been a few phone calls, but most of our interaction has occurred via email. We copyedited my book [The Ringer] digitally, using Microsoft Word's track-changes feature. I've never had the sense that someone has "been looking for me." Rather, I knew from the start that it was my job to go out and look for people who might write a review, interview me, or maybe even buy the book.
I'm not complaining--I accept this self-marketing as part of publishing a book today. My chance to publish my first book came now, in the middle of massive changes in the publishing industry--the rise of e-books, the fall of Borders, and a prolonged economic downturn that leaves people with little disposable income for books--and I'm thankful to have this opportunity.
6. Jenny also has a good (though rather short) interview with Shann Ray (American Masculine) in a recent issue of High Country News. Here's how the conversation kicks off:
Q: You've said that redemption is one of your favorite themes in literature. Why is that?
A: I think people are hungry for it. Coming out of modernism and branching into postmodernism, we have a glut of irony, cynicism, nihilism and characters that are difficult for people to identify with -- characters that are so interiorly dark or shattered that they're not going to rise to any type of redemption, they're just going to fall and make the reader feel like that's just life and that's what you have to do. Last century was the bloodiest in history, with 120 million war-related deaths; I think that we can see why (contemporary literature) would want to emphasize the nihilism and the emptiness of life. But I believe there's a need for balance. I feel like a lot of the new territory in writing will come from attending to the desolation, but not ignoring the consolation, not ignoring the notion that there is in each person the seed of the potential for atonement or redemption.
7. HiLowbrow has 10 classic examples of dustjackets and "boards" (the paper- or cloth-covered stiff cardboard forming a book’s covers) from what they call the Radium Age of science-fiction (1904-1933). As a collector of vintage books, I'm drawn to these dustjackets in ways that are inexplicable and perhaps best left private. I love them all, but I'm especially turned-on by the board art of The Panchronicon, the 1904 novel by Harold Steele Mackaye. I want me one of them there airships!
8. I'm behind in catching up on the backlog of email and so a few "Soup and Salad" items have been sitting in my Inbox for well over a month. Here's one from the Reader's Quest blog which I've been meaning to tell you about: "Reading During Hurricane Irene."
I tried again to concentrate on Tolstoy while the wind roared over the roof. It was impossible to see the corners of the ceiling--never mind anything that might be happening outside--but I could barely resist the urge to get up and try to look out a window that could shatter at any time. The dog hid in her crate and we tried not to flinch when we heard the unmistakable crack and thud signaling the demise of one of the seventy-foot tulip poplars somewhere behind the house. At least it hadn’t fallen on the house. “I like the candles, Mom,” said my 13-year-old with a reassuring smile. “It smells like Christmas in here.”
Tolstoy wasn’t going to happen, at least not until the storm had passed us over. Instead I opened the Book of Common Prayer to read the Service of Light and Evening Prayer:
“Be our light in darkness, O Lord, and in your great mercy defend us from all the perils and dangers of this night….”
9. And here's another must-read from back in August: Josh Rolnick's "My Life in Stories" from The Millions:
“So,” the agent said, “I like your stories. Are you working on a novel?”It only gets better from there. Like I said, a must-read.
I was sitting in the venerable Dey House, the 1857 Victorian home of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, meeting with another agent--the fifth or sixth I’d met since I’d arrived in Iowa City. She sat in a chair, facing me, across a large wooden desk, the question lingering in her eyes.
I’d known the question was coming. Every other agent I’d met had come around to the same thing, eventually.
The answer--the truth--was that I was not. Writing a novel. Perhaps eventually I would. But at the time, I was writing stories, exclusively. Even worse, the stories had nothing to do with each other. They had no re-occurring characters; they were not linked, even thematically. I had a vague notion that one day, the stories would miraculously interweave into a collection that felt somehow organic. But try telling that to an agent, whose job it will be to actually sell your book. The starry light goes out of their eyes. They hand over the obligatory business card, ask you to keep in touch.
No, I thought, eyeing her across the desk, I do not have a novel.
“Yes,” I said. “I do.”
She leaned forward, intertwining her fingers on the blotter.
“What’s it about?”
Here, I paused. There was still time to save myself. It’s about nothing. I don’t even have an idea. I haven’t written a single word. I don’t know what came over me.
But I had come across something interesting the week before, while researching a short story.
“It’s about life saving stations. Funded by Congress in the 1800s?” I sat back, hoping to discern some flicker of interest in her expression. “They were a precursor to the Coast Guard. Red houses that dotted the Atlantic Coast, manned by young men--kids, really. They’d stand watch in a storm, waiting for shipwrecks.”
