A Single Point of Light

New Orleans, God bless your Creole soul:

Beginning Jan. 11, The Times-Picayune will debut “The Reading Life,” which will feature expanded coverage of books and the New Orleans literary scene each week on the cover of Friday’s Living section. Books coverage that now appears in this space will move to Friday.

Our expanded books coverage is built on a belief that a great many of our readers have a rich and varied reading life, beyond the newspaper. and while some national statistics seem to suggest that reading is on the decline, others make a different case.

(Full article, via Critical Mass)

Filed under Journalism + Literature on December 30, 2007
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Awkward Latinism of the Week

Latin may be enjoying a Renaissance of sorts, but used without care it can also lead to unintentional hilaritas. Exhibit A, from Michiko Kakutani’s favorite books list at the NYT:

THE YIDDISH POLICEMEN’S UNION by Michael Chabon. A clever, engaging and fully imagined epic cum detective story…

Filed under Journalism + Miscellaneous on December 28, 2007
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A Fantasia for the New Year

The End of the Internet.

(A man can dream, can’t he?)

Filed under Miscellaneous on December 28, 2007
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What We Talk About When We Talk About Raymond Carver

071224_carverv2_p646.jpg

The New Yorker’s special feature on Raymond Lush and Gordon Carver—sorry, Raymond Carver and Gordon Lish—is full of little surprises, but the main event is definitely the publication of “Beginners,” an unedited version of the story first published as “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love.”

Now the magazine has posted a comparison draft of the two versions at their website, which makes for an interesting case study in fiction editing. Here’s a sample (bold indicates Lish’s additions; erasures his deletions):

Mel Herb stopped talking. “Here,” he said, “let’s drink this cheapo gin the hell up. Let’s drink it up. Then we’re going to dinner, right? Terri and I know a new place. That’s where we’ll go, to this new place we know about. But we’re not going until we finish up this cut-rate, lousy gin. We’ll go when we finish this gin.

Terri said, “We haven’t actually eaten there yet. But it looks good. From the outside, you know.”

“I like food,” Mel said. “If I had it to do all over again, I’d be a chef, you know? Right, Terri?” Mel said. “It’s called The Library,” Terri said. “You haven’t eaten there yet, have you?” she said, and Laura and I shook our heads. “It’s some place. They say it’s part of a new chain, but it’s not like a chain, if you know what I mean. They actually have bookshelves in there with real books on them. You can browse around after dinner and take a book out and bring it back the next time you come to eat. You won’t believe the food. And Herb’s reading Ivanhoe! He took it out when we were there last week. He just signed a card. Like in a real library.”

“I like Ivanhoe,” Herb said. “Ivanhoe’s great. If I had it to do over again, I’d study literature. Right now I’m having an identity crisis. Right, Terri?” Herb said. He laughed. He fingered twirled the ice in his glass. I’ve been having an identity crisis for years. Terri knows. Terri can tell you. But let me say this. If I could come back again in a different life, a different time and all, you know what? I’d like to come back as a knight. You were pretty safe wearing all that armor. It was all right being a knight until gunpowder and muskets and twenty-two pistols came along.”

Second-guessing is, of course, the point of the exercise, though what the edits really show is that neither Lish nor Carver were infallible. For example, pushing the story away from the Library/Ivanhoe bit seems smart, but it’s a little disturbing to see Lish so insistent on declassing things (”let’s drink this cheapo gin the hell up”).

If this kind of thing strikes you as fun, there’s lot’s more to be had here.

Filed under Literature on December 27, 2007
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Advertisements for Myself: Dante at Slate

I’ve got an article on Dante’s Paradiso (and why it’s so unloved) up at Slate this week. Check it out!

Filed under Literature + Propaganda on December 26, 2007
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The Dukes of Redonda

Kingdom of Redondas

Javier Marías, the author of Your Face Tomorrow, is also the ruler of the Kindgom of Redonda, which occupies a one-square-mile island in the Caribbean Ocean. What follows is a list of the dukes and duchesses that Marías has named since assuming the crown in 1997. (A full list of the Redondan peerage may be found here.)

Pedro Almodóvar, Duke of Trémula (1999)
António Lobo Antunes, Duke of Cocodrilos (2001)
John Ashbery, Duke of Convexo (1999)
Antony Beevor, Duke of Stalingrado (2006)
Pierre Bourdieu, Duke of Desarraigo (1999)
William Boyd, Duke of Brazzaville (1999)
Ray Bradbury, Duke of Diente de León (2006)
Michael Braudeau, Duke of Miranda (2004)
AS Byatt, Duchess of Morpho Eugenia (1999)
Guillermo Cabrera Infante, Duke of Tigres (1999)
Pietro Citati, Duke of Remonstranza (2002)
JM Coetzee, Duke of Deshonra (2001)
Francis Ford Coppola, Duke of Megalópolis(1999)
(more…)

Filed under Politics + Literature on December 22, 2007
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