- from Ellen Barry’s profile of Russian Booker Prize winner Yelena S. Chizhova:

Since [1996] she has written for six hours a day without weekends or vacations, producing five novels, three of them finalists for the Booker Prize. It is not surprising, given this, that she speaks about her work with moral urgency.

This week in my independent study we started Paley’s Collected Stories, and alongside my reactions I wanted to post the cover of the edition I am using, which though it doesn’t seem to me that I bought it so many years ago is already browning inwards from the corners.

Why scan a book cover when you can Google it, right?  My laziness yielded a Google bonus: a copy with a Philip Roth endorsement that my copy lacks (did the publishers add it in a later edition, or decide it was better to do without it?). “Splendidly comic and unladylike,” Philip says.  Which would never have occurred to me!  In fact with most people I would wonder why anyone after 1903 or so would use “unladylike” as praise or at all, but this is Philip Roth so we know what he’s referring to.

But: let’s get crafty, shall we?

continue reading Thoughts On Grace Paley

We’re reading Deborah Eisenberg’s Twilight of the Superheroes in my fiction workshop this week, which I’m really glad of, as I would otherwise have been unlikely to re-visit it, and I would have missed a lot that I didn’t get on my first reading, when the book came out in 2006.  I was really into Eisenberg’s previous work then, but for some reason—the title story, I think; more on that below—I decided that since I preferred her earlier collections I didn’t “need” this one and in a fit of misdirected organization sold my hardcover copy, so now I’m reading from a trade paperback.  I miss the hardcover vibe of I AM IMPORTANT ENOUGH TO BE IN HARDCOVER AND HAVE DECKLED EDGES.  DECKLED!

But—reading Eisenberg.  It’s like treading water in a sea of smart.

continue reading The Spine Of The Story

How about some Lost haiku?  By Jedediah Berry, whose Manual Of Detection site + blog you should check out: crshd:

Lamppost, leap of faith.
How many plane crashes does
It take to get home?

My spring independent study reading list.
MFA programs prompt strong opinions, for and against (also: qualified—in both senses of the word—opinions).  Above all what MFA programs offer is a chance to spend relatively a lot of time reading, thinking about and discussing literature, and trying to write it, with—hopefully—a simpatico group of cohorts to give you comments you’d need an editor to get otherwise.  That’s no guarantee of anything.  But it can be pretty wonderful.

My spring independent study reading list.

MFA programs prompt strong opinions, for and against (also: qualified—in both senses of the word—opinions).  Above all what MFA programs offer is a chance to spend relatively a lot of time reading, thinking about and discussing literature, and trying to write it, with—hopefully—a simpatico group of cohorts to give you comments you’d need an editor to get otherwise.  That’s no guarantee of anything.  But it can be pretty wonderful.

Amazon.com, with the literal interpretation of Flannery O’Connor

Amazon.com, with the literal interpretation of Flannery O’Connor

Karen Brown’s story in the current issue of Five Points is fantastic.  Also: Birkenstock nuns!  Ummm, band name…

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Adam Shatz: In Orhan Pamuk’s fiction “happiness is always a thing of the past.”

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Robert Scheer interviews Martin Jacques about Jacques’ When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order (positive if qualified Times review here).

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I was making an Amazon wish list to distribute the spring semester reading list to my independent study.  The last list I’d made was for Christmas 2006, and it’s a little startling how many of books and (non-downloadable) albums have since become unavailable, or are now available only as downloads.

Dana Spiotta’s Eat The Document is out of print, but available from $ 0.01.  You can still get the European version of Saint Etienne’s Tiger Bay on CD; worth it for the lovely “I Buy American Records” (!).  Harold Brodkey’s gorgeous This Wild Darkness: The Story Of My Death is also out of print but available from $0.01, apparently the going rate.  When Brodkey disciplines his larger arc, as he does in Wild Darkness, his sentence structures are so beautifully expansive:

I am standing on an unmoored raft, a punt moving on the flexing, flowing face of a river. It is precarious. I don’t know what I am doing. The unknowing, the taut balance, the jolts and instability spread in widening ripples through all my thoughts. Peace? There was never any in the world. But in the pliable water, under the sky, unmoored, I am traveling now and hearing myself laugh, at first with nerves and then with genuine amazement. It is all around me.

Jeffrey Eugenides reads and discusses Brodkey’s short story “Spring Fugue” in a New Yorker podcast.

Some of the stories I admire seem to zero in on one particular time and place. There isn’t a rule about this. But there’s a tidy sense about many stories I read. In my own work, I tend to cover a lot of time and to jump back and forward in time, and sometimes the way I do this is not very straightforward. I feel that this is something that people may find they have to adjust to, but it’s a way of saying whatever it is that I want to say, and it sort of has to be done this way. Time is something that interests me a whole lot—past and present, and how the past appears as people change…

…I never remember being innocent. I always remember things being very complicated. Mostly I remember having a self as a child who was completely hidden from the world of adults and teachers and people around me.

Alice Munro, in a 2001 interview in The Atlantic, on the publication of Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage

A year ago next week, Captain Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger landed his US AIrways safely in the Hudson.

In the current NYRB, James Salter reviews William Langewiesche’s Fly by Wire: The Geese, the Glide, the Miracle on the Hudson.  Salter, in addition to being a fine fiction writer, is a pilot, and knows whereof he writes:

Fly by Wire is a story with two heroes, one of them the pilot of the stricken plane, and the other the man who had been responsible for the advanced control concepts of the airplane itself, an Airbus A320

Growing up, I remember engineer-relatives voicing great and possibly patriotically-inspired suspicion of Airbus automation, but the crash pictured above—not during takeoff, as labeled, but at an airshow with passengers on board, who’d been informed only that they were going to be circling Mont Blanc—occurred not, Salter writes, because of automated features, but because the pilot had disengaged them.


