This
isn’t technically a feature film, but it’s the trailer for one. And it looks
amazing. Can’t wait:
Friday, June 21, 2013
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Title Chase: The Sea is My Brother, by Jack Kerouac
I've been working my way through Kerouac's first and, until it was released posthumously two years ago, rightly unpublished, novel The Sea is My Brother . The book draws on Kerouac's own brief experience in the Merchant Marine. Or, at least, that's what I thought it would be about. Here's where the title comes from:
“Perhaps the old adage, “We’re all in the same boat” went without saying in the Merchant Marine and seamen resigned themselves to one another quite philosophically. And of course, like the slogan he had heard of—a famous placard above the door of the Boston Seamen’s Club—which said, very simply, that all those who passed under the arch of the door entered into the Brotherhood of the Sea—these men considered the sea a great leveler, a united force, a master comrade brooding over their common loyalties.”
I'll have more to say about the book later on, but I thought the title was a good one. That is, until you consider the make-up of the book:
Perhaps Kerouac's "brief experience" in the Merchant Marine was briefer than we thought. Afterall, we know his active duty in the US Navy lasted all of 8 days before he was diagnosed with dementia praecox and honorably discharged.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Author Look-Alikes: Vol. 16
Shave
off Sherwood Anderson’s eyebrows and you’ve got Chris Cooper:
Turn
Gustave Flaubert’s hair white and you’ve got Wilford “Diabeetus” Brimley:
Pump E.E. Cummings full of red blood cells and performance-enhancing drugs and you’ve got Lance Armstrong:
Give Saki a smirk and a wristwatch and you've got Bob Hope :
Give Somerset Maugham a consiglieri and a 'family' of hired goons and you've got Don Corleone:
Labels:
Author Look-Alikes,
E.E. Cummings,
Gustave Flaubert,
Saki,
Sherwood Anderson,
Somerset Maugham
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Practice Shelf Actualization This Summer-- sincerely, Science
Summer's here, and people's summer reading recommendations are out in full force. So I thought why not add one of my own. Here it is:
Read something good. Read something challenging. Read a classic or two.
In the world of lay book
bloggers I’ve noticed some pretty vociferous opposition to the notion that
people should read “good” books instead of dividing all their time between wildly
popular vampire novels and the latest blockbuster S&M fantasy. Those who
advocate reading the so-called classics or high-minded literary fiction often
get labled as snobs for doing so. The basic argument against these people seems
to be that it doesn’t matter what folks read, as long as they are reading
(which, they always fail to realize, is merely snobbery of a different sort.)
I
guess I can get on board with that argument… to a point. Reading is
an essential life skill that improves the lives of those who possess it. And reading just about anything will foster that skill. But does it really not matter what we read?
That’s
like saying that eating is essential your health and wellbeing, but that it
doesn’t really matter what you eat so long as you are eating. Nevermind
that a constant diet of Big Macs and Twinkie chasers (may they rest in peace!)
will eventually land you in home hospice care with an oxygen tube up your nose
and a nurse to administer sponge baths to the folds and crevices you can no
longer reach by yourself.
I
don’t begrudge anyone the hot new Dystopian Young Adult title or the
occassional Epistolary Urban Fantasy Steampunk Romance, just like I don’t
deprive myself of inordinate amounts of chocolate chip cookie dough or obstain
from Black Raspberry Dark Chocolate Chunk ice cream. But sheesh, if that’s all
your reading? (Or eating?) It’s time to recalibrate.
Now,
would I rather have my kids read a crappy book, than spend the afternoon
shooting heroine? Sure. No question. But would I rather have my kids read a
crappy book, than spend the afternoon shooting hoops? Probably not.
And
yes, this all depends on what your definition of ‘classic’ is, or what ‘good’ or
‘crappy’ mean to you in terms of books. But let’s be honest, it’s not tough to
recognize challenging fiction, or a brainless beachread, when you see it. So, read
something that will challenge you. Read something that has stood the test of
time. Read a classic. And this isn’t me being a book snob, this is backed up by
science. Check this out:
“Researchers at the University of Liverpool found that serious literature catches the reader's attention and triggers moments of self-reflection.”
