
Thursday, January 31, 2008
symbol: ho

Wednesday, January 30, 2008
there was no hurry, for there was nowhere to go
let the people listen in
Daniel Menaker, who left his post as executive editor in chief of the Random House Publishing Group in June, is moving online in March to be the host of a new Web-based book show.
The show, to be called “Titlepage,” will feature a round-table discussion between Mr. Menaker, 66, a former fiction editor at The New Yorker, and a group of four authors. The first episode will be streamed online at titlepage.tv on March 3. The idea is to take advantage of the fact that it’s much easier to post video online than to get a show on television.
“Titlepage” will combine elements of “Apostrophes,” a popular French literary program; “The Charlie Rose Show” on public television; and “Dinner for Five,” in which a group of actors discussed their craft, on the Independent Film Channel...
The first episode will feature Richard Price, who wrote “Clockers” and the coming “Lush Life”; Susan Choi, author of “A Person of Interest”; and Charles Bock, whose debut novel, “Beautiful Children,” went on sale last week.
(Does it bug anyone else that titles are designated by quotation marks in newspapers? Or is that just an MLA nerd thing?)
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
design-phan
Monday, January 28, 2008
givin' gettin' givin' gettin' it on
Sunday, January 27, 2008
sunday short stack

"Three o'clock is always too late or too early for anything you want to do." - Jean-Paul Sartre (See Fitzgerald on 3 AM.)
- Yesterday at Skylight Books, I saw the impressive multimedia presentation that accompanies Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of the Planet Earth, 73rd Edition. A perfect gift for your favorite sarcastic cartographer...
- Retrocrush has video of the 25 greatest duets of all time.
- Sarah Boxer looks at books on blogs.
- Over at Salon, Zach Baron compares the latest releases from Cat Power and Magnetic Fields.
- Is science fiction the last great literature of ideas? Clive Thompson thinks so.
- The Nonist shares a fabulous document from the golden days of baseball when a few f-bombs were the worst of the sport's problems.
- A scary blob has clogged the sewers of Lewiston, Maine.
- Because you can't trust the dopamine high that infatuation triggers in your brain, Steven Pinker suggests you stick with someone who's infatuated with you.
- Neatorama lists 10 accidental product discoveries.
- Click through these Metafiler links (nsfw) to see the way Russian and Israeli children are taught about the birds and the bees.
Saturday, January 26, 2008
lucky number three

ouch
"...the novel’s prose is so breathless that it simply looks out of shape..." - from a review by Troy Patterson
"...this musing...serves also to illustrate the artless, wordy and underarticulated writing that makes 'All Shall Be Well' such a Black Death of a chore to read." - from a review by Ken Kalfus
Snap.
Friday, January 25, 2008
I rest my case
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
uncensored gut reactions to the oscars nominations
Performance by an actor in a supporting role: Hal Holbrook in “Into the Wild” - Well deserved. He stole this film.
Performance by an actress in a leading role: Julie Christie in “Away from Her” - Sigh. No one else comes close.
Performance by an actress in a leading role: Ellen Page in “Juno” - WTF?
Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original score): No Jonny Greenwood? He was robbed! (I know it's a technicality - a lame one.)
Original screenplay: “Lars and the Real Girl” - Written by Nancy Oliver - Why did no one see this film? It's adorable.
Overall: Where's Zodiac?
More here...
Sunday, January 20, 2008
it's the stupid details that my heart is breaking for
sunday short stack

