« August 2006 | Main | October 2006 »

Freedom by Right

So the good political news about living in Pennsylvania is I get to vote against America's most reprehensible Senator, Rick Santorum, in the fall.

The bad news is that it can be a perfectly beautiful day and I'll come home to find this on my front door:

Freedom by Right
We don't live in America
America lives in US

1) Protect, defend and obey the Constitution for th U.S. which is based on Biblical principles.
2) [blah blah reduce taxes blah blah]
    Restore morality
- return prayer and the Ten Commandments
    Restore resposibility - Abortion is not a form of birth control
    [blah blah 2nd amendment blah blah]

Jim Barr for State Representative 20th Legislative District

I'll give it this: it's better copy edited than most wacko right wing tracts. However, properly placed commas are not enough to swing my vote to Jim Barr and his we-hate-abortion "consitution party." In fact, stacks of thousand dollar bills wouldn't be enough.

Noah Webster

NoahwebstersMy sister is driving around New England with her patient boyfriend in tow and she sent me this picture. We're not big sticklers for spelling, nor are we dictionary fiends. So why the visit to the Noah Webster house?

You probably know that Noah Webster crafted the first American dictionary which is called, logically, Webster's. Maybe you even know that his house is a museum in West Hartford, Connecticut.

What you might not know is that my great grandmother brought up my grandmother and her brothers in that house. Then after the kids were grown the family built another house on the property and gave the Noah Webster house to the state. I think that other house, the newish one, is where we visited my great grandmother when she was in her 90s; I was completely oblivious to the literary history across the lawn.

Catching JG Ballard, vicariously

With this here internet, I can get the scoop on this JG Ballard appearance, uh, somewhere (I think in the UK?).

While the man is, apparently, old, fat and deaf, he's no dummy; when asked where to find vital writing today, he says, "on the internet" (of course).

Morning, monday

The Elegant Variation has a complete report -- with pictures! -- of the West Hollywood Book Fair. Mark even captured the entire Goldberg literary sibling set Goldberg (Tod, Lee, Karen and Linda) at their panel.

The Millions gets the photo-less scoop on the Brooklyn Book Festival -- not to worry, pics are here and here. And the 60-second version is captured on video -- really, they even got Brooklyn Boro Prez Marty Markowitz. 

Laila Lalami spends quality time with 500 Tennesseeans. So close to Pittsburgh -- drop on by!

The Syntax of Things muses on James Frey's first post-debacle interview, finds the nonfiction memoirist novelist wanting.

Beware, tomorrow is International Talk Like a Pirate Day and just in time, The Mumpsimus has found a sea chanty soundtrack -- yep, an MP3 awaits.

RSS means Random Shutdown Syndrome

Sadly, this is my new favorite website.

Fishy fishy fishy fish

Stanleyfishatpitt

This is the as-packed-as-possible crowd that turned out to see literary theorist (turned Law School dude) Stanley Fish do his fantastic rhetoric dance Thursday at Pitt. Fish is there, in the short sleeved blue oxford, talking to the woman in white; if you gave him a visor he'd look like the guy who counts the take in a noir film. (My class in film noir was adjourned early so interested students, and our professor, could attend). From what I remember of my literary theory -- which, admittedly, isn't much -- Stanley Fish was the only lit theorist who made me laugh out loud.

He engaged the quiet, awed and/or confused crowd in an exercise in logic and rhetoric about argument itself that was beguiling. It begins:

1) Has my conviction that X is true been reached in the course of a particular education (mine) and career trajectory, complete with mentors, influences, substantive commitments,religious, ethnic and political attachments, etc? - YES
2) Is the history by which I arrived at my conviction its author? - NO.

And goes on for 7 more pages, which I will not retype, since I've already quoted without permission from Señor Fish* despite the warning on the handout not to do so. Anyway, during his talk, two things were clear: he's so deft with his rhetoric that to disagree with him, or even to take issue, makes one feel entirely irrational; and he could have wound up at the exact opposite of his actual conclusion and been equally convincing. Supremely gifted.

Also funny. He illustrated one of his terms, "giving accounts," by saying "During the old Hollywood studio system, Tom Cruise would have either been shut up or killed." Hee. He said Tom Cruise.

My favorite question was "In the game of argument, whose rules are you following? Artistotle's? Kant's?" because it proved that I am really in grad school. So what if I can't define what Kant and Aristotle's rules of argument might be -- someone in that room could, and took them very seriously. Not Stanley Fish so much, who's answer was something like "no rules." Which made me happy to be in grad school, too.

*Señor Fish serves topnotch fish tacos in Los Angeles.

Thursday hustle

I really should be finishing that noir reading. Instead...

Metroblogs Montreal gets the story on the Dawson College shootings. As in, hides from a gunman and sees a colleague take a bullet in the shoulder.

