just when you thought every fetish had been exhausted...
...welcome to
erotic falconry.
(NSFW, obviously)
...welcome to
erotic falconry.
(NSFW, obviously)
Posted by escapegrace at 12:58 PM
The LA Times has announced the nominees for their annual book prizes. For fiction and first fiction:
Fiction
Junot Díaz, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Riverhead Books)Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction
Antonia Arslan {Translated by Geoffrey Brock} Skylark Farm (Alfred A. Knopf)Posted by escapegrace at 9:16 AM
L. Ron Hubbard is not only a bad writer; he's also a plagiarist.
Posted by escapegrace at 9:41 PM
Another historic independent bookstore - Dutton's of Brentwood - has given up the ghost. From the LA Times:
Mired in debt and uncertain about the future of his current location, Doug Dutton said Monday that he will close his iconic Brentwood bookstore, where thousands of authors have celebrated their works in the central courtyard and readers such as Dustin Hoffman and Meg Ryan have sought counsel on stocking their bookshelves.
Dutton's, which plans to close April 30, is one of many independent bookstores that have disappeared in the last couple of decades. Rising rents, the growth of big-box chains and the triumph of Amazon.com as a major force have challenged the indies.
But Dutton's has a national reputation, a following among authors who appeared at its many readings and, for its two decades of history, a special place in literary Los Angeles. Many considered it the most literary and high-minded of L.A.'s bookstores, as well as one that felt increasingly, if charmingly, anachronistic.
Posted by escapegrace at 8:01 AM
I just exchanged a car with 211,000 miles for one with 7 miles. (Mine is metallic midnight blue.) I am officially a grown-up.
Posted by escapegrace at 6:18 PM 0 comments
Jon Stewart for "Normally when you see a black man or a
woman president, an asteroid is about to hit the Statue of Liberty...How (else) will we know it's the future? Silver unitards?
That can't be all."
Posted by escapegrace at 9:39 AM
Long before my choice for Best Picture - There Will Be Blood - was officially released, I was chock full of anticipation because I had used its source material - Upton Sinclair's Oil! - for my dissertation. Of course, in the book, there is little of the dark misanthropy that makes me love the adaptation, and in the film, there is little of the union struggle that provides the core of the book. While only the skeleton of Oil! is used to inspire There Will Be Blood, it's nice to see some attention paid to one of Sinclair's alternative religion texts. In honor of the tonight's Oscars, I am dusting off the ol' diss and posting the section that looks at how the character of Eli was based on my favorite evangelist, Aimee Semple McPherson.
Upton Sinclair also uses Aimee Semple McPherson’s life history in creating the character of Eli Watkins in his 1927 novel Oil!, but unlike [Myron] Brinig [in The Flutter of an Eyelid], Sinclair doesn’t lampoon the evangelist. Eli Watkins is far from the most righteous of religious figures, but he does possess a humanity not found in Angela Flower. Of course, Sinclair makes the interesting authorial choice of transforming Sister Aimee into Brother Eli. This gender switch does not add anything to the narrative, except perhaps to distance Sinclair’s evangelist from McPherson, an unnecessary mask since it is apparent from biographical details that Watkins is a male version of Sister Aimee. Judging by the other female characters in the novel, who are either spoiled debutantes or nurturing socialists, it is quite possible that Sinclair was not up to the task of addressing the complexity of a character like McPherson. Making her a man granted a simplicity not found in the genuine article.
In his foreword to the 1997 edition of Oil!, Jules Tygiel relates that H.L. Mencken thought Sinclair suffered from a “credulity complex,” due to the number of causes, belief systems, and speculations in which Sinclair was interested throughout his lifetime. Tygiel claims Mencken said that “Sinclair had believed, at one time or another, in more things than any other man in the world” (vii). Oil! is not the only book by Sinclair that deals with religion in southern California. In his 1922 novel They Call Me Carpenter, Jesus pays a visit to Los Angeles. Oil! chronicles the business enterprise of J. Arnold Ross and the increasing Bolshevik sympathies aroused in his son, Bunny, as a result of the mining strikes he witnesses and his admiration for the strike leader, Paul Watkins. Bunny and his father meet the Watkins family when they buy the family’s land in the hopes of oil prospects. Bunny had previously made the acquaintance of Paul, the eldest son, who is on the run from his family in the beginning of the novel, trying to escape their religious influences. Bunny is fascinated by Paul’s description of his father’s fervor in the church of Aimee Semple McPherson.
