Monday, June 27, 2011
What's New in Poetry?
I have a little bit of downtime on my first day of work, so I thought I would take the opportunity to mention here Emory University's What's New in Poetry? series. It is a wonderful reading series that I had the pleasure of participating in a few years back, and I am looking forward to attending the series regularly now that I am here in Atlanta. There is a reading next week on Friday, July 8th, featuring Molly Brodak, Lyndsey Cohen, and James May. All readings are held on the first floor of the Emory Bookstore and start at 8 p.m. "Like" What's New in Poetry? here on Facebook to stay afloat of news & events.
Monday, June 13, 2011
ATL-bound
For those of you who read this blog and may not have yet heard, I am moving to Atlanta on June 25th and starting a new job there on June 27th. Everything is quite hectic right now since the span of job offer to job start is pretty short when it involves an 800+ mile move (not to mention I am still teaching four nights a week right up until I leave). I have very much enjoyed my time in Saginaw these past few years, but I am now looking forward to new adventures in Atlanta.
Sunday, June 05, 2011
Recent Reading
I finished Chronic City, and I take back what I said a few posts below about it reminding me of Auster. It is a fun read with interesting characters & fantastic elements, from the tiger that is terrorizing the city, to the astronaut fiance who is stuck in space, to the apartment complex just for dogs, to the artist who constructs giant chasms in the city. Perhaps it is because I recently finished reading Inherent Vice, but the names here could fit into a Pynchon novel--Chase Insteadman being one for example. Chase becomes student to Perkus Tooth, who attempts to educate Chase on movies, music, and the finer points of Gnuppets, but Chase has a hard time keeping up with Tooth's obsessions. Eventually, what Chase comes to learn about the role he plays and what he comes to learn about those in power re-defines everything for the former child actor. Now if only I could find a copy of Obstinate Dust...
Keeping with my recent streak of reading books from 2009, I also read Tao Lin's Shoplifting From American Apparel. I wish I had read this before I read Richard Yates, but really it doesn't matter. I've only read two of Lin's books now, but the themes are persistent. Shoplifting captures a young author who is lonely and largely communicates with people through gmail chat. Like in Richard Yates, there are autobiographical elements at work here. The protagonist, Sam, is a vegan who occasionally shoplifts and largely spends his time on his computer, whether it be at NYU's library or on the macbook he seems to carry everywhere with him. After an opening online exchange between Sam and Luis, the narrative jumps ahead four months, and we find out that Sam is no longer with the Sheila who is mentioned in the opening exchange. Sam becomes briefly involved with a series of women, but largely remains disconnected. The writing style is flat & direct, the descriptions vague but somehow engaging: "They kissed some more then stared at each other with neutral facial expressions. Sam thought that her facial expression was as neutral as Sheila's when Sheila was in similar situations. Sam felt his own neutral facial expression." This novella comes in at under 100 pages and makes for a very quick read.
I haven't committed to a new book yet, but I think it might be Tony Tost's 33 1/3 book American Recordings. I've also been flipping around in Ron Padgett's How Long. And for a freelance job, I am reading a lot about the history of Bay City, MI.
Keeping with my recent streak of reading books from 2009, I also read Tao Lin's Shoplifting From American Apparel. I wish I had read this before I read Richard Yates, but really it doesn't matter. I've only read two of Lin's books now, but the themes are persistent. Shoplifting captures a young author who is lonely and largely communicates with people through gmail chat. Like in Richard Yates, there are autobiographical elements at work here. The protagonist, Sam, is a vegan who occasionally shoplifts and largely spends his time on his computer, whether it be at NYU's library or on the macbook he seems to carry everywhere with him. After an opening online exchange between Sam and Luis, the narrative jumps ahead four months, and we find out that Sam is no longer with the Sheila who is mentioned in the opening exchange. Sam becomes briefly involved with a series of women, but largely remains disconnected. The writing style is flat & direct, the descriptions vague but somehow engaging: "They kissed some more then stared at each other with neutral facial expressions. Sam thought that her facial expression was as neutral as Sheila's when Sheila was in similar situations. Sam felt his own neutral facial expression." This novella comes in at under 100 pages and makes for a very quick read.
I haven't committed to a new book yet, but I think it might be Tony Tost's 33 1/3 book American Recordings. I've also been flipping around in Ron Padgett's How Long. And for a freelance job, I am reading a lot about the history of Bay City, MI.
Labels:
books,
fiction,
nonfiction,
poetry,
recent media consumption
Saturday, June 04, 2011
New Review of A Model Year
Sandra Simonds reviews A Model Year over at her blog. It's a wonderfully thoughtful review. I especially like: "There’s an obvious problem: the same things that keep us going also keep us not going." And also the question: "How does one create intimacy as an anonymous worker in a city of anonymous workers?" You can read the full review here. Thanks Sandra!
Wednesday, June 01, 2011
New Book Reviews at NewPages
The first part of the June book reviews are now up at NewPages. The second batch will go up on June 14th. For now, check out reviews of Jess Row's Nobody Ever Gets Lost, Susan Briante's Utopia Minus, Matthew Rohrer's Detroyer & Preserver, Matthew Henriksen's Ordinary Sun, Chelsea Martin's The Really Funny Thing About Apathy, Lizzy Acker's Monster Party, Dinty W. Moore's Crafting the Personal Essay, Craig Nova's Brook Trout and the Writing Life, Mathias Enard's Zone, Michael Kimball's Us, Michael Bible's Cowboy Maloney's Electric City, Noelle Kocot's The Bigger World, William Corbett's The Whalen Poem, and Joshua Edwards's Campeche. You can read them all here.
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