“I don’t know if it’s ever very wise to give up on
Dickens. in my experience , a sudden panic about
my own ignorance is followed firstly by the
desperate desire to read nonfiction, and then,
usually very swiftly by a realization that any
nonfiction, and then, usually very swiftly by a
realization that any nonfiction reading I am going
to do is going to be hopelessly inadequate and partial.
If I knew I was going to die next week, then I’d
definitely be keen to read up on facts about the
afterlife, in the absence of any really authoritative
books on the subject (no recommendations, please),
then I think I’d rather read great fiction, something
that shoots for and maybe even hits the moon, than
a history of the House of Bourbon.”
Nick Hornby. More Baths, Less Talking
**
A 20th CENTURY AUTHOR HAVING FUN
jMost likely most of us have heard about the great
Artist Domenikos Theototokopoulos, better known as
El Greco. In John O’Hara’s 1934 novel Appointment in
Samara, there is a bootlegger named Al Greco.
**
OPENING TO DWIGHT GARNER’S REVIEW OF
PURE COLOUR by Sheila Heti
“Sheila Heti’s new novel, “Pure Colour,” is about a
young woman who turns into a leaf. ‘Unrequited love’s
a bore,’ Billie Holiday sang. So, it turns out, is photosynthesis.”
Dwight Garner. “Metaphysics Laced With Magic”
in The New York Times” (February 8, 2022)
**
ON READING IN CHINA
“Fiction only makes up about 7 percent of the printed
books sold in China,” Walsh points out, but “the
mainland’s internet literature boom makes it the
largest self-generating industry of unregulated,
free-market fiction in the world.” On sites hosting
millions of titles, some writers pound out 30,000
words a day! (“The Great Gatsby” is 47,000 words.)
Hundreds of millions of users spend countless hours
per week reading fantasy romances that are often more
than 6 million words long. “
Rectual in politics. "Via ovica
Washington Post (February 11,2022)
THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF WRITING HARDY BOYS
BOOKS UNDER THE CATCH-ALL PSEUDONYM FRANKLIN
W. DIXON
Most of the early volumes were written by Canadian
Leslie McFarlane, who authored nineteen of the first
twenty-five titles and co-authored volume 17 The Secret Warning, between 1927 and 1946[ Unlike many
other Syndicate ghostwriters, McFarlane was regarded
highly enough by the Syndicate that he was frequently
given advances of $25 or $50, and during the Depression,
when fees were lowered, he was paid $85 for each Hardy
Boys book when other Syndicate ghostwriters were
receiving only $75 for their productions.According
to McFarlane's family, he despised the series and
its characters.[
WIKIPEDIA
**
ON READING KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL
Kitchen Confidential is the knuckle-crack of a fighter
getting ready to wallop. I still catch my breath reading
his description of the palms of a fearsome chef, a line
that wouldn’t be out of place in Moby Dick: ‘The hideous
constellation of water-blisters, angry red welts from
grill marks, the old scars, the raw flesh where steam or
hot fat had made the skin simply roll off.’”
Helen Rosner. Anthony Bourdain: The Last Interview
(Brooklyn: Melville House, 2010)
**
ON CLOSE READING
: “Showmanship for Magicians is a handbook meant
to turn amateurs into professionals. Its subtitle
is Complete Discussions of Audience Appeals and Fundamentals of Showmanship and Presentation. I
held my first copy and solemnly turned the pages,
reading each sentence so slowly that it’s a miracle
I could remember what the verb was. The cover was
plain-faced – like as secret manifesto that should
be hidden under your mattress – and the pages were
thick as rags.”
Steve Martin. Born Standing Up (New York: Scribner, 2007)
**
LITERARY NOTE #40
“Scaffolds and derricks rise from the reeds to the clouds.”
Ah, well. Wallace Stevens did not write poetry for clods.
LJP
**
DOROTHY PARKER & CONVENTS
“Convents don’t teach you how to read; you have to
find out for yourself. At my convent we did have a
textbook, one that devoted a page and a half to
Adelaide Ann Proctor; but we couldn’t read Dickens;
he was vulgar, you know. But I read him and Thackeray,
and I’m the one woman you’ll ever know who’s read
every word of Charles Reade, the author of The Cloister the Hearth. But as for helping me in the outside world,
the convent taught me only that if you spit on a
pencil eraser it will erase ink.”:
Dorothy Parker in an interview with Marion Capron,
published in Writers at Work: The Paris Review interviews (NY: Viking Compass Edition, 1959)
‘*
Cool
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Of Clouds and Clods. . . Well done.
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Re: fiction vs non-fiction: A friend once remarked to me, “yeah, truth may be stranger than fiction but it’s not as satisfying.” Amen.
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