“What does he believe?”When the Watkins patriarch tries to convert “Dad” (as J. Arnold Ross is called throughout the novel), Bunny’s father invents a religion of their own (The Church of the True Word) to avoid Watkins’s preaching. At first, Dad won’t explain it on doctrinal grounds, but he finds it useful later when he can employ it to convince Watkins to stop beating his family. When the Watkins land has been bought (and christened “Paradise”), Dad sets the terms of payment to ensure the family is protected from the Foursquare Gospel. Dad once again uses The Church of the True Word to manipulate the Watkinses into not giving money to missionaries.
“The Old Time Religion. It’s called the Four Square Gospel. It’s the Apostolic Church. They jump.”
“Jump!”
“The Holy Spirit comes down to you, see, and makes you jump. Sometimes it makes you roll, and sometimes you talk in tongues.”
“What is that?”
“Why, you make noises, fast, like you was talkin’ in some foreign language; and maybe it is – Pap says it’s the language of the arch-angels, but I don’t know. I can’t understand it, and I hate it” (44).
...but here was Eli, transformed into a prophet of the Lord, and blazing after a fashion not unknown to prophets, with a white flame of jealousy!Almost immediately, Eli begins preaching at the “holy jumpers” church in Paradise, using the dogma of the fictional Church of the True Word. Eli calls his ministry the Third Revelation, and when the money starts to pour in, his family doesn’t see any of it. Sinclair uses Eli’s evangelism to comment on the vulnerability of the masses in the face of spiritual promises:
'I am him who the Holy Spirit has blessed! I am him who the Lord hath chosen to show the signs! Look at me, I say – look at me! Ain’t my hair fair and my eyes blue? Ain’t my face grave and my voice deep?’ – and sure enough, Eli’s voice had gone down again, and Eli was a grown man, a seer of visions and pronouncer of dooms (117).
Eli was a lunatic and a dangerous one, but a kind that you couldn’t put in an asylum because he used the phrases of religion. He hadn’t wits enough to make up anything for himself, he had jist [sic] enough to see what could be done with the phrases Dad had given him; so now there was a new religion turned loose to plague the poor and ignorant, and the Almighty himself couldn’t stop it (120).The next time we see Eli, he is dressed in finery and being chauffeured in a limo. During the war, Eli preaches against the Hun, “telling how the Holy Spirit had revealed to him that the enemy would be routed before the year was by, and promising eternal salvation to all who died in this cause of the Lord – provided, of course, that they had not rejected their chance to be saved by Eli” (215). Eli then gathers believers to pray for rain at the front and “the floodgates of heaven were opened” on the Huns but not the Allies (216). Dad gives Eli money for the Temple when Eli’s power has grown to the point that he might be helpful to the oil baron. Eli’s “Bible Marathon” gets press and financing for the Temple, which “opened amid such glory to the Lord as had never been witnessed in this part of the world” (421).
The story he told was that, finding himself being carried out to sea, he had prayed to the Lord, and the Lord had heard his prayer, and had sent three angels to hold him up in the water. The name of one of these angels was Steve, and the second was a lady angel, whose name was Rosie, and the third was a Mexican angel, and his name was Felipe. These angels had taken turns holding onto the shoulder-straps of Eli’s green bathing suit; and when he grew faint, one of them would fly away and bring him food (458).After a protracted battle with the devil, Eli returns to the shore. He claims to have found a feather in his bathing suit and his story is bought wholesale by his adoring public. One of the last appearances of Eli in the novel is as a disembodied voice spreading his gospel over the radio, Sister Aimee’s transmission of choice.
Posted by escapegrace at 9:49 AM 1 comments
At the LA Times, Cecelia Rasmussen takes a fascinating look at the history of disaster ballads in Southern California. There's even audio...
Newspapers have always written about the nation's disasters -- but so have balladeers, enshrining death and heroism and crime in songs about virtually every newsworthy event: the 1889 Johnstown flood, the last train ride of engineer
These songs were popularized in sheet music and phonograph records, and some of the mournful tunes later wound up on the radio. Southern
Posted by escapegrace at 9:21 AM
Even Edith Wharton is not safe from foreclosure.
