5.9.14

Margaret Atwood Joins the Future Library Project

Canadian author's new work will not be read for 100 years
Margaret Atwood
From Alison Flood (The Guardian):
Depending on perspective, it is an author's dream – or nightmare: Margaret Atwood will never know what readers think of the piece of fiction she is currently working on, because the unpublished, unread manuscript from the Man Booker prize-winning novelist will be locked away for the next 100 years.

Atwood has just been named as the first contributor to an astonishing new public artwork. The Future Library project, conceived by the award-winning young Scottish artist Katie Paterson, began, quietly, this summer, with the planting of a forest of 1,000 trees in Nordmarka, just outside Oslo. It will slowly unfold over the next century. Every year until 2114, one writer will be invited to contribute a new text to the collection, and in 2114, the trees will be cut down to provide the paper for the texts to be printed – and, finally, read.

"It is the kind of thing you either immediately say yes or no to. You don't think about it for very long," said Atwood, speaking from Copenhagen. "I think it goes right back to that phase of our childhood when we used to bury little things in the backyard, hoping that someone would dig them up, long in the future, and say, 'How interesting, this rusty old piece of tin, this little sack of marbles is. I wonder who put it there?'" [Read More]

Find Margaret Atwood on Amazon: US | UK

Also at A Piece of Monologue:
18.8.13

Margaret Atwood, MaddAddam

Ruth Scurr reviews Atwood's new novel in the TLS
Margaret Atwood
A review of Atwood's MaddAddam, from Ruth Scurr (TLS):
“The act of naming is the great and solemn consolation of mankind.” Margaret Atwood found this first epigraph for her William Empson lectures, published as Negotiating with the Dead: A writer on writing (2002), in Elias Canetti’s The Agony of Flies: Notes and notations (1992). The act of naming explains the peculiar title of Atwood’s new novel MaddAddam – the third volume of a dystopian sequence, so far including Oryx and Crake (reviewed in the TLS, May 16, 2003) and The Year of the Flood (TLS, September 18, 2009). The title MaddAddam looks and sounds like a stretched (or stuttered) version of the appellation “Madam”, but in Atwood’s dystopia it is the collective name for the grandmasters of an elaborate computer game: “EXTINCTATHON, Monitored by MaddAddam. Adam named the living animals, MaddAddam names the dead ones. Do you want to play?” [Read More]

Also at A Piece of Monologue:

Schlondorff and Pinter: The Handmaid's Tale

John Clute on Volker Schlondorff and Harold Pinter's film adaptation of Atwood's novel
A still from The Handmaid's Tale (dir. Volker Schlöndorff, 1990)
From a 1991 review published in the TLS:
For ten minutes there is some hope for Volker Schlondorff’s film of Margaret Atwood’s searching and claustrophobic novel of 1985. Only a few years from now, somewhere in a northern region of the United States, there has been a violent revolution. Inspired by a sudden loss of fertility in the human species, women-despising fundamentalists have come to power, and have reshaped society in their own insanely constrictive image. They call their terrible new world Gilead.

A young married couple attempt to escape across the border with their small daughter; the husband is killed, the child confiscated, and Kate, the brand-new widow (Natasha Richardson in flowing, nubile form), finds herself in a kind of concentration camp, where she will be taught to be a Handmaid; a breeder for the new elite. These initial scenes are shot with an icy sweeping clarity; just as in his film version of The Tin Drum, Schlondorff superbly evokes the moments just after the final calamity, the chaos and the stunned hush of zero hour, the deracinated despair of the exile.