Her eyebrow went up. “Tell me more.”
“Well, when they spotted one, they’d head out in a small dinghy--a rescue crew. My novel’s about a saving station crewman on Long Beach Island, New Jersey. A terrible shipwreck in a violent storm.”
I swallowed hard. Clearly, she could see right through me. My career as a writer was over before it’d even started.
“It’s a love story,” I added.
“I love it!” she said.
And that was that. I’d been writing short stories seriously for half a dozen years. Revising, polishing. Sending them out. Tallying rejections. Revising some more. I’d published one story by that point, with a second forthcoming. And she was all but ready to represent me on the basis of a few-sentence novel synopsis I’d concocted right there on the spot. Practically from thin air.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Front Porch Books: September 2011 Edition
Front Porch Books is a monthly assessment of books--mainly advance review copies (aka "uncorrected proofs" and "galleys")--I've received from publishers, but also sprinkled with packages from Book Mooch and other sources. Because my dear friends, Mr. FedEx and Mr. UPS, deliver them with a doorbell-and-dash method of deposit, I call them my Front Porch Books. Note: most of these books won't be released for another 2-6 months; I'm just here to pique your interest and stock your wish lists. To see a larger version of the book covers, click on the thumbnails.
Crimes in Southern Indiana
by Frank Bill
(Farrar, Strauss and Giroux)
Few Fall releases have me as excited as Bill's debut collection of gnarly noir stories set in the Rustbelt of the Midwest. It's like there's a hundred-thousand bullets bumping through my bloodstream, unsettling me in a good way as I look forward to running my eyes across these pages. The stories probably aren't for everyone. If you like to read your fiction while sipping chamomile tea and listening to Josh Groban on your iPod dock, you probably want to keep away from Bill's rapists, drug dealers and no-good sonsabitches in wife-beater T-shirts. Just look at how he literally kicks down the door and comes at us with two loaded barrels right from the Opening Lines of the first story, "Hill Clan Cross":
The Night Strangers
by Chris Bohjalian
(Crown)
Just in time for Halloween, Bohjalian (Secrets of Eden, Skeletons at the Feast and The Double Bind) delivers a spooky ghost tale which begins, as all good hauntings do, in a dank basement behind a locked door:
The Angel Esmeralda: Nine Stories
by Don DeLillo
(Scribner)
Can this really be the first book of short stories the grand master of American postmodernism? Hard to believe, but true. After a 40-year career whose epic-novel highlights include Libra, White Noise and Underworld, DeLillo is finally bringing us a collection of compact fiction--nine stories bundled into 200 pages. I've had a hot-cold relationship with DeLillo (but mostly hot): loved Underworld, shrugged at The Body Artist, stopped just short of cartwheels for Libra. And yet, The Angel Esmeralda is another of my most-anticipated books of the Fall season (this always happens every September: a virtual book monsoon). The stories cover nearly the whole timeline of DeLillo's career, starting with "Creation" from 1979, so I'm expecting this will be an illuminating chart of one writer's progress.
The Sourtoe Cocktail Club
by Ron Franscell
(Globe Pequot Press)
The full title of Franscell's story of father-son bonding in Alaska is The Sourtoe Cocktail Club: The Yukon Odyssey of a Father and Son in Search of a Mummified Human Toe...and Everything Else. If that mummified human toe doesn't grab you, then I don't know what will--especially when you learn the human digit is an actual additive in a drink at a bar in Dawson City, Yukon. I'll stick with my little paper umbrella if it's all the same, thanks. Judging by these Opening Lines, Franscell's book looks like it's a deeply personal account of a tumultuous time in his life and should appeal to fans of memoirs like David Gilmour's The Film Club:
Sand Queen
by Helen Benedict
(Soho Press)
I'm understandably biased when I say I'm happy to see a rising tide of fiction about the Iraq War hitting bookshelves, but Benedict's novel about the unlikely relationship between a female American soldier and a female Iraqi medical student looks especially promising, judging from these Opening Lines:
The Dubious Salvation of Jack V
by Jacques Strauss