Since 2002, Ms. Copeland explained by phone this week, the Mount, which is open to the public — much of it has been restored in recent years to match the period when Wharton lived there — has been covering its operating expenses by borrowing from the Berkshire Bank in nearby Pittsfield. It now owes the bank some $4.3 million, and in mid-February, when it failed to meet a scheduled monthly payment of $30,000, the bank sent a notice that it intended to start foreclosing unless the default was remedied promptly, Ms. Copeland said.
To stay open, she added, the Mount needs to raise $3 million by March 24. “The bank has really been very patient,” she explained. “They’re eager to help us work this out.”
[...] Wharton lived at the Mount only until 1910, when her marriage to the troubled Teddy Wharton became unsalvageable, and she moved permanently to France. But the house, which she treasured in memory, was where she came into her own as a writer; it’s where she finished “The House of Mirth,” her breakthrough novel (part of whose profits paid for the Mount’s elaborate gardens) and got the inspiration for “Ethan Frome.” It is now on the register of National Historic Landmarks and is one of only a few such places associated with a woman and her accomplishments.
Posted by escapegrace at 9:13 AM
Annie Leibovitz has turned out a pretty snazzy Hitchcock tribute in this month's Vanity Fair. (That's Keira Knightly and Jennifer Jason Leigh in an imagined remake - make it! - of Rebecca.) FirstShowing has the spread.
Posted by escapegrace at 8:15 AM
Click through to browse an impressive collection of punk rock flyers from 1981-1984.
Posted by escapegrace at 7:57 AM
While public discussion of proper grammar is always supported here, this NY Times article on the correct use of a semicolon in a subway ad is (intentionally, I hope) absurd. The Son of Sam could wield a semicolon just as well as a revolver?
Louis Menand, an English professor at Harvard and a staff writer at The New Yorker, pronounced the subway poster’s use of the semicolon to be “impeccable.”
Lynne Truss, author of “Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation,” called it a “lovely example” of proper punctuation.
Geoffrey Nunberg, a professor of linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, praised the “burgeoning of punctuational literacy in unlikely places.”
Allan M. Siegal, a longtime arbiter of New York Times style before retiring, opined, “The semicolon is correct, though I’d have used a colon, which I think would be a bit more sophisticated in that sentence.”
The linguist Noam Chomsky sniffed, “I suppose Bush would claim it’s the effect of No Child Left Behind.”
Posted by escapegrace at 7:51 AM
Alain Robbe-Grillet, the French writer who pioneered the so-called "new novel" genre in the 1950s, died Monday at the age of 85, the Academie Francaise (French Academy) said...He had been admitted to hospital in the Normandy city of Caen over the weekend after suffering a heart ailment.
In a series of essays published in 1963 Robbe-Grillet developed the theory of the "new novel" which sought to overturn conventional ideas on fiction-writing...His theory was that traditional notions such as plot and character should be subordinated to impersonal descriptions of physical things...His first published book -- "Les Gommes" [The Erasers] -- established him as a leader of a new generation of writers that also included Samuel Beckett, Claude Simon and Natalie Serrault... Robbe-Grillet said the term 'new novel' was aimed at "all those seeking new forms for the novel ... and all those who have determined to invent the novel, in other words to invent man."
Posted by escapegrace at 8:05 AM
"Nothing is permanent in this wicked world - not even our troubles." - Charlie Chaplin
Posted by escapegrace at 10:36 AM
I hope everyone in the country can absorb the disparity these two videos highlight. I, too, feel a thrill going up my leg.
Posted by escapegrace at 1:49 PM
There's been some interesting adaptation news this week.
The Coen Brothers will adapt Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union, which should be an excellent return to the stark, frigid landscapes of Fargo with a speculative twist. (via rockslinga)
Natalie Portman will direct an adaptation of Amos Oz's A Tale of Love and Darkness in Hebrew. (Is all this overachieving designed to make me hate her?)
Faulkner's Intruder in the Dust, originally adapted in 1949, will be made into a film again by Picture Entertainment and Plum Pictures.
Posted by escapegrace at 9:18 AM
CheatNeutral: Helping You Because You Can't Help Yourself
Posted by escapegrace at 7:31 AM
A friend was just showing me her Julie Doucet collection, so I'm sure she's going to be thrilled about the artist's slideshow over at CBC. 365 Days is the newly released sketchbook of a year in Doucet's life.
