June 2012
29 posts
6 tags
Isn't it Ironic?
William Gaddis’s J R is hard. There, I’ve said it. Rick Moody’s wrong, in his introduction to the Dalkey Archive edition, to claim as emphatically as he does that the novel “is not difficult” (emphasis in original), if we’re sticking to conventional definitions of the word difficult. Yes, J R isn’t difficult the way that Ulysses or Gravity’s Rainbow or even Infinite Jest is difficult. For the...
Jun 29th
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“These novels are Harry Potter for sexually active female adults.”
– Gioconda Belli on Fifty Shades of Grey in the LA Review of Books
Jun 29th
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Jun 28th
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“The most important literature we write in the Anthropocene will be the words...”
– David Biello, “Welcome to the Anthropocene” (via millionsmillions)
Jun 28th
25 notes
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Read and Not Heard? Gaddis at the National Book...
When Gravity’s Rainbow won the National Book Award for Fiction in 1974, Thomas Pynchon’s publisher arranged for the comedian Professor Irwin Corey to accept on Pynchon’s behalf. Corey’s rambling, surrealist performance (including a streaker running across the stage) turned Pynchon’s absence from the ceremony into a manic spectacle worthy of one of his novels. Two years later, J R took the fiction...
Jun 28th
13 notes
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Jun 27th
9 notes
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Radar LARB
The week in reading… LAX “Theme Building” The Trystero exists! “Thomas Pynchon‘s The Crying of Lot 49 revolves around a conspiracy theory about a secret postal system called “The Trystero.” Alongside the release of Pynchon’s complete eBook backlist, Trystero signs have been planted in 200 spots around the world. These signs link to an online message system, a 21st Century...
Jun 26th
8 notes
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#OccupyGaddis began as a hashtag
…but has turned into much more. When the Los Angeles Review of Books approached me about reviewing William Gaddis’s 1975 novel J R, I jumped at the opportunity. As I mentioned in my first post, Gaddis has long been on my literary-historical radar, but I’ve never managed to get around to reading him, despite spending ten years as a Ph.D. student and postdoc specializing in postwar U.S....
Jun 23rd
22 notes
7 tags
Jun 23rd
22 notes
1 tag
NYRB Meet-up tonight, 6pm, Library Bar, Downtown... →
Jun 21st
20 notes
5 tags
The Deryesque in All of Us...
by Michael Goetzman Gone are the halcyon days of consumer culture, when everyone watched the same TV spots, was drawn by the allure of Tomorrowland, and coveted the same big-finned Coupe de Villes. Blotting the old mass media culture from view is the ever-spreading cloud of the internet and its byzantine “network culture,” which Mark Dery, writer and cultural critic, anticipated in the nineties....
Jun 21st
5 notes
5 tags
Welcome to the Anthropocene
by David Biello I LIVE IN A SUPERFUND site. So do you, no matter where you live. Despite environmental laws older than I am and the migration of U.S. heavy industry overseas, the toxic impacts of modern human life touch every inch of the U.S. And it’s not just the U.S., it’s North America, it’s Asia, it’s Antarctica, every inch of everywhere really — even the organic...
Jun 20th
17 notes
Crying in Public: Colin Dickey at LARB
Dickey’s saints are distinctly undomesticated, and if they are mostly long dead, they are likewise still very much alive (they are “zombies in their faith,” in another unruly analogy). Meandering back and forth across the centuries, Dickey argues that the saints are always untimely, “always anachronistic — an occupation from another time that has no real corollary in contemporary life.” -...
Jun 19th
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Radar LARB
(Please don’t eat the library paste, via letterology) [Audio] Zadie Smith reads Frank O’Hara’s poem “Animals” (quite beautifully, we might add):  I wouldn’t want to be faster / or greener than now if you were with me O you / were the best of all my days Deborah Weisgal on the “Mother of All Girls’ Books”: “Little Women is brutal, a ferocious wolf dressed up...
Jun 19th
25 notes
5 tags
Completely Smothered: Parts 1 & 2 Available Now
“ “NOBODY LIKES A CENSOR — they stifle the singular, the personal, the human — and no one knows this better than John Kaye.  When Kaye, who worked briefly in “program practices,” wrote “Smothered” for us, he said he didn’t want it published so much as “released into the world.” At the surface, it’s about a young writer unwillingly...