Unfortunately, as soon as Kate begins to understand what it means to become a Handmaid, Schlondorff loses touch with the tale. It is, perhaps, not his fault, nor for that matter Atwood’s. In a work of sustained and concentrated prose, the dystopian abstractedness of the social setting helps to sharpen the arguments it conveys. But neither Schlondorff, nor Harold Pinter, whose screenplay is notably uneasy, show themselves capable of handling those implausibilities in the opened-out perspective of the film. [Read More]

Also at A Piece of Monologue:
31.10.12

Margaret Atwood on Byliner and Dystopias

A video discussion with The New York Times

The New York Times talks to Margaret Atwood about technology, storytelling, her serial novel "Positron," and other works. [Read More]

Also at A Piece of Monologue:
7.3.12

Margaret Atwood, In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination

Joyce Carol Oates reviews Atwood's new collection of essays and reviews
Margaret Atwood, In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination
Joyce Carol Oates reviews Margaret Atwood's new book, In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination, in the New York Review of Books:
Margaret Atwood’s eclectic and engaging miscellany of essays, reviews, introductions, and “tributes” is a literary memoir tracing the myriad links between science fiction and literature, and relating both to those archetypal forms and structures so famously anatomized by her University of Toronto professor Northrop Frye in The Anatomy of Criticism (1957). It is simultaneously a self-portrait of the artist as an inquisitive, questing, impressionable, and avid reader since childhood of a dazzling variety of popular and esoteric entertainments—from comic strips and comic books to classics of the genre by Jonathan Swift, H.G. Wells, Aldous Huxley, and George Orwell. Atwood’s intention is to break down the artificial distinctions between science fiction and “serious” literature by close readings of works by these writers as well as H. Rider Haggard’s She (1887), enormously popular in its time, Bryher’s Visa for Avalon (1965), Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go (2005), and Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness (1969) and The Birthday of the World and Other Stories (2002). [Read More]
Also at A Piece of Monologue:
28.6.11

Margaret Atwood's Reading List

A glimpse into Atwood's daily routines
Margaret Atwood. Photograph: George Whiteside
Heather Horn asks Margaret Atwood what she reads throughout her average day:
When I wake up in the morning I might check my email to see what gruesome things have come in from Europe, but I won't go to news sites. I don't like news too early in the day. I would rather have it filter in gradually. I might go for a walk with a friend and purchase a paper newspaper, which is very nice to have in a cafe. Then I might go online later in the day and look at a couple of newspapers or other news outlets or follow links that people have sent me. I listen to the radio, but around six o'clock in the evening.

I subscribe to and read a lot of magazines. Too many. Some of them are literary, like the London Review of Books, the New York Review of Books, the TLS sometimes, a number of little literary magazines. And some of them are scientific, environmental, and historical. When in airports I will buy Discover Magazine. When I'm in the U.K. I might buy the New Scientist. I might buy Scientific American or The Economist, and anything else that strikes my fancy. I might buy a Time or Newsweek or an Atlantic if they've got something I wish to read.

I sometimes watch YouTube items, which I find through Twitter. I have a large Twitter following. How did I get that? I don't know. I go on Twitter maybe once in a day, sometimes twice, sometimes never if I'm out of WiFi range, and see what people are telling me and so forth. I look up the URLs of things that look interesting. I've got two Internet browsers. I find it very helpful to have two, so I can look up urls on one that are mentioned on the other. I've got several news sites bookmarked.

But there's nothing except food and drink that I can't live without (I take these questions literally). Anything else is optional, although I would be quite upset if I couldn't read any books. I read books in print form or in in e-form: I've got a Kindle and I've got a Kobo. [Read More]

Also at A Piece of Monologue:

Writers on Twitter

A selection of literary figures you might want to follow
Margaret Atwood
The Accredited Online Colleges website has compiled a list of '50 Impressive Literary Figures You Should Follow on Twitter'. While not all of them are strictly 'literary', many of them are interesting, and there may be one or two you are not aware of. Here is a brief selection:
  • William Gibson: Of course one of cyberpunk’s progenitors would make his way to Twitter! William Gibson is generous with retweets and replies, but he does talk about his own work as well as things piquing his interest.
  • Doug Coupland: Most of the Generation X and Hey, Nostradamus! writer’s feed is occupied with brief thoughts and the occasional link.
  • Stephen Fry: Although known mainly as a comedic actor, Stephen Fry also happens to be an acclaimed author and mental health awareness activist — one with a beautifully funny, provocative Twitter.
  • Hugo Schwyzer: The Pasadena City College professor of gender studies and history is a prolific feminist and sociological commentator with an amazing oeuvre. His feed makes articles and insights quickly accessible for changemakers on the go.
  • Mignon Fogarty: Grammar Girl herself keeps a Twitter, carrying over the informative content found on her blog and in her podcast and books.
  • Paulo Coelho: With tweets in both Brazilian Portuguese and English, the celebrated, prolific Paulo Coelho uses his social media skills to touch a broad range of fans.
  • Arianna Huffington: Understandably, most of the publishing and media giantess’ tweets mostly have to do with politics and culture rather than writing and reading.
  • Augusten Burroughs: Twitter allows fans to step into the life of this popular memoirist, learning more about his projects and personal thoughts.
  • Chris Anderson: As the editor-in-chief of Wired, the incredibly popular Chris Anderson stands at the forefront of new media, science and technology journalism — a fact reflected right there in his feed.
  • Margaret Atwood: Critically-lauded, award-winning The Handmaid’s Tale author Margaret Atwood loves herself some retweets, but she also manages to slip talks about her own views, projects and events as well.
  • Tao Lin: Prolific poet, essayist and Vice columnist and cartoonist Tao Lin tweets some interesting observations and links to various works.

[Read the complete list]
14.3.11

Disjecta: This week's links

Your guide to this week's best cultural links
Samuel Beckett is now on Twitter: Follow him @samuelbbeckett

Literature:

Samuel Beckett on Twitter: Poet, playwright and novelist Samuel Beckett now has a presence on Twitter. Follow him for daily quotes, news, events and links to online content. Enjoy!
Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Beckett Documentary: A very rare treasure, well worth your time
Samuel Beckett: Debts and Legacies 2011
Samuel Beckett: Ends and Odds
Samuel Beckett and Silence
Samuel Beckett: One of Beckett's favourite chess books, Irvine Chernev's The Most Instructive Games of Chess Ever Played
Samuel Beckett: Portugese productions by Teatro Plástico
Samuel Beckett: Audio recording of David Warrilow performing A Piece of Monologue
Samuel Beckett: Madeleine Renard as Winnie in Samuel Beckett's Oh Les Beaux Jours (Happy Days)
Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot: The Video Game
Samuel Beckett on James Joyce
James Joyce on Hamlet
James Joyce: Fourth Annual James Joyce Research Colloquium, 14-16 April 2011
Barry Miles' top ten counterculture books
Judith Butler on Franz Kafka
George Orwell: The Guardian reviews A Life in Letters
Joyce Carol Oates: Los Angeles Times reviews Oates' recent memoir, A Widow's Story
Joyce Carol Oates: Elle interviews the American author about her new memoir, A Widow's Story
Philip Roth and Joyce Carol Oates receive National Humanities Awards
Philip Roth on Fact and Fiction
Philip Roth on God and Religion: 'I don't have a religious bone in my body'
Margaret Atwood: Atwood profiled as part of The Guardian's Top 100 Women series
J. M. Coetzee: Stephen Abell on Coetzee, suffering and the novel
Don DeLillo: American novelist reads from Mao II at a 2011 PEN event
The Great Gatsby as video game
Our favourite writers as Legos
Dante Alighieri's Death Mask

Philosophy & Critical Theory:

Assuming Gender: Second issue of the online academic journal is now free to download
Roland Barthes on the Labyrinth Metaphor
Jacques Lacan: Unpublished seminars
Why should we care about Immanuel Kant?
Lisa Appignanesi on the language of love
Gilles Deleuze University Lectures 1979-1987
Jacques Derrida: Television interview in which Derrida reflects on 'what comes before the question'
Judith Butler: Critical theorist profiled as part of The Guardian's Top 100 Women
Friedrich Nietzsche: Was Nietzsche the first psychologist?
Verso Book of Dissent: Competition