"Never look back unless you are planning to go that way." - Henry David Thoreau
- Is melancholy being annihiliated?
- Maybe it's because you donated your "detritus of soured love" to the Museum of Broken Relationships. (Read more at 3qd via MetaFilter.)
- Someone has translated William Carlos Williams' poem "This Is Just to Say" (I'm the jerk who ate your plums) into lolspeak..."O Hai Just FYI" (via KR Blog)
- The riddle of tick marks vs. quotation marks solved! (via John Hodgman)
- Treat yourself to the sex faces of the men of the Australian Open.
- At the opposite end of the face spectrum, what kind of bad livin' do you have to do to end up with a nose like that? (You know, aside from the forgetting about the corpse kind of livin'...)
- The National Book Foundation has a new blog on the future of literary reading.
- Even more exciting, the Library of Congress has a Flickr page.
- The ABCs of New York made me extra eager for summer.
Saturday, January 19, 2008
that guy deserves the gold
Thursday, January 17, 2008
the fate of fifty index cards
It's a decision that has fallen to his sole surviving heir (and translator), Dmitri Nabokov, now 73. Dmitri has been torn for years between his father's unequivocal request and the demands of the literary world to view the final fragment of his father's genius, a manuscript known as The Original of Laura. Should Dmitri defy his father's wishes for the sake of "posterity"?
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
stimulation overload
While I'm on the subject, the profile of Cormac McCarthy in December's Rolling Stone is definitely worth a read. It details McCarthy's relationship with the genius science geeks at the Santa Fe Institute, where he spends his days as a Research Fellow after riding up on a mule one day.
Monday, January 14, 2008
any zeitgeisty parvenu
In the progressive Midwestern city where I live, the high school dropout rate for these alienated and written-off boys is alarmingly high. Some are even middle-class, but many are just hanging on, their families torn apart by harsh economics and a merciless criminal justice system. Why does it seem to be the Republicans who are more vocal about reforming our drug laws? Why has no one in the Democratic Party campaigned to have felons who have served their time made full citizens again? Their continued disenfranchisement is a foolhardy strike against these men and their families.
Perfect historical timing has always been something of a magic trick — finite and swift. The train moves out of the station. The time to capture the imagination of middle-class white girls, the group Hillary Clinton represents, was long ago. Such girls have now managed on their own (given that in this economy only the rich are doing well). They have their teachers and many other professionals to admire, as well as a fierce 67-year-old babe as speaker of the House, several governors and a Supreme Court justice. The landscape is not bare.
Boys are faring worse — and the time for symbols and leaders they can connect with beneficially should be now and should be theirs. Hillary Clinton’s gender does not rescue society from that — instead she serves as a kind of nostalgia for a time when it might have. Only her policies are what matter now, and here — despite some squabbling and bad advice that has caused her to “go negative” — the Democrats largely agree. But inspiration is essential for living, and Mr. Obama holds the greater fascination for our children.
Sunday, January 13, 2008
sunday short stack