Posted by escapegrace at 7:49 AM
NPR's Song of the Day is a new Mountain Goats track named for the creator of Fu Manchu.
Posted by escapegrace at 8:32 AM
"When we got into office, the thing that surprised me the most was that things were as bad as we'd been saying they were."
- John F. Kennedy
Posted by escapegrace at 11:24 AM
1. The Gathering by Anne Enright
Enright's novel is rife with Irish despair, but I can't remember the last time I stopped so often to marvel at a sentence, which is in itself a cure for melancholy.
2. Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey by Chuck Pahliniuk
I realized with some surprise that this was my first Pahliniuk book. It reminded me of the work of the best magicians - seemingly wondrous, partly in its ability to discourage you from looking too close. I accepted on faith that the time travel plot's math would work.
3. The Sabotage Cafe by Joshua Furst
Furst's ability to craft a realistic female voice is to be commended; I just didn't really like the women enough to care that much about them.
4. Yes, Yes, Cherries: Stories by Mary Otis
Yes, yes, Mary Otis. More, more. You got me writing again. Thank you.
5. Heart-Shaped Box by Joe Hill
I never read books like this, but who could resist a rock star who buys a haunted suit on eBay? Not me. Hill's thriller wasn't free of the elements that keep me from this genre, but I had a darn good time nonetheless.
Posted by escapegrace at 11:20 AM 0 comments
At The Millions, Emily Colette Wilkinson posts the soundtrack for her screenplay about grad school life in the humanities. Beginning with...
Posted by escapegrace at 7:37 AM
...and apparently, copying someone else's story didn't cheer her up! Jezebel looks at what went wrong when a Self editor tried to replicate the Eat, Pray, Love experience.
Posted by escapegrace at 2:06 PM
I'm making an executive decision to plan lessons rather than post a sunday short stack, so in lieu of links, enjoy Sarah Silverman's lovely message to her fella on The Jimmy Kimmel Show earlier this week.
Posted by escapegrace at 8:31 AM
I was in the office of a colleague the other day, and she had a note to herself on the wall that read: "No new projects." I told her I needed a sign like that, too, but it should read: "Do new projects." Sometimes I feel like I have enough projects for three lifetimes - with more cropping up every week - and I will still spend hours at a time talking on the phone or watching old episodes of Deadwood and Six Feet Under on DVD. (I don't do cable at least.)
One of the projects I'm not working on is a search for Las Vegas literature that moves beyond the typical settings and characters you'd expect - the "strippers and pornographers, runaways and addicts" that are mentioned in this review of Charles Brock's new novel Beautiful Children. I'm encouraged, however, by the "parents and adolescents" and "comic book illustrators" also listed as well as Liesl Schillinger's "bravo." We shall see...
From the first chapter of Beautiful Children:
In a short amount of time that section of videotape would be transformed into a series of stills, frames scanned into a computer. A single frame would be enlarged, then Photoshopped, resulting in the image of a slouching, unexpressive child. This image would be circulated in e-mail attachments, faxes, and flyers; it would be posted in arcades and student unions and youth hostels; in post offices and convenience stores and drop-in centers for the homeless and indigent. And at some point fairly early on in this process, Lincoln Ewing would be reminded of the damndest piece of information. A drop of conventional wisdom that, honestly, Lincoln had no clue where he'd picked up. It concerned Native Americans. Supposedly, when photography was invented, they believed each picture from the white man's magic machine removed a piece of the subject's soul.
This was precisely the kind of thing Lincoln didn't need in his head. Yet, just as a tongue cannot resist probing the sensitive area of a cracked tooth, Lincoln would find himself returning to that god-awful piece of information: gnawing on it when a police officer misread his son's birth certificate, causing the boy's middle name to fall by the wayside, becoming as forgotten as the great-grandfather who had inspired it. And when mention of the boy's twelve years of age was replaced by his date of birth — this distinction small, but especially painful, however pragmatic; done, it was explained, as a matter of protocol, to acknowledge a grim reality: nobody can say how long a child will be missing.
Posted by escapegrace at 9:31 AM
Merry pranksters Improv Everywhere gathered over 200 people to freeze in place in the middle of Grand Central Station last weekend. I love the freaked out children and the guy who goes up and pokes one of the frozen. Ah, the power of synchronized watches...
Posted by escapegrace at 8:33 AM