Theatre

Samuel Beckett: Conor Lovett to perform First Love and The End at the Samuel beckett: Out of the Archive festival
William Shakespeare: Helen Mirren: 'I want to play Hamlet!'
William Shakespeare: Was Hamlet a melancholy Dane? That is the question

Film:

J. G. Ballard: Christian Bale (Empire of the Sun) to reunite with Brad Anderson (The Machinist) on adaptation of Ballard's Concrete Island
Michel Gondry adapting Philip K. Dick's Ubik
Allen Ginsberg: Peter Bradshaw reviews Howl, a new biopic of the American Beat poet

Thank you to all link contributions, which can be found on the A Piece of Monologue Twitter page.
31.1.11

Disjecta: This week's links

Your guide to this week's best cultural links
Franz Kafka, The Sons (Schocken).
Design: Peter Mendelsund.

Literature:

Samuel Beckett: This week's Ends and Odds over at Samuel Beckett: Debts & Legacies
Patti Smith on Virginia Woolf
Stanley Fish: Adam Haslett reviews critic's new book, How to Write a Sentence and How to Read One
William Burroughs' Home Movies: Features Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg and others
Phillip Pullman: Call to defend libraries resounds around web
James Joyce reads Finnegans Wake
James Joyce: Ulysses, illustrated with historical documents and photographs
James Joyce: Frank Callanan on the political attitudes of Ireland's high modernist
J. D. Salinger's Private Passions
Can Literature be Philosophical? James Ryerson on the philosophical novel
Writers Obsessed with Writers
Margaret Atwood: A new collection of scholarly articles exploring Atwood's work
Joseph Conrad: Phil Mongredien on Joseph Conrad's classic novel of postcolonial corruption
W. G. Sebald: W. G. Sebald turned a walk through Suffolk into an extraordinary book. As a film inspired by the work is premiered, Stuart Jeffries retraces his steps

Philosophy & Critical Theory:

Susie Orbach: Orbach talks about bodies (podcast)
Continental Philosophy Bulletin Board: A crisp new design
Roland Barthes: Lori Soderlind reviews Barthes' Mourning Diary in the New York Times

Film:

Werner Herzog: In Conversation, New York, March 23rd, 2011

Art, Design & Photography

Franz Kafka: Peter Mendelsund shares his passion for Kafka, and some forthcoming designs to be released by Schocken
Joyce Carol Oates: Story of photographer Jane Yarborough Creech, whose work is featured on recent Oates memoir
Joris Karl Huysmans: À Rebours illustrated

Thank you to all link contributions, which can be found on the A Piece of Monologue Twitter page.
27.1.11

Margaret Atwood: The Robber Bride, The Blind Assassin, Oryx and Crake

A new collection of scholarly articles exploring Atwood's work
J. Brooks Bouson (editor), Margaret Atwood: The Robber Bride, The Blind Assassin, Oryx and Crake
In a bulletin for interesting new books being published this year, Conversational Reading is promoting J. Brooks Brouson's edited collection of essays on the work of Margaret Atwood. Simply entitled Margaret Atwood: The Robber Bride, The Blind Assassin, Oryx and Crake, it includes a critical discussion of some of the major themes in Atwood's work, from trauma, memory and mourning to parody, feminism and environmentalism. In all, a promising collection.

The book was published on 17 January 2011. I've gleaned the following from the Continuum website:

About the Collection

In this critical collection, well-known Atwood scholars offer original readings and critical re-evaluations of three Atwood masterpieces—The Robber Bride, The Blind Assassin, and Oryx and Crake. Providing new critical assessments of Atwood’s novels in language that is both lively and accessible, Margaret Atwood reveals not only Atwood’s ongoing and evolving engagement with the issues that have long preoccupied her—ranging from the power politics of human relationships to a concern with human rights and the global environment—but also her increasing formal complexity as a novelist. If Atwood is a novelist who is part trickster, illusionist and con-artist, as she has often described herself, she is also, as the essays in this critical collection show, an author-ethicist with a finely honed sense of moral responsibility.

