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September 30, 2006

An odd name-check...

Just found on The Guardian's website, in a serialized JFranz short story "Ambition":


Betsy went and found a bathroom and checked her make-up. She came out and had a conversation with a girl who was possibly as old as 30 and seemed astonished by Betsy's answers to polite questions about how she spent her days. "Aren't you bored?" the girl said. Betsy drifted into a corner and stood looking at other happy young girls who were talking about trade unions in Benezuela, and the rise of Soft Skull Press, and the demise of the bhangra scene in South London, and she thought she might cry.

So if both JFranz and The Onion find us useful, I guess we've become a kind of shorthand.

September 25, 2006

Bill Burroughs, Jr.

So we've a book coming out in November called Cursed from Birth: The Short, Unhappy Life of Williams S. Burroughs, Jr., the memoir of the "Son of Naked Lunch." But, because this book has been so long in the publishing (long story to tell, I'll spare you...), some folks are already writing and talking about it...this from today's International Herald Tribune and then, next week, you can do an online chat about Billy Burroughs with writer David Ohle, who compiled and edited Cursed from Birth and who is also the author of the Soft Skull book The Age of Sinatra...

September 24, 2006

What are the Germans saying?

So I wish there were the hours in the day that would allow me to blog at length about the German Book Office trip to meet with a great many German publishers and editors, mostly though not exclusively independent, a trip that also included Lauren Wein from Grove, Dennis Loy Johnson from Melville House, Katie Dublinski from Graywolf, Cal Barksdale from Arcade, and Rachel Deahl from Publishers Weekly. Suffice it to say that if any country's cultural apparatus invites you to do such a thing, you do it. You do it, and then you apologize for the fact that such visit will never be reciprocated by your own damn government...

Anyway, the one thing I have to offer is something called SignandSight.com A condensation, in English, of the various cultural reporting from both German newspapers and papers and magazines from around the world. It should be on every culture blogger's column of links, me thinks...

September 21, 2006

Abu Ghraib: the Last Great American Movie

Ever so elegant post by David Griffith, author of the forthcoming A Good War is Hard to Find...

...[I]t seems that Abu Ghraib is not so much about state mandated torture (although the boundaries of what is what is not torture do seem to have been intentionally blurry), it is about young people whose moral consciences did not cause them to balk and a citizenry that failed the same test.
Film studies folks have been thinking about the roots of misrepresentating the "other," and "problematically" totalizing the complexity of cultural identity, ethnicity, sexuality, etc. through the deployment of a subtle visual rhetoric, some of which is conscious and some of which is, arguably, subconscious. These scholars hold that film can call attention to such problems. Just look at countries along cultural fault lines, such as Irish and Mexican film: both deal quite literally with borders and the violence that erupts as a result of the tension between perspectives. In these films the violence is understood as symptomatic of deep social undercurrents.

September 18, 2006

The Booker

One thing that I've not noticed anyone mention (perhaps cause it's a bit insider baseball, perhaps because different media have credited different publishers according to whether they're in the US or UK or what-have-you) is that of the six short-listed titles, no less than four are liked to Grove Atlantic.

Desai, Kiran The Inheritance of Loss - Hamish Hamilton (published by Atlantic Monthly, an imprint of Grove, in the US)
Grenville, Kate The Secret River - Canongate (distributed by Grove in the US)
Hyland, M.J. Carry Me Down - Canongate (distributed by Grove in the US)
Matar, Hisham In the Country of Men - Viking
St Aubyn, Edward Mother’s Milk - Picador (Open City in the US, distributed by Grove)
Waters, Sarah The Night Watch - Virago

That, if I may say, is pretty damn impressive...

Bookforum and BOMB

The new Bookforum is out, with, delightfully, two reviews of Soft Skull books—American Genius, A Comedy by Lynne Tillman, and Mark Swartz's H2O, though sadly neither of them are available online—much other stuff there though.

However, the Geoffrey O'Brien interview of Lynne Tillman in BOMB magazine (not [yet?] online) is partially transcribed by Brian Sholis at In Search of the Miraculous...