Jun 18th
3 notes
4 tags
Jun 17th
17 notes
The Failure of William Gaddis
#OccupyGaddis begins today. Time to pull that neglected Penguin Classics edition of J R off the shelf, or pick up the handsome new edition from Dalkey Archive, or, if you’re lucky enough, gently reread your first edition (jacket pictured). However you must join us for LARB’s summer reading challenge of J R, winner of the 1976 National Book Award. Follow #OccupyGaddis, and read...
Jun 15th
19 notes
7 tags
Senior Fiction Editor Matthew Specktor writes to... →
“Your mother is stubborn, and I am stubborn (however malleable I might be when prodded relentlessly for dessert), and curiosity is the coin of the realm for me. It’s all I’ve got, as I certainly don’t have money, and whatever I’ve got of taste — that dubious virtue by which we attempt to justify our love of one thing over our contempt for another — may or may not be transmissible. I’ve...
Jun 15th
7 notes
LARB Talks to Spook Magazine
The New Inquiry’s Malcolm Harris and The Los Angeles Review of Books’s Evan Kindley talked on Twitter with Spook Magazine’s one-man editorial team Jason Parham about the new publication’s founding, goals, and forthcoming first issue. Evan Kindley: I’ll start us off. Jason, how long have you been planning Spook? When was it born? Jason Parham: The idea was born in December. I officially started...
Jun 14th
17 notes
The Complete Bradbury Tribute at LARB
1. The Bradbury Era by F.X. Feeney 2. Fairy Tales about the Modern World by Jonathan R. Eller, Neil Gaiman, Robin Anne Reid and William F. Touponce 3. Nightmarish Glimpses of Our Inner Selves by Brian Attebery, John Clute, Rob Latham and Gary K. Wolfe
Jun 13th
27 notes
Jun 12th
20 notes
7 tags
Radar LARB
(via: thestate.ae) Where are the flying cars? An indignant David Graeber wants to know: “The postmodern sensibility, the feeling that we had somehow broken into an unprecedented new historical period in which we understood that there is nothing new; that grand historical narratives of progress and liberation were meaningless; that everything now was simulation, ironic repetition,...
Jun 11th
26 notes
13 tags
#OccupyGaddis
By Lee Konstantinou When I started grad school, ten years ago, I was pretty cocky. I felt well-read, confident in my grasp of American literary history. The paradoxical effect of getting a Ph.D. in English is that it leaves you feeling less knowledgeable, less well read than before you start. This is mostly the effect of realizing how much there is out there, how much you’ll never read, how...
Jun 9th
102 notes
Guest Blogger Lisa Teasley on Marriage, Writer’s...
MY HINDU HUSBAND, a white Midwesterner, moved in three years ago with an Eastern Philosophy library to covet, even if one is not interested in the vastness of the subject. A third of the pie, Vedanta and yoga, was introduced to the West in the late 19th century by Swami Vivekananda, who lately has been re-emerging as a fascinating figure in the cultural soup. A recent profile in the WSJ magazine...
Jun 7th
8 notes
5 tags
WatchWatch
Ray Bradbury (1920-2012) on his other job prospect: magician. Via Kasia Cieplak-Mayr von Baldegg at The Atlantic. Courtesy the Internet Archive, the film was produced by David L. Wolper. For more visit http://archive.org/.
Jun 7th
14 notes
3 tags
Ray Bradbury: August 22, 1920 - June 5, 2012
Ray Bradbury has died at the age of 91. Click here to read Lisa Jane Persky on Bradbury’s The Illustrated Man, at the Los Angeles Review of Books. (Image of a young Ray Bradbury with George Burns.)
Jun 6th
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2 tags
Tell Us How You Really Feel (We Might Just Publish...
Summer’s almost here, and to celebrate, LARB plans to spread out the beach towels and peruse some reader reviews. Write 250 words or less on what you’re currently reading and what you think of it (or don’t). Is it a book that’s hot off the presses, a classic, or a lost paperback? Already reviewed at LARB? Even better. Each month through September we will select the best reviews for publication...
Jun 5th
54 notes
6 tags
Radar LARB
Dr. Seuss’s World War II editorial cartoons: “Because of the fame of his children’s books (and because we often misunderstand these books) and because his political cartoons have remained largely unknown, we do not think of Dr. Seuss as a political cartoonist. But for two years, 1941-1943, he was the chief editorial cartoonist for the New York newspaper PM (1940-1948), and...
Jun 5th
18 notes
1 tag
Welcome
The new home for the LARBlog is on tumblr. More interviews, guest bloggers and stories are on the way, along with Radar LARB presented daily. Stay tuned…
Jun 4th
31 notes