August 2010

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So Kim’s been off exploring the United Kingdom (but she’s such a good person that she left a bunch of posts for me to put on the blog while she’s gone, so you probably haven’t even missed her).  Anyway, among the many cool and literary places she’s visiting is Bath, famous to most of us as the setting of many a Jane Austen scene.  I’m sure she’ll have a lot to write about Bath and Austen when she gets back, but until then you can get your Austen fix with the following video which is incredibly wonderful and funny and brilliant and nuts.  My brother-in-law sent this to me originally and I loved it on first sight.

My favorite line?  ”Is that your blood?”  ”Oh . . . yes, some of it.”

I feel fairly certain Jane would have loved this.

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After spending the day at SFMOMA, I walked around a couple of corners and down a flight of stairs to quiet art gallery and bookstore, Crown Point Press.  The store is perfect for this neighborhood of galleries, a modern art museum, and the Academy of Arts.  With just under half the space devoted to books,  the offerings are used (as in ‘like new’ or ‘not newly published’) art books.  I found a Lichtenstein at SFMOMA that interested me, so I pulled out the catalogue from an exhibit of his work that occurred years ago and looked for similar paintings.  Once I noticed the price, $225, and the excellent condition of the book, I flipped through carefully.  The price made me wonder about whether or not I should take another look at the catalogues of art exhibits that I have shoved on bookshelves, maybe they are worth more than I thought.  More importantly, it reminded me that the exhibit catalogues are full of information, good ones aren’t just expensive picture books.  Crown Point Press has a wall full of luscious monographs and exhibit catalogues.

The bookseller was incredibly helpful.  While a good museum bookstore has a concentration of art books, what I have yet to find is a bookseller at a museum store.  Don’t take me wrong, people are often helpful at the stores, but they aren’t booksellers.  This woman was a bookseller who specialized in art.  I asked about an artist I heard about at the Getty Research Institute, Malvina Hoffman.  Actually, what I said was ‘there is an interesting artist that I’d love to find more information about and for the life of me, I can’t remember her name, but I’m sure her initials are MG.” (Note, the initials are MH, good grief.)   I apologized and said my memory has a new tendency to fail me, she replied “it’s only going to get worse” and then started pulling down books about women artists.  She went through several books while I told her Hoffman’s story trying to find something about my sculptor.  Coming up empty, I took her card to contact her the next time I start looking for books about Hoffman.  This is the store to contact if you need someone to keep an eye out for unique art books.

The art criticism and essay shelves were full of out of print gems.  Unfortunately, most of the books were pricey and I was too tired to evaluate if I should spend that much money.  In the end, I left empty handed, but of all of the stores I visited in San Francisco, it’s this little corner bookstore that I remember the most.

Crown Point Press

20 Hawthorne St.

San Francisco, CA

Tel:  415.974.6273

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Psst.  There’s a book giveaway contest going on over at my Facebook page.  If you like getting a free book now and then, or know someone who does, come on over and check it out.

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I just discovered my favorite author of the decade.  Maybe of the past several decades.

Every once in a while–say every five or ten years–I read a short story that blows me away. I still remember mulling over O’Henry’s “The Gift of the Magi” and Maupassant’s “The Necklace” (the MOST agonizing story ever written) as a fairly young kid, and Hemingway’s “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber” when I was a bit older, moving on and up through O’Connor’s “Everything That Rises Must Converge,” Shaw’s “The Girls in Their Summer Dresses,” and Olsen’s “Tell Me a Riddle” (which is arguably more novella than short story).

But nothing in recent years has blown me away like the two stories I just read, both by Nathan Englander.

”Free Fruit for Young Widows” was my first exposure to him.  I’d never even heard of Englander before, but I stumbled across this short story in The New Yorker. (You can still read it online on their website.)  I thought it was incredible, so I checked Englander’s short story collection For the Relief of Unbearable Urges out of the library.

The whole collection is worth reading but the first story, “The Twenty-Seventh Man” is simply one of the best things I’ve ever read in my life. Period. It’s compassionate, harrowing, funny, poignant, horrifying . . . all in a few pages. And should be taught in every high school in this country. (An aside: there’s a character in it who has autism–at least I think he does; it’s not stated–and it was the most original, compassionate portrayal of autism I’ve seen since Mark Haddon’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time.)

I’ve recommended these two Englander short stories to a bunch of people, ranging from Kim (who reads everything) to my father (who’s in his eighties) to my brother (who mostly reads scientific articles) and everyone has said it’s simply one of the best things he or she has ever read.

I don’t gush about a lot of modern writers, as anyone who reads these pages knows.  I was an English major in college, reading Dickens, Austen, Bronte and the like.  Most modern literature leaves me cold.  I don’t find the stories exciting or the people engaging.  It feels like the majority of short stories I read fall into the same pattern: a description of someone leading your basic life of quiet desperation, somewhat alienated from the people around him, with lots dialogue and details that sum up the meaninglessness of our daily pursuits, and a minor emotional epiphany at the end that leads to precisely nowhere.

But Englander tells a real story and he tells it like no one else.  His stories aren’t “familiar” but they are page-turners.  Frankly, I don’t need to recognize the boring, soul-sucking details of my own daily life in the stories I read: I’d much rather recognize something huge and painful about the way people torture and also love one another, about how compassion is the only healing force in the face of cruelty, about how parents can and should teach their children that, and about how we shouldn’t judge anyone until we know what his life has been.

Englander’s stories remind me of a beautiful and poignant quote from Olsen’s Tell Me a Riddle:

“Heritage.  How have we come from our savage past, how no longer to be savages–this to teach.  To look back and learn what humanizes–this to teach.  To smash all ghettos that divide us–not to go back, not to go back–this to teach.”

This is what Englander teaches.  Only he does it in the best way possible: by writing a story you can’t put down.

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Looking for a literary way to cap off the summer?  Pen Center USA and Stories joined forces to sponsor Lit Crawl II, a combination author reading and bar crawl along Sunset Blvd that starts at The Echo on Saturday, August 28th at 6PM. This takes the Tournament of Books one step further because these authors will be battling in person.  What is a Lit Crawl?  The eleven invited authors will have the opportunity to read for 8 minutes after which the audience will show their enthusiasum for the work by clapping (yours truly will be clapping hard for Dennis Danziger).  The author with the most applause wins.  I’m not sure what they’ll win, but I doubt it will cause them to jump into a higher income tax bracket.  The buzzer keepers will be the editors of our new literary magazine that the town is raving about, Slake Magazine.  Here are the authors anxious to enter the literary ring and duke it out with each other:  Neal Pollack, Allison Burnett, Katie Arnold, Dennis Danziger, Graham Moore, Gabrielle Calvocoressi, Samantha Dunn, Joseph Mattson, Edan Lepucki, James Greer and Rachel Resnick.

Following the reading, the party will progress to four locations–El Prado, Gold-Room, Little Joy and The Shortstop–with the authors and readers celebrating at each stop.  What a fun way to experience LA authors and meet your fellow Angeleno readers.  I’ll be there, let me know if you’re going to attend.

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