Also, apologies for the lack of posting last week, the German Book Office had me in Munich and Berlin meeting a gazillion German publishers and editors, in the company of folks from Arcade, Grove, Melville House, Graywolf, and Publishers Weekly. Will try to post some little bits about all that later this week...

September 10, 2006

Who is The Whistleblower?

A study of 233 whistleblowers—the largest study on this topic ever conducted—found that the average whistleblower was a family man in his 40s with a strong conscience and high moral values. After blowing the whistle on fraud, 90 percent of the whistleblowers were fired or demoted, 27 percent faced lawsuits, 26 percent had to seek psychiatric or physical care, 25 percent suffered alcohol abuse, 17 percent lost their homes, 15 percent got divorced, 10 percent attempted suicide, and 8 percent were bankrupted. But in spite of all this, only 16 percent said that they would not blow the whistle again. The Whistleblower is the story of one such person, who gambled everything by telling the truth.

September 04, 2006

Google Book Search causes people to buy books from booksellers?!?! Whodathunkit!

According to web monitoring firm Hitwise, the top destination for surfers visiting Google's UK Book Search was Amazon UK, accounting for 8.3 per cent of visits.

Book sites accounted for 15.93 per cent of all sites visited from the Google Book Search page last week.

September 03, 2006

Daily Negations: Sept 3rd

When I am tired, it is easy to believe that my exhaustion is the reason I am depressed and lonely and uninspired. But when I am well rested, I can realize that these negative feelings are not a result of too little sleep. They are a result of my being a miserable, hopeless, misanthropic wretch.—John S. Hall

September 02, 2006

Ed Park

To add to the encomia being heaped upon Ed Park in the aftermath of his injudicious firing...

In February of 2004, two days before Matt Sharpe appeared on the Today Show to discuss his book with Ms. Couric following its selection by Susan Isaacs for the TODAY SHOW book club, a review ran in the Village Voice. That review was by Ed Park and Matt and I agreed that if he never got a better review in the rest of his life, he could still die and consider himself well-reviewed ("genuine sui generis genius comic family novel writing")

I post the whole review below, because it really was amazing, but let me gloss one bit of it for you. Midway through the review, Ed refers to "the sibilant traffic jam of an opening ('Chris Schwartz's father's Prozac dosage must have been incorrect')"...Now I worked on that book for a while, and I heard Matt read from it several times, and there were other reviews, including a very nice one by Claire Dederer in the NYTBR, and all that, but it wasn't until I myself had to read the first five pages of that novel aloud, and nearly melted down just trying to get "Chris Schwartz's father's Prozac dosage must..." past my lips...

The point being: for a critic to notice that was just astonishing. How could he have noticed it, really, I still wonder...

Aphasic Instinct
Everything is illuminated—and often repeated—in Matthew Sharpe's heart-piercing novel
by Ed Park
March 3 - 9, 2004

Matthew Sharpe's The Sleeping Father is two novels in one—an imploding-family masterpiece every bit as heart-piercing as The Corrections, and a stylistically thrilling inquiry into the weight of words. It's a treasure-house of gleaming deadpan sentences (sample chapter-spanning juxtaposition: "They had a nice time on the couch until the sun went down," followed by "Three hours before summer arrived in California, it arrived in Connecticut"). It's sad, to the degree that this reader instinctively closed his eyes right at the moment it became clear something very ugly was about to happen. It's resplendent with aching absurdities, word salads, inspired semicolon deployment, golden-eared teenage monologues. It's the best thing I hope to read all year—and if it isn't, this will be a very good year indeed.

The titular not-all-there paterfamilias is Bernard Schwartz, a divorced copywriter whose unwitting intake of a contraindicated drug sends him into a coma. When he emerges, his speech is a mess of gnomic utterances and weirdly poetic circumlocutions (asking for a cigarette: "Get me—lung—fire—white—smoke—tube"). Sharpe effortlessly shifts between the perspectives of those in and around the Schwartz family, but his most indelible creation is Chris, Bernie's loving 17-year-old son. Paul Robeson fan, would-be screen saver mogul, and inheritor of his father's formerly flourishing sense of irony, Chris alternately jokes and lashes out in hyperarticulate bursts. Endearing and infuriating, he possesses a knee-jerk misogyny (especially toward his father's doc, Lisa) that barely masks a confused plea for intimacy.