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Here's another novel that opens with the equivalent of verbal fireworks. I focus a lot of my attention on Great Beginnings because they often make the difference between committing to a book or setting it aside for the proverbial "rainy day"--which, if I'm honest with myself, will never come. The Dubious Salvation of Jack V. centers around 11-year-old Jack Viljee, a white boy living in Johannesburg in 1989. Though, according to the Jacket Copy, Jack's world is "a rational simple place," apartheid shapes and squeezes the South Africa outside his front door and Jack's perception of that world is sharpened by the family's black maid Susie. "The noisy domesticity is upset by the arrival of Susie's fifteen-year-old son. Percy is bored, idle, and full of rage, and when he catches Jack in an indeliby shameful moment, Jack learns that the smallest act of revenge has consquences beyond his imagining." Oh yes, those Opening Lines. Here they are in all their attention-grabbing glory:
I Married You for Happiness
by Lily Tuck
(Atlantic Monthly Press)
Tuck's novel opens with the line "His hand is growing cold; still she holds it." Intrigued? Read on. Here's the Jacket Copy:
The Maid
by Kimberly Cutter
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
One film that consistently makes my 10 Best Movies of All Time list is The Passion of Joan of Arc, a 1928 silent film starring Maria Falconetti. It's smartly filmed, emotionally wrenching, and features an unforgettable performance with Falconetti's transformative face looming large in the camera's frame. This is a long way of saying I've set the bar pretty high when it comes to narratives about Joan of Arc. I haven't had the chance to read Kimberly Cutter's novel, The Maid, but from the Opening Lines, it looks like it could be as rich and nourishing as those tears coursing down Falconetti's cheeks:
What It Is Like to Go to War
by Karl Marlantes
(Atlantic Monthly Press)
Like Joan of Arc, Marlantes knows a thing or two about leading soldiers into battle. A graduate of Yale and a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, Marlantes suspended his studies to join the Marines in Vietnam. His bloody, fiery crucible of combat was documented in the novel Matterhorn. In my review elseweb, I had mixed feelings about Matterhorn, but I couldn't deny it "puts the reader in the thick of combat like few others I've read." Now, like Tim O'Brien's If I Die in a Combat Zone, Marlantes has given us the truth behind his Vietnam fiction. What It is Like to Go to War documents the author's experiences in Southwest Asia and opens the aperture wide to comment on the societal role of combat and its place in literature. Blurbworthiness: ''Karl Marlantes has written a staggeringly beautiful book on combat--what it feels like, what the consequences are, and above all, what society must do to understand it. In my eyes he has become the preeminent literary voice on war of our generation. He is a natural storyteller and a deeply profound thinker who not only illuminates war for civilians, but also offers a kind of spiritual guidance to veterans themselves. As this generation of warriors comes home, they will be enormously helped by what Marlantes has written--I'm sure he will literally save lives.'' (Sebastian Junger) Here are the Opening Lines to the first chapter ("Temple of Mars"):
Watergate
by Thomas Mallon
(Pantheon Books)
I've been a fan of Thomas Mallon's work from the day I read Henry and Clara, his smart, engaging novel about the Civil War officer who was stabbed on the night he joined Abraham Lincoln in that fateful box seat at Ford's Theater. Mallon approaches history like it was a half-filled canvas waiting to be painted with fiction. His other novels--including Dewey Defeats Truman, Two Moons, and Bandbox--each take a different slice of our history and give it a fresh, human perspective. Now Mallon enters the nondescript office building in downtown Washington on a summer evening in 1972 for his exploration of America's worst political scandal. I, for one, can't wait to find out what's on the missing eighteen-and-a-half minutes of tape (though we'll have to wait for February when Mallon's novel is released). Here's the Jacket Copy:
A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Hope, Deception, and Survival at Jonestown
by Julia Scheeres
(Free Press)
Here's another story which shared the headlines of the 1970s with Watergate. For anyone who was alive in 1978, the news of the mass suicide (murder) from the Jonestown religious compound in Guyana was unforgettably shocking. I was 15 at the time and, thanks to the graphic photos in TIME magazine, I still carry the image of the sun-bloated bodies sprawled around the vat of Kool-Aid. Nearly one thousand people (913, to be exact) fell under the sway of Jim Jones, the leader of the Peoples Temple, and "drank the Kool-Aid" as a matter of faith. Julia Scheeres (author of the memoir Jesus Land) goes inside the tragedy, based on her first-hand interviews with survivors and families and her access to the diaries, letters and audiotapes collected by the FBI after the jungle massacre. This is a book which both calls to me and repels me. I approach the carnage with hesitant, weak-muscled legs, knowing that what I see and read will be horrific. And yet, 913 ghosts insist I have no other choice.