"...Serious literature acts like a rocket-booster to the brain. The research shows the power of literature to shift mental pathways, to create new thoughts, shapes and connections in the young and the staid alike," Philip Davis, an English professor who worked on the study with the university's magnetic resonance centre, said.”
“...The academics were able to study the brain activity as readers responded to each word, and noticed how it 'lit up' as they encountered unusual words, surprising phrases or difficult sentence structure.”
“...The research also found poetry, in particular, increased activity in the right hemisphere of the brain, an area concerned with 'autobiographical memory', which helped the reader to reflect on and reappraise their own experiences in light of what they had read.”
“The academics said this meant the classics were more useful than self-help books.”Who can argue with that? Improve yourself. Improve your shelf.
Monday, June 17, 2013
Review: The Garden of Eden, by Ernest Hemingway
I
don’t expect much when I pick up a posthumous work of a great author. I expect
even less when it’s the fourth, and final, posthumous work of that author to find
its way to publication. But I was pleasantly surprised when I finished Ernest
Hemingway’s The Garden of Eden the
other day.
What
starts out innocently enough as a story of two newlyweds honeymooning on the
post-war Riviera, quickly becomes a Fitzgeraldesque tale of an artist struggling
to ply his trade with a crazy wife who is jealous of her husband’s writing.
Then it veers into a sticky half-fictional situation like Hemingway experienced
vacationing in the South of France with his wife Hadley, and live-in girlfriend
and future-wife, Pauline Pfeiffer—only with a few important details altered to
make the male character come off a little better than he did in real life.
There
is lots of swimming, lots of tanning, lots of passive-aggressive dialogue, lots
of mixed drinks, and lots of hair styling. Yes, that’s right, hair-styling. In
the end, though, this is a book about writing. Which is why it works for me.
Hemingway brilliantly works a couple short stories, and the process of writing
them, into the main story of love gone sour. Though the reader never actually reads
them, they see the main character of David Bourne reliving the childhood
experiences on which they are based as he writes them, and therefore come to a
deeper understanding of who he is as a person.
Ironically,
in a story where a writer reading his own press clippings becomes a major plot
point to his own detriment, Hemingway leaves a few clues that he, too, was
guilty of reading his own press clippings, dropping references to his
newspaperman style and his iceberg theory of writing:
“He wrote it in simple declarative sentences with all of the problems ahead to be lived through and made to come alive.”
“Finally he knew what his father had thought and knowing it, he did not put it in the story.”
“He had, really, only to remember accurately and the form came by what he would choose to leave out. Then, of course, he could close it like the diaphragm of a camera and intensify it so it could be concentrated to the point where the heat shone bright and the smoke began to rise. He knew that he was getting this now.”
He
also talks through his editing process, and his conviction that the work has to
marinate on its own:
“It was a very young boy’s story, he knew, when he had finished it. He read it over and saw the gaps he must fill in to make it so that whoever read would feel it was truly happening as it was read and he marked the gaps in the margin.”
“He cared about the writing more than about anything else, and he cared about many things, but he know that when he was doing it he must not worry about it or finger it nor handle it any more than he would open up the door of the darkroom to see how a negative was developing. Leave it alone, he told himself. You are a bloody fool but you know that much.”
Last
of all, Hemingway puts into fiction what he must have experienced when his wife
lost nearly every page of his years of hard work:
“You can write them again.”
“No,” David told her. “When it’s right you can’t remember. Every time you read it again it comes as a great and unbelievable surprise. You can’t believe you did it. When it’s once right you never can do it again. You only do it once for each thing. And you’re only allowed so many in your life.”
“So many what?”
“So many good ones.”
The
bottom line is that this novel is probably less interesting for the story it
tells, than for the insights it gives us into the life of the author as he
surveyed his 60 years and wove it into his fiction. I liked it. You might, too.
Friday, June 14, 2013
"Seldom Seen" Sleight?
One of the books I’ve recently placed a hold on at my local library is Edward Abbey’s The Monkey Wrench Gang . Not necessarily a literary classic, mind you, but I think it’s a book most people would put in the western canon. No, not thatWestern Canon , but the canon of important works set in and about the American West.