"One has to be able to count, if only so that at fifty one doesn't marry a girl of twenty."
- Maxim Gorky
- New favorite io9 provides five alternate histories for New York City.
- Meanwhile, Los Angeles wins the Wallpaper Design Award for Best City.
- Bear with me for a moment...
- Julia Burchill advocates a return of the "fun-loving, red-blooded bitch."
- This one's for RMM - The Clean: Live at Other Music
- The National Book Critics Circle announces the 2007 awards finalists.
- Times Square in the '70s or your spam folder?
- I have a feeling Billy the Kid will break my heart.
- Chicago Sun-Times: The WGA strike reveals the lack of women writers in Hollywood.
- From the publishers of the lovely Caroline Tiger's book How to Behave: Dating and Sex comes the new instructional guide by Dategirl Judy McGuire: How Not to Date.
- I think describing anyone's music as "if Patsy Cline were the lead singer for The Shangri-Las" is a surefire set-up for disappointment, if not outright sacrilege.
Saturday, January 12, 2008
anonymity = notoreity?
[Sir Walter] Scott's case illustrates a paradox that we find over and over again: the anonymous writer who does not truly attempt to remain unknown. For the most part, he enjoyed the speculation his anonymity attracted. "I have seldom felt more satisfaction than when, returning from a pleasure voyage, I found Waverley in the zenith of popularity, and public curiosity in full cry after the name of the author". English (and Scottish) literature is full of similar cases - of authors who went to great lengths to maintain anonymity, but thereby promoted their readers' interest in the authorship of a work. The main lesson is a simple one: that anonymity is most successful when it provokes the search for an author.
Friday, January 11, 2008
she started a heat wave by letting her seat wave
After World War II, Niagara’s honeymoon promoters aimed to leverage the postwar travel boom. Magazines dedicated to tourism sprang up, like Holiday, which declared in June 1946 that “Niagara Falls is still America’s honeymoon capital.” The Niagara Falls, Ontario Chamber of Commerce began issuing “honeymoon certificates” in 1949, handing out more than forty-two thousand of them in ten years. The auto industry was on board as co-marketer. A magazine called Friends, published by General Motors and handed out by Chevrolet dealers, ran an article in June 1950 titled “Here’s Why They Honeymoon at Niagara.” In it, a variety of couples give their reasons for choosing the Falls. Andrew and Mary DiCicco of Detroit, for instance, chose the Falls “partly because of its romance and partly because it was conveniently close to Detroit—motorists can drive from there to Niagara Falls in less than six hours.”
The postwar Niagara honeymoon was now promoted as an American tradition: a slew of stories about Falls honeymoon history appeared. Honeymooning at the Falls was an American rite of passage. The Niagara Falls Gazette ran a 1946 feature titled “Lore and Sentiment behind Niagara’s Fame as Nation’s Honeymoon Capital.” Referring to the waterfall as “sentiment in liquid form,” they recounted the results of an informal survey asking visiting couples why they came to Niagara. “Eleven couples queried in succession,” the paper reports, said, “‘Our parents came here. We could have gone anywhere, but somehow, this just seemed right.’” And why not? The Falls were an American icon, the Canadians our allies, and a trip to Niagara a way to touch the national past. Returning soldiers, many articles declared, had seen enough of Europe. They’d rather enjoy the sights of their own nation now.
A visit to Niagara was, like much of postwar culture, a reassuring encounter with what the nation had just been fighting for: the American way of life. What did that mean? It went beyond democracy and freedom to embrace a host of lifestyle ideals valorized as the way it should be: the wholesome family life of Leave It to Beaver and Father Knows Best, the small-town community values of Norman Rockwell and Life magazine, the modernity and progress represented by the torrent of household consumer goods Americans adopted en masse—refrigerators, televisions, Tupperware. And of course, the “traditional” gender roles of I Love Lucy, The Honeymooners, Marjorie Morningstar, and the era’s fashions: tiny waists, full feminine skirts, and high heels for women, gray flannel suits for men. The marriage manuals of the era affirmed this natural order: the man was to dominate and the woman was to let him.
Marilyn’s star turn as Rose Loomis turned this stereotype over and examined its seamy underside. She was a wife gone bad—like the Falls, a feminine force, with the emphasis shifted from beauty to power. The movie publicity made the connection explicit: “Marilyn Monroe and Niagara,” crowed the poster, “a raging torrent of emotion that even nature can’t control!”
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
she came to stay
Via Campaign for the American Reader comes a list from Lisa Appignanesi of the top 10 books by and about my almost birthday-mate.
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
Monday, January 07, 2008
but if not the humanities, what?
The premise of secular humanism (or of just old-fashioned humanism) is that the examples of action and thought portrayed in the enduring works of literature, philosophy and history can create in readers the desire to emulate them. Philip Sydney put it as well as anyone ever has when he asks (in “The Defense of Poesy,” 1595), “Who reads Aeneas carrying old Anchises on his back that wishes not it was his fortune to perform such an excellent act?” Thrill to this picture of filial piety in the Aeneid and you will yourself become devoted to your father. Admire the selfless act with which Sidney Carton ends his life in “A Tale of Two Cities” and you will be moved to prefer the happiness of others to your own. Watch with horror what happens to Faust and you will be less likely to sell your soul. Understand Kant’s categorical imperative and you will not impose restrictions on others that you would resist if they were imposed on you.
It’s a pretty idea, but there is no evidence to support it and a lot of evidence against it. If it were true, the most generous, patient, good-hearted and honest people on earth would be the members of literature and philosophy departments, who spend every waking hour with great books and great thoughts, and as someone who’s been there (for 45 years) I can tell you it just isn’t so. Teachers and students of literature and philosophy don’t learn how to be good and wise; they learn how to analyze literary effects and to distinguish between different accounts of the foundations of knowledge. The texts Kronman recommends are, as he says, concerned with the meaning of life; those who study them, however, come away not with a life made newly meaningful, but with a disciplinary knowledge newly enlarged.
Sunday, January 06, 2008
sunday short stack

"In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o'clock in the morning, day after day."
- F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Earlier this week, a boy saved his mother from an assailant by attacking him with a light saber.
- I would have to make it to the age of 130 to claim that I'd lived in three centuries - like these people.
- András Szántó on MOCA's Takashi Murakami exhibit: "A savvy cultural investigation into the relationship of art and commerce? Or just another way to sell a handbag?"
- How do you write?
- David Markland pointed out something I hadn't realized when it happened - for the first time in my life, the high-pitched squeal was not only a test.
- The Decapitator wreaks havoc on the billboards of London.
- I'm going to slap these [citation needed] stickers on my students' papers.
- The Wire goes meta.
- Barbara Ehrenreich takes on the Disney princesses.
- Slideshow: The presidential candidates pose with Mr. Potato Head.
- WFMU has a fascinating profile of "eccentric musician, composer and bandleader. . .Milton Delugg."
- Ed returns all shiny and new.
Saturday, January 05, 2008
your nose needs some corrections
Friday, January 04, 2008
correlations between dieting & increased food blogging