Fiction Ruined My Family
by Jeanne Darst
(Riverhead Books)
All writers' families are the same; they're all unhappy in their own quirky ways. Jeanne Darst comes from a literary lineage of novelists, journalists and alcoholics which provides hilarious fodder for her memoir. Here's the Jacket Copy for Fiction Ruined My Family:
Men in the Making
by Bruce Machart
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
I've been yearning to read Bruce Machart's debut collection of short stories ever since the day I turned the last page of his novel The Wake of Forgiveness (read my review of that book here). As lyrical as that book was, the stories of Men in the Making seem to have a punchy, contemporary vibe to them. If Machart was channeling Cormac McCarthy in The Wake of Forgiveness, then it feels like the ghosts of Larry Brown, Raymond Carver, and maybe even Richard Ford are leaving vapor trails across these pages. And that, as they say, is a good thing. I've already talked about the visceral punch I got from an earlier reading of one of these stories, "The Only Good Thing I've Heard," and now skimming through the collection, that early promise seems to hold true throughout the book. Here, for instance, are the Opening Lines to the first story, fittingly titled "Where You Begin":
Crimes in Southern Indiana
by Frank Bill
(Farrar, Strauss and Giroux)
Few Fall releases have me as excited as Bill's debut collection of gnarly noir stories set in the Rustbelt of the Midwest. It's like there's a hundred-thousand bullets bumping through my bloodstream, unsettling me in a good way as I look forward to running my eyes across these pages. The stories probably aren't for everyone. If you like to read your fiction while sipping chamomile tea and listening to Josh Groban on your iPod dock, you probably want to keep away from Bill's rapists, drug dealers and no-good sonsabitches in wife-beater T-shirts. Just look at how he literally kicks down the door and comes at us with two loaded barrels right from the Opening Lines of the first story, "Hill Clan Cross":
Pitchfork and Darnel burst through the scuffed motel door like two barrels of buckshot. Using the daisy-patterened bed to divide the dealers from the buyers, Pitchfork buried a .45-caliber Colt in Karl's peat moss unibrow with his right hand. Separated Irvine's green eyes with the sawed-off .12-gauge in his left, pushed the two young men away from the mattress, stopped them at a wall painted with nicotine, and shouted, "Drop the rucks, Karl!"There's a lot going on in those three sentences--almost too much--but if you're like me, you can't pull your eyes away from the car crash of human misery and squalor. Frank Bill is a force to be reckoned with--and others agree. Blurbworthiness: "Lord, where in the hell did this guy come from? Blasts off like a frigging rocket ship and hits as hard as an ax handle to the side of the head after you've eaten a live rattlesnake for breakfast. One of the wildest damn rides you're ever going to take inside a book." (Donald Ray Pollock, author of Knockemstiff) "This gritty, violent debut collection begins rather like pulp genre fiction then deepens into something much more significant and powerful. Set in a dilapidated, seedy, nightmare version of southern Indiana, complete with meth labs, dog-fighting rings, and all manner of substance abuse, the stories are connected by recurring characters. The collection opens with vignettes focused mainly on carnage. But as readers go deeper, the stories lengthen, with Bill turning his attention to psychology and character development and bringing the community to life in fascinating ways...Bill's characters live in a fractured world where there are no good jobs, not much respect for life, and not much hope. It's a bleak, hard-boiled vision of America." (Library Journal)
The Night Strangers
by Chris Bohjalian
(Crown)
Just in time for Halloween, Bohjalian (Secrets of Eden, Skeletons at the Feast and The Double Bind) delivers a spooky ghost tale which begins, as all good hauntings do, in a dank basement behind a locked door:
The door was presumed to have been the entry to a coal chute, a perfectly reasonable assumption since a small hillock of damp coal sat moldering before it. It was a little under five feet in height and just about four feet wide, and it was composed of barnboard and thick pieces of rough-hewn timber. Its most distinguishing feature was not its peculiarly squat visage—and if a person were predisposed to see such things in the dim light of the basement, the knobs on the wood and the character of the planking did suggest the vague shadow of a face—but the fact that at some point someone had sealed the door shut with six-inch-long wrought-iron carriage bolts. Thirty-nine of them ringed the wood and it was all but impenetrable, unless one were feeling energetic and had handy an ax. The door glowered in an especially dank corner of the basement, and the floor before it was dirt. The fact was, however, that most of the basement floor was dirt; only the concrete island on which sat the washing machine, the dryer, the furnace, and the hot-water tank was not dirt. When most prospective buyers inspected the house, this was their principal concern: a floor that seemed equal parts clay and loam. That was what caused them to nod, their minds immediately envisioning runnels of water during spring thaws and the mud that could be brought upstairs every time they did laundry or descended there to retrieve (perhaps) a new lightbulb or a hammer. It was a lot of largely wasted square footage, because the footprint of the house above it was substantial. As a result, the door was rarely noticed and never commented upon.Still not hooked? Try this Jacket Copy on for size: "In a dusty corner of a basement in a rambling Victorian house in northern New Hampshire, a door has long been sealed shut with 39 six-inch-long carriage bolts. The home's new owners are Chip and Emily Linton and their twin ten-year-old daughters. Together they hope to rebuild their lives there after Chip, an airline pilot, has to ditch his 70-seat regional jet in Lake Champlain after double engine failure. Unlike the Miracle on the Hudson, however, most of the passengers aboard Flight 1611 die on impact or drown. The body count? Thirty-nine--a coincidence not lost on Chip when he discovers the number of bolts in that basement door."