His best friend, Frank Dial ("one of five blacks matriculated at the Bellwether High School for Upper Middle Class Caucasians"), has "a word for everything, and often not a nice one"; Chris, for his part, has "a stern principle about accuracy and honesty in speech that he said he took pride in not living up to." Frank diligently keeps a notebook entitled Everything in the World, in which he records the curiosities and outrages of their suburban universe—e.g., Things that look like things that you already know what they look like. When a racist bully destroys it, Frank starts a fresh one: Everything I Hate. (Sharpe's beguiling 2000 debut novel, relating the sentimental education of a sixth-grader who moves to New York with her female teacher/lover, was brightly called Nothing Is Terrible.)

As Sharpe's young protagonists—and here we include Chris's sober-minded younger sister, Cathy—muddle through their assorted griefs, they all look to language for answers. Frank's book—any book—is a way of containing the world, coordinates stretched across the void. Chris wishes his father would dispense fatherly advice, the kind that "came in numbered lists and started with words like 'Always,' or 'Never,' or 'Remember,' or 'Son.' "

Words promise security, but they always fall short. Thus from the sibilant traffic jam of an opening ("Chris Schwartz's father's Prozac dosage must have been incorrect") to the "brain damage round-robin" that Chris imagines sharing with his father, Sharpe boldly foregrounds both the antic possibilities and million immutable agonies of language, so that form and feeling shadow each other across the pages. He uses repetition, incremental variation, go-for-broke catalogs—as incantation, litany, curse, symptom; as infinitely extendable punchline. In one of the book's sharpest scenes, Chris attempts to teach his father the surrealist game of exquisite corpse ("It's for your aphasia and my amusement"): "How this works is I name a part of speech, like noun or verb or adjective, then we each write one of whatever part of speech I just named at the top of our strips of paper."

The end result, when the players uncover their entries, should be a pair of zany sentences. But the word-impoverished Bernie "neither understood Chris's instructions nor could he identify the different parts of speech," and they resort to "a modified version . . . in which they took turns saying nouns to each other." Later, Chris tries to clarify between the general and the specific. After divvying up the universe into 31 categories, he tries to explain how a tree can be both a category and an individual thing. He advises that Bernie point as well as talk. "Another way to do it would be to give the tree a specific name." "Like what?" "Shirley." Father and son embark on an orgy of naming—animals, blades of grass, houses, clouds, and "When the sky was dark, they named the darkness." It's my favorite literary take on the divine prerogative since the increasingly forgetful denizens of Macondo started putting instructions on their animals.

But failure is beautiful, too, and in the end it's all we have. Even as the characters strive for precision, meanings can be elusive. In a mind-bending move, Sharpe slyly exploits Bernie's part-of-speech confusion, essentially infecting the reader with it. Try to pin down the parts of speech as this chapter-capping sentence unfolds: "It was real awkward divorced family comforting." The Sleeping Father is genuine sui generis genius comic family novel writing.

September 01, 2006

Could Lynne Tillman, in fact, be writing chicklit?

While it was not the central message of Ron Hogan's piece on ChickLit in today's GalleyCat, it is nice to see our Lynne Tillman used as the gold standard for "serious women's fiction" (in faux contradistinction to ChickLit). Oddly enough though, Lynne's newest book American Genius, A Comedy involves extended discussions on the topics of facials, furniture, and fabrics...

Why I'll Be in the Office Saturday and Monday...

Mark Ames (Going Postal) on Americans' refusal to even take the meagre two weeks of vacation time we get a year...Editor's Choice on the Guardian blog.


Accounting giant PricewaterhouseCoopers has lately become so frustrated in its inability to force workers to take holiday time that it resorted to shutting down and locking out its 19,000 employees twice a year in order to force them to relax.

One can imagine PwC's parking lot the day after forced-vacation lockdown. It would look like the scene outside of the mall in George A Romero's Dawn of the Dead: thousands of starched, dazed yuppies converging on the corporate grounds, clawing at the entrance, growling for the opportunity to just put in one more 70-hour work week.