Anyhow,
last night I’m reading my college alumni magazine (Go Utes) and I stumbled across
this profile of the man who was the real-life inspiration for “Seldom Seen” Smith, the ringleader of Abbey’s ragtag group
of fictional environmentalist misfits. Though he’s still alive and well, retired
river guide Ken Sleight isn’t spilling the beans on how much of Abbey’s tale is
based on actual events. But I still get a kick out of discovering the truth
behind the fiction…
Thursday, June 13, 2013
The Writer's Voice: Arthur Conan Doyle
The
only known recording of the Sherlock Holmes creator. He would die three years
later. Fascinating stuff. He explains what bugged him about earlier detective
stories, and how he changed all of that with the character of Holmes.
Is
it me, or is his Scottish accent a heckuvalot nearer today’s standard American
accent than the Scots we hear in the media today?
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Buyer Beware: Vol. 1
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Another Month in the Can
Today
we pack up another month and throw it in the archives. Above are the authors we’ve
covered this month, and below are the five most popular posts from that period:
- Profusion of Proverbs from Sancho Panza
- Review: Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane
- The (Literal) Snows of Kilimanjaro
- Poet’s Corner: “Consolation” by Billy Collins
- Literary Product Placement
And
of course, some of the great search terms that led folks here:
- Does Dirk Pitt have a pet? >> We don’t know, but here’s our ode to the adventure novel, the only place we've mentioned him.
- Plot Twist in Farewell to arms >> from the comments of this post
- Nelson Algren >> Our last Short Story Club Selection.
- At the cancer clinic >> Ted Koozer knocks it out of the park
- Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station >> Yep. We've covered it.
- Milkman compared to lily owens >> In our Links to the Past post
- Around the world in 80 days airship >> THERE'S NO SUCH THING !!!
- Death of a traveling salesman eudora welty or arthur miller >> Answer: Welty
- Vinyl >> Another great poem
- Proust Memory >> Could be this piece or this piece.
Thanks
for visiting. You’re welcome back any time.
Monday, June 10, 2013
Literary Product Placement
Did
you know that clear back in the 1870s, shipping
companies lobbied Jules Verne to include them by name in his novel Around the World in 80 Days ? Even in the
nineteenth century, corporations saw the potential for product placement
advertising in literature.
I stumbled upon the following list on Wikipedia the other day. It’s a list of literary references for the old-fashioned breath freshener Sen-Sen, which you can still find today, I believe. I’d bet that maybe only Coca-Cola could generate a longer list than this:
I stumbled upon the following list on Wikipedia the other day. It’s a list of literary references for the old-fashioned breath freshener Sen-Sen, which you can still find today, I believe. I’d bet that maybe only Coca-Cola could generate a longer list than this:
- Michael Chabon references them in his novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay.
- Toni Morrison references them in her novel The Bluest Eye.
- Zora Neale Hurston references them in her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God.
- John D. Fitzgerald references them in his novel The Great Brain.
- Betty Smith references them in her novel A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.
- Robert Asprin has a character called "The Sen Sen Ante Kid" in his novel Little Myth Marker. The character plays Dragon Poker and always starts the game by adding a Sen Sen to the ante.
- Stephen King references them in his novel 11/22/63 as well as in his novella The Library Policeman.
- Philip Roth references them in his novel I Married A Communist.
- Ray Bradbury references them in his novel Death is a Lonely Business.
- Robert Penn Warren references a character named Sen-Sen Puckett "who chewed Sen-Sen to keep his breath sweet" in his novel All The King's Men.
- Phillip K. Dick references them in his novel Ubik.
- W. Somerset Maugham mentions them in his novel Of Human Bondage.
- John Steinbeck references them in the novel The Wayward Bus.
- Thomas Harris references them in the novel The Silence of the Lambs. "... she felt the ache of his whole yellow-smiling Sen-Sen lonesome life..."
- Christopher Bram references them in his 1988 novel Hold Tight.
- Chuck Palahniuk references them in his 2011 novel Damned.
- Margaret Laurence references them in her novel A Bird in the House.
- Lanford Wilson references them in his play Talley's Folly.
- They are also referenced in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire.
- They are referred to in the song "Ya got trouble" in the movie and play 'The Music Man'
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