The Angel Esmeralda: Nine Stories
by Don DeLillo
(Scribner)
Can this really be the first book of short stories the grand master of American postmodernism? Hard to believe, but true. After a 40-year career whose epic-novel highlights include Libra, White Noise and Underworld, DeLillo is finally bringing us a collection of compact fiction--nine stories bundled into 200 pages. I've had a hot-cold relationship with DeLillo (but mostly hot): loved Underworld, shrugged at The Body Artist, stopped just short of cartwheels for Libra. And yet, The Angel Esmeralda is another of my most-anticipated books of the Fall season (this always happens every September: a virtual book monsoon). The stories cover nearly the whole timeline of DeLillo's career, starting with "Creation" from 1979, so I'm expecting this will be an illuminating chart of one writer's progress.
The Sourtoe Cocktail Club
by Ron Franscell
(Globe Pequot Press)
The full title of Franscell's story of father-son bonding in Alaska is The Sourtoe Cocktail Club: The Yukon Odyssey of a Father and Son in Search of a Mummified Human Toe...and Everything Else. If that mummified human toe doesn't grab you, then I don't know what will--especially when you learn the human digit is an actual additive in a drink at a bar in Dawson City, Yukon. I'll stick with my little paper umbrella if it's all the same, thanks. Judging by these Opening Lines, Franscell's book looks like it's a deeply personal account of a tumultuous time in his life and should appeal to fans of memoirs like David Gilmour's The Film Club:
I don't really remember when I started dreaming about the Toe, except that it was sometime after I died and sometime before I began traveling in time.I found Franscell's earlier book The Darkest Night to be a riveting (and, yes, deeply personal) story of a horrific crime which took place near Casper, Wyoming in 1973, so I'm hoping for good things from The Sourtoe Cocktail Club. Just don't expect me to tip the glass back and let that toe touch my lips.
It wasn't a proper death, of course, but my life stopped in every way when my twenty-year marriage imploded. Our undoing wasn't infidelity, money or abuse; we had simply and sadly stopped believing in each other. We had evolved into strangers who slept together. And that's all I will say about that.
At the end, a few weeks before Christmas when there was no point in pretending for the children we still loved each other, she asked me to leave. Since we had been running a small-town newspaper together, I suddenly had no job, no home and no place to go. But I went. One frosty December day, I kissed my son and daughter goodbye and hit the road.
Sand Queen
by Helen Benedict
(Soho Press)
I'm understandably biased when I say I'm happy to see a rising tide of fiction about the Iraq War hitting bookshelves, but Benedict's novel about the unlikely relationship between a female American soldier and a female Iraqi medical student looks especially promising, judging from these Opening Lines:
It's the biggest frigging spider I’ve ever seen in my life. From one hairy leg to the other, the whole thing’s as long as my forearm. So I make sure it’s dead first. Nudge it with the butt of my rifle till it flips over, limp and sandy. Then I pick it up by a leg, haul it into the tent like a shopping bag and nail it to the pole beside the head of my cot, right under my crucifix. That should keep Macktruck quiet, at least for the time being. He’s terrified of spiders. Asshole.I'm interested to see how Benedict handles the experience of a female soldier in a combat zone--which can be fraught with more danger than her male counterparts, as we've seen in Brian Turner's harrowing poem "Insignia" which I discussed earlier here at the blog.
The whistling is loud outside the tent today; a creepy, skin-prickling sound I can never get used to. The desert whistles all day and night out here. The hissing whistle of the wind cutting past your helmet. The moaning whistle of it winnowing through the razor wire. I stand under the hot canvas a moment, just listening. And then it hits me again, that deep-down ache that makes me want to curl up and cry.
“What the fuck are you doing, Brady?” It’s Will Rickman, this bony young specialist in my squad with zitty skin and an Adam’s apple twice the size of his brain.
I wipe my hands on my pants. “Nothing.”
Rickman steps closer and squints at my spider. “Look at that thing. It’s disgusting. It’s fuckin’ bleeding black ooze.”
“Don’t talk like that about Fuzzy.”
Rickman raises his eyebrows. But all he says is, “Let’s go, they’re waiting.”