The NY Times is wowed and amazed by Google's philanthropic strategy ("Not the Usual"). Guys, venutre philanthropy is nothing new; trust me, this is one thing Google didn't Only Revinvent.

David Cross "reviews" a new CD from Yo La Tengo with nary a listen: "this New Jersey (and Brooklyn!?) trio consisting of the fat guy and two Jews are quite capable of taking us on one wild and wacky ride through the debauched underworld of the 'Indiers.'" (via largeheartedboy)

The 88 does a live spot on The Current in Minnesota. What, no pics of awesome drummer Brandon?

LAist editor Tony Pierce is in Minnesota, too, but not for long. He's driving cross country while still blogging like a madman.

Speaking of blogging like mad, author Martha Southgate is knocking it out of the park while guest blogging at The Elegant Variation.

I'm avoiding a lot of the Mark Z Danielewski buzz until I have a chance to read Only Revolutions (damn that noir homework!), but this LA Times story seems to be generally spoiler-free.

Lit fun in the online world

Gotta love the snarkety snark of this post about the memoirs of Laura Albert (the creator of JT Leroy). But is there anything amusing to say about the three guys who invented LonelyGirl15?

There is funny out there: Ed gives us a taste of Nora Ephron's wit. Could an Ephron/Segundo encounter be on the way?

John Hodgman has been everywhere with the release of Areas of My Expertise in paperback, and I hope you have time to listen to the podcasts of his Little Gray Books Series, now on hiatus, which are ingeniously funny and include music! and a live Galapagos audience!

Maybe this is all over TV (which I gave up for grad school), but watching Audrey Hepburn dance to AC/DC (Via La Gringa) is awfully cute, despite helping to sell stretch pants for the Gap.

And in good-things-come-to-those-who-persevere news, if you get an MFA and wind up proofreading a crappy tax magazine, don't worry, you can still grow up to be Edward P Jones.

the tripbooks

When I was a not-writer, just a kid with a bad attitude, OK hair and a baggy t-shirt, I hung out with a bunch of writers. Poets, mostly. They lived in a historic victorian house that they treated with as little care as possible. They slept on grimy futons on the floor. They ate off paper plates to avoid doing dishes. Hot sauce was a major food group.

The main decoration in the house were flags, long colored nylon flags that hung from the ceiling and reached almost to the ground, creating false, beautifully transluscent walls. The flags were faded and dusty. They had hung from lightpoles during the Olympics. I never could tell if they had been rescued from the garbage or stolen right off the poles. I loved sitting in rooms with them. Sometimes tho you'd get positioned under one and it would be a drag, you'd brush it aside fruitelessly until, in frustration, you tied it up in a knot, or stuffed it behind a door, and then it would be all crumply wrinkled the next time you came over.

At parties the guys, the poet-writers, they'd drink a lot or do drugs, whatever was around, and eventually someone would reach for a blank notebook. They called the first one a Trip Book and after it was filled up there were more Trip Books, each one passed from hand to hand at parties. A conversation would be bursting all around but for one bent head, someone intent on a drawing or a poem or a nasty commentary they were scrawling in the Trip Book.

Every time a Trip Book was passed to me I froze up. I never knew what to write. I wanted to narrate what was happening, which wasn't creative on the level of drawing 6-headed bats with split penises (penii?) or a 10-page poem that used bubblegum as a motif. I'd gamely jot down a crummy poem of my own, or sketch something I saw, or draw a little maze -- as a 13-year old, I'd  drawn elaborate mazes that were published in the local paper -- but it wasn't anything serious. I was just trying to make a mark and pass the book along. Because to me, a blank book making the rounds at a party wasn't going to capture anything true.

Most of the Trip Books are gone. Most of what filled them was crap. But I tell you, in an MFA workshop, you can be forced to do exercises less interesting, with more empty results, than those spacey-bullshit Trip Books. This week, for the first time, I was surprised to find myself missing them. 

goddang, Dzanc!

Welcome the birth of Dzanc Books, a new nonprofit dedicated to publishing and promoting literary fiction. They'll also give a hand to literary journals -- which, of course, rule -- but could also use a few more readers.

Dan Wickett of the Emerging Writers Network and Steve Gillis, the founder of 826michigan, are the men behind the Dzanc curtain. They've got loads of energy and a huge love of books, and are sure to make Dzanc a successful venture.

Now, if they can just tell us how to pronounce the name...

Recent Posts

Upcoming guests

Flickr pics

  • www.flickr.com
    Pinky P's photos More of Pinky P's photos

mailboxorama

  • Pinky has moved to Pittsburgh:
    Carolyn Kellogg
    297 46th St.
    Pittsburgh, PA 15201

Show library