I hesitated initially about posting the video, just as it took me three years to bring myself to watch United 93.  It’s a little too close to drone porn.  To rubbernecking.  Almost everyone survived the airshow crash, which at least tempers that significance.  Somewhat.   But I’m suspicious of the impulse to look away, the get-closure-get-happy-power-of-positive-thinking Oprah, Norman Vincent Peale, mega-church “what, me worry?” sensibility.

At one point in Evening the dying Anne Lord—or, Susan Minot, because Anne doesn’t really articulate it—feels separate from everyone around her not because she’s old, ill and dying, but because experiencing those things makes her aware of how people in the ‘prime of life’ go about their business as if it’s never going to end.

The first word that ‘airplane’ brings to mind for me is ‘flight’; the second is ‘crash.’

In the clip, the Airbus glides so smoothy into the forest, it upends our expectation of disaster.  Crashes are supposed to be jarring, sudden—brace yourself for impact.  In The Year Of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion writes that the death of her husband, in mid-sentence, over a glass of scotch, reminds her of the framing of accounts of 9/11:

“It was just an ordinary beautiful September day,” people still say when asked to describe the morning in New York when American Airlines 11 and United Airlines 175 got flown into the World Trade towers. Even the report of the 9/11 Commission opened on this insistently premonitory and yet still dumbstruck narrative note: “Tuesday, September 11, 2001, dawned temperate and nearly cloudless in the eastern United States.”

I think we habitually conflate “ordinary” with “exempt,” as emergency will be announced by that damned Carmina Burana movie trailer chorus or the nerved-up string section in the Bourne movies.  In that sense, there is no “ordinary.”  I think that may be what we turn away from.  This fascinated Auden:

In Breughel’s Icarus, for instance: how everything turns away
Quite leisurely from the disaster; the ploughman may
Have heard the splash, the forsaken cry,
But for him it was not an important failure; the sun shone
As it had to on the white legs disappearing into the green
Water; and the expensive delicate ship that must have seen
Something amazing, a boy falling out of the sky,
had somewhere to get to and sailed calmly on.

Brueghel flips the convention of his time.  Instead of catastrophe—the crucifixion, the slaughter of the innocents—taking center stage, with a dog pooing or children skating in the corner, he puts the catastrophe off to the side.  Dum de dum.  Nothing to see here.

Watching disasters—videos of crashes, photos of wrecks, “the humanity, oh the humanity”—we feel it’s proper to look away.  Looking at Brueghel’s ploughman, who does just that, we’re horrified.  Look!  How can you do anything but look?

Hello, Sarah here, and I’m going to try to tell you about Nicholson Baker’s The Anthologist.  Not all about, because there are a lot of reviews already out there saying that you should read it, and they’re right.  But about a few of the things I’ve remarked on while reading it that the reviews I’ve read haven’t remarked on.  A nice homonym, ‘remark.’  You can make a remark or remark on something, and I can then remark on your remark.  And if that remark gets repeated with a few distortions, we could get all 1990s and say it was [re]marked.

The Anthologist is narrated in a manner somewhat like this by Paul Chowder, who’s procrastinating writing the introduction to an anthology of rhymed poetry.  So the novel is his act of procrastination, and is itself an anthology of what pops into his head.  “All I’ve met is a part of me,” or maybe it’s the other way around.   Tennyson said that; do kids read Tennyson anymore?  He’s pithier for yearbook quotes than Atlas Shrugged or Madonna, and twenty years later you won’t have to be embarrassed by the Tweet’s-worth of sentiment next to your picture—just by the picture itself.

But, The AnthologistNicholson Baker Paul Chowder must have Internet habits a lot like mine because the pacing of subject changes and interjection of random ideas is about right for when I’m working and checking Tumblr or Facebook (not so much anymore) or The Times or The Awl.  Did you know that in the 10s six of the seven careers projected to create the most new jobs in the U.S. are low-skill, low-wage?  Also: China.  There are many of them and their ancient culture will help them take over, or maybe not.  Only occasionally, so far, do Baker’s Paul’s digressions feel at all constructed.  (Speaking of digressions, did you know you could buy software that lets you save videos from YouTube to your desktop?  I assume this means Flash-authoring software, but Baker Paul is cagey about that).

A good portion of the novel covers Paul’s theory on rhythm and scansion, and other comments such as how poetry isn’t subject to the same categories of fiction/nonfiction as prose which may sound dry but isn’t at all, the way he tells it:

Coleridge says that Alph the sacred river ran through caverns measureless to man.  Did it really do that?  John Fogerty says the old man is down the road.  Is he?

The entire book is quotable:

[The inchworm] looked comfortably full of metaphorphosive juices—full of the short happiness of being alive.  I touched it, and it began doubling itself up and then greenly casting itself forward again.

Phrases like “the short happiness of being alive” would die in the wrong context.  Baker’s prose is simple and elegant and fluid, not self-consciously simple like Hemingway’s or Didion’s (both favorites of mine, lest you think otherwise); and as in Didion’s writing, sentence structure enables insights.  As does diction.  Things like saying “greenly casting” instead of “the inchworm was green” let you make all kinds of asides—we’re with you after that.  The keenness of the asides keeps Baker’s forays into poetry aloft.  And back, and forth.  Nothing is beneath his notice, not even USB cables.

The Anthologist is about awareness—an upper middle class, perhaps excessively introspective poet’s awareness, but all the more compendious for that; and it’s about How We Are Aware Now; the overarching and only slightly allayed sense of concern; the amount of information available to us effortlessly.  We’re all anthologists.  The difficult thing is reserving attention for our own sustained endeavors.