I pick up my rifle and follow him, sunglasses over my eyes, scarf over my mouth. Ducking against the wind, the sand whipping into my cheeks, I run to the Humvee and cram into the back behind the other guy in my team, DJ, and our squad leader, Staff Sergeant Kormick.
“We got better things to do than wait while you powder your nose, Brady,” Kormick shouts to me over the wind, shoving the Humvee into gear with a grinding wrench.“Don’t keep us waiting again. Got it?”
“Got it, Sar’nt.”
The Dubious Salvation of Jack V
by Jacques Strauss
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Here's another novel that opens with the equivalent of verbal fireworks. I focus a lot of my attention on Great Beginnings because they often make the difference between committing to a book or setting it aside for the proverbial "rainy day"--which, if I'm honest with myself, will never come. The Dubious Salvation of Jack V. centers around 11-year-old Jack Viljee, a white boy living in Johannesburg in 1989. Though, according to the Jacket Copy, Jack's world is "a rational simple place," apartheid shapes and squeezes the South Africa outside his front door and Jack's perception of that world is sharpened by the family's black maid Susie. "The noisy domesticity is upset by the arrival of Susie's fifteen-year-old son. Percy is bored, idle, and full of rage, and when he catches Jack in an indeliby shameful moment, Jack learns that the smallest act of revenge has consquences beyond his imagining." Oh yes, those Opening Lines. Here they are in all their attention-grabbing glory:
When I was eleven I was too old to cry in front of my friends, but not too old to fake a stomachache at a sleepover if I was suddenly overcome with homesickness because my friend's mother had made mutton stew and prayed before the meal and bought no-name-brand toothpaste that tasted funny. When I was eleven I had a nightmare and went to my parents' room and interrupted them having sex. I was old enough to know what they were doing, but I did not pretend I was half asleep, because it was that horrible nightmare about the dead children with the stitched-up lips and the stitched-up eyes who came out of the black lake to chase me.I don't know what's more disturbing: catching your parents in flagrante delicto or having a nightmare about dead children with stitched-up faces. Either way, I Can't. Stop. Reading.
I Married You for Happiness
by Lily Tuck
(Atlantic Monthly Press)
Tuck's novel opens with the line "His hand is growing cold; still she holds it." Intrigued? Read on. Here's the Jacket Copy:
The tale unfolds over a single night as Nina sits at the bedside of her husband, Philip, whose sudden and unexpected death is the reason for her lonely vigil. Still too shocked to grieve, she lets herself remember the defining moments of their long union, beginning with their meeting in Paris. She is an artist, he a highly accomplished mathematician—a collision of two different worlds that merged to form an intricate and passionate love. As we move through select memories—real and imagined—Tuck reveals the most private intimacies, dark secrets, and overwhelming joys that defined Nina and Philip's life together.Blurbworthiness: "A breathlessly mannered, affecting new work....Small, vital snapshots make up two lives closely shared, and beautifully portrayed in this triumph of a novel." (Publishers Weekly)
The Maid
by Kimberly Cutter
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
One film that consistently makes my 10 Best Movies of All Time list is The Passion of Joan of Arc, a 1928 silent film starring Maria Falconetti. It's smartly filmed, emotionally wrenching, and features an unforgettable performance with Falconetti's transformative face looming large in the camera's frame. This is a long way of saying I've set the bar pretty high when it comes to narratives about Joan of Arc. I haven't had the chance to read Kimberly Cutter's novel, The Maid, but from the Opening Lines, it looks like it could be as rich and nourishing as those tears coursing down Falconetti's cheeks:
In the dream, death is as far off as the mountains. It’s a cold, blue winter morning, and she is riding her horse very fast over a field of snow toward a high pine forest, still dim with shadow. Her armor glints in the early light, the steel giant’s hands flashing on either side of her horse’s mane, but the metal is strangely weightless in the dream. She does not feel it. What she feels instead is the still and brilliant morning, the snow and the speed and the cold air on her cheeks, and inside of her a violent, holy joy that makes her eyes very bright and propels her wildly over the fields toward the enemy forest, snow spraying and glittering beneath her horse’s hooves.
Behind the girl rides her army of ten thousand men, all of them eager as she is, united by the same strange and feverish joy as they crash across the winter fields, across a black icy river that winds, shining like a ribbon, through the white land and toward the shadowed stillness of the pines. She can hear them thundering behind her, and hearing them, she knows that they are riding together toward a mad and glorious victory. And she knows too that they are riding toward death. But there is no fear in her this morning. She is seventeen, a peasant, unschooled, simple as a thumb. Fear has no place in her heart yet, though soon enough it will. Soon enough she will be caged, tortured, branded a witch, a whore, a limb of Satan. But on this morning she is simply God’s arrow, shot across the winterland, brilliant and savage and divine. Unstoppable.