Contents

Series Preface \ Acknowledgments \ 1. Introduction: Negotiating with Margaret Atwood J. Brooks Bouson \ Part I: The Robber Bride (1993) 2. Magical Realism in The Robber Bride and Other Texts Sharon R. Wilson \ 3. Parodic Border Crossings in Atwood’s The Robber Bride Hilde Staels \ 4. You’re History: Living with Trauma in The Robber Bride Laurie Vickroy \ Part II: The Blind Assassin (2000) 5. “Was I My Sister’s Keeper?” The Blind Assassin and Problematic Feminisms Fiona Tolan \ 6. Narrative Multiplicity and the Multi-layered Self in Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin Magali Cornier Michael \ 7. “If You Look Long Enough”: Photography, Memory, and Mourning in The Blind Assassin Shuli Barzilai \ Part III: Oryx and Crake (2003) 8. Moral/Environmental Debt in Margaret Atwood’s Payback and Oryx and Crake Shannon Hengen \ 9. Problematic Paradice: Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake Karen Stein \ 10. The Apocalyptic Imagination in Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake Mark Bosco \ Notes on Chapters \ Works Cited \ Further Reading \ Notes on Contributors \ Index

Reviews

We welcome this new collection of essays on Margaret Atwood’s later novels, the first to include a substantial section on Oryx and Crake. J.Brooks Bouson has assembled an international team of major Atwood scholars who show us fascinating new ways of understanding Atwood’s fiction by highlighting features which range from magic realism to environmentalism and debt, trauma narratives, and her apocalyptic imagination. The critical inventiveness of these essays matches Atwood’s own irrepressibly creative storytelling.

Coral Ann Howells, Professor Emerita, University of Reading, Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of English Studies, University of London, UK and co-editor of the Cambridge History of Canadian Literature (CUP, 2009)
Publisher's website: Continuum

Also at A Piece of Monologue
28.11.10

Disjecta: This week's links

Your guide to this week's best cultural links
Joy Division, 'She's Lost Control'/'Atmosphere' single. Art direction: Peter Saville.

Literature:

100 Notable Books of 2010: An annual round-up from the New York Times

Margaret Atwood: 'Human creativity is not confined to just a few areas of life. The techno-scientific world has some of the most creative people you'll ever meet.'
Robert McCrum interviews Atwood in The Observer

Irish Company: James Joyce and Samuel Beckett: Friedhelm Rathjen embarks on a cycling tour of Ireland in search of his literary heroes

James Joyce's burnt kidney breakfast: A selection of quotations from Ulysses, compiled by Biblioklept.

William S. Burroughs: Dangerous Minds compiles a number of biographical sources on Burroughs' collaboration with Nirvana frontman, Kurt Cobain

Saul Bellow: 'Of course, readers of Bellow will plunge into these letters eager to trace the making of a writer, and in this they will not be disappointed.' John Banville reviews Saul Bellow's Letters in The Observer

Philip K. Dick: A map of Philip K. Dick's Hugo Award-winning The Man in the High Castle

Norman Mailer: The New York Times profiles Norris Church Mailer, 'artist and ally' of the American novelist, who passed away recently

Paul Celan: Ian Pindar celebrates the German poet on what would have been his 90th birthday

Patti Smith: Musician reflects on winning National Book Award for Just Kids, a non-fiction work based on her relationship with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe

Tom Waits: The Guardian reports that the American musician is planning to publish a collection of his poetry. Hard Ground will be published by University of Texas Press in March 2011.

Philosophy & Critical Theory:

Assuming Gender: This year's annual lecture is by Professor Mandy Merck, entitled 'The Question of Caster Semenya: Gender and the Level Playing Field'. 01 December from 4.30 at Cardiff University. Free to attend.

Noam Chomsky: Chomsky is due to speak at Cardiff University on 11 March 2011. More details to be confirmed.

Theatre:

Samuel Beckett: The Guardian reviews Michael Lawrence's production, Krapp, 39, inspired by Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape

Franz Kafka: Two British comedians, Tom Basden and Tim Key, star in Joseph K., a darkly