What It Is Like to Go to War
by Karl Marlantes
(Atlantic Monthly Press)
Like Joan of Arc, Marlantes knows a thing or two about leading soldiers into battle. A graduate of Yale and a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, Marlantes suspended his studies to join the Marines in Vietnam. His bloody, fiery crucible of combat was documented in the novel Matterhorn. In my review elseweb, I had mixed feelings about Matterhorn, but I couldn't deny it "puts the reader in the thick of combat like few others I've read." Now, like Tim O'Brien's If I Die in a Combat Zone, Marlantes has given us the truth behind his Vietnam fiction. What It is Like to Go to War documents the author's experiences in Southwest Asia and opens the aperture wide to comment on the societal role of combat and its place in literature. Blurbworthiness: ''Karl Marlantes has written a staggeringly beautiful book on combat--what it feels like, what the consequences are, and above all, what society must do to understand it. In my eyes he has become the preeminent literary voice on war of our generation. He is a natural storyteller and a deeply profound thinker who not only illuminates war for civilians, but also offers a kind of spiritual guidance to veterans themselves. As this generation of warriors comes home, they will be enormously helped by what Marlantes has written--I'm sure he will literally save lives.'' (Sebastian Junger) Here are the Opening Lines to the first chapter ("Temple of Mars"):
The sun had struggled all day behind monsoon clouds before finally being extinguished by the turning earth and the dark wet ridges of the Annamese Cordillera. It was February 1969, in Quang Tri province, Vietnam. Zoomer lay above my hole in monsoon-night blackness on the slick clay of Mutter's Ridge, the dark jungle-covered ridge paralleling Vietnam's demilitarized zone where the Third Marine Division and the North Vietnamese Army had struggled together for two years. A bullet had gone through Zoomer's chest, tearing a large hole out of his back. We kept him on his side, curled against the cold drizzle, so the one good lung wouldn't fill up with blood. We were surrounded and there was no hope of evacuation, even in daylight. The choppers couldn't find us in the fog-shrouded mountains.
Watergate
by Thomas Mallon
(Pantheon Books)
I've been a fan of Thomas Mallon's work from the day I read Henry and Clara, his smart, engaging novel about the Civil War officer who was stabbed on the night he joined Abraham Lincoln in that fateful box seat at Ford's Theater. Mallon approaches history like it was a half-filled canvas waiting to be painted with fiction. His other novels--including Dewey Defeats Truman, Two Moons, and Bandbox--each take a different slice of our history and give it a fresh, human perspective. Now Mallon enters the nondescript office building in downtown Washington on a summer evening in 1972 for his exploration of America's worst political scandal. I, for one, can't wait to find out what's on the missing eighteen-and-a-half minutes of tape (though we'll have to wait for February when Mallon's novel is released). Here's the Jacket Copy:
For all the monumental documentation that Watergate generated—uncountable volumes of committee records, court transcripts, and memoirs—it falls at last to a novelist to perform the work of inference (and invention) that allows us to solve some of the scandal's greatest mysteries (who did erase those eighteen-and-a-half minutes of tape?) and to see this gaudy American catastrophe in its human entirety. In Watergate, Thomas Mallon conveys the drama and high comedy of the Nixon presidency through the urgent perspectives of seven characters we only thought we knew before now. Praised by Christopher Hitchens for his "splendid evocation of Washington," Mallon achieves with Watergate a scope and historical intimacy that surpasses even what he attained in his previous novels, and turns a "third-rate burglary" into a tumultuous, first-rate entertainment.
A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Hope, Deception, and Survival at Jonestown
by Julia Scheeres
(Free Press)
Here's another story which shared the headlines of the 1970s with Watergate. For anyone who was alive in 1978, the news of the mass suicide (murder) from the Jonestown religious compound in Guyana was unforgettably shocking. I was 15 at the time and, thanks to the graphic photos in TIME magazine, I still carry the image of the sun-bloated bodies sprawled around the vat of Kool-Aid. Nearly one thousand people (913, to be exact) fell under the sway of Jim Jones, the leader of the Peoples Temple, and "drank the Kool-Aid" as a matter of faith. Julia Scheeres (author of the memoir Jesus Land) goes inside the tragedy, based on her first-hand interviews with survivors and families and her access to the diaries, letters and audiotapes collected by the FBI after the jungle massacre. This is a book which both calls to me and repels me. I approach the carnage with hesitant, weak-muscled legs, knowing that what I see and read will be horrific. And yet, 913 ghosts insist I have no other choice.
Fiction Ruined My Family
by Jeanne Darst
(Riverhead Books)
All writers' families are the same; they're all unhappy in their own quirky ways. Jeanne Darst comes from a literary lineage of novelists, journalists and alcoholics which provides hilarious fodder for her memoir. Here's the Jacket Copy for Fiction Ruined My Family:
The youngest of four daughters in an old, celebrated St. Louis family of prominent journalists and politicians on one side, debutante balls and equestrian trophies on the other, Jeanne Darst grew up hearing stories of past grandeur. And as a young girl, the message she internalized was clear: while things might be a bit tight for us right now, it's only temporary. Soon her father would sell the Great American Novel and reclaim the family's former glory.And here are the Opening Lines which have the funny, breezy style of something by Sloane Crosley or Sarah Vowell:
The family uproots and moves from St. Louis to New York. Jeanne's father writes one novel, and then another, which don't find publishers. This, combined with her mother's burgeoning alcoholism--nightly booze-fueled weepathons reminiscing about her fancy childhood--lead to financial disaster and divorce. And as Jeanne becomes an adult, she is horrified to discover that she is not only a drinker like her mother, but a writer like her father.
At first, and for years, she embraces both--living in an apartment with no bathroom, stealing food from her babysitting gigs, and raising rent money by riding the subway topless, or performing her one woman show in her living room. Until gradually, she realizes that this life has not been thrust on her in some handing-down-of-the-writing-mantle-way. She has chosen it; and until she can stop putting drinking and writing ahead of everything else, it's a questionable choice. She writes, "For a long time I was worried about becoming my father. Then I was worried about becoming my mother. Now I was worried about becoming myself."
Writers talk a lot about how tough they have it--what with the excessive drinking and three-hour workday and philandering and constant borrowing of money from people they're so much better than. But what about the people married to writers? Their kids? Their friends? Their labradoodles? What happens to them? I'll tell you what happens to them. They go fucking nuts. Tolstoy's wife, Sophia, after copying War and Peace--1,225 pages--by hand seven times and having thirteen children by him, is rumored to have poisoned him in his eighty-second year; Viv Eliot, institutionalized after being found meandering the streets of London at five a.m. asking if T.S. had been beheaded, died in Northumberland House mental hospital, after one failed escape attempt, at age fifty-eight; William Makepeace Thackeray's wife, Isabella, threw herself out of a bathroom window on a ship at sea headed for Ireland rather than vacation with him.
One might almost judge writers not by their prose but by the people around them.
Men in the Making
by Bruce Machart
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
I've been yearning to read Bruce Machart's debut collection of short stories ever since the day I turned the last page of his novel The Wake of Forgiveness (read my review of that book here). As lyrical as that book was, the stories of Men in the Making seem to have a punchy, contemporary vibe to them. If Machart was channeling Cormac McCarthy in The Wake of Forgiveness, then it feels like the ghosts of Larry Brown, Raymond Carver, and maybe even Richard Ford are leaving vapor trails across these pages. And that, as they say, is a good thing. I've already talked about the visceral punch I got from an earlier reading of one of these stories, "The Only Good Thing I've Heard," and now skimming through the collection, that early promise seems to hold true throughout the book. Here, for instance, are the Opening Lines to the first story, fittingly titled "Where You Begin":
Sad to say, but dogs get killed sometimes. Take a city like Houston, four million people and all those cars, sometimes it’s bound to happen, but if you’re like I used to be, it doesn’t bother you so much. Anyway, before this is over there’s one less dog in the world, so in case you’re not like I was, fair warning.
But if you’re like I used to be, when your fiancée of five months gets home from a day of slaving for that lawyer downtown, the guy who cuts her a check twice a month for the privilege of telling her what to do and watching her cleavage go red with splotches the way it does sometimes when she’s flustered; when she makes it through the door and finds you scribbling your latest on a legal pad, still in your boxers with the newspaper untouched on the porch in its plastic wrap, the classifieds still tucked inside without a single job listing circled; and when a few minutes later she comes half naked and frowning into the hallway, as red-faced and eager for her evening shower as would be a farm wife after bleeding a hog, you know you’re history.
Kaput. Finito. It’s over and you don’t even ask for that ring back. All you think is, Well, dip my dog, because that’s a quarter-carat solitaire with not too damn bad color and clarity. Even so, you just let it go, chalk it up to a learning experience, like the time you bought a quarter ounce of oregano outside the Texaco station from a pock-faced Mexican kid with jeans about half fallen off his illegal brown ass. You chalk it up. You say, “That there’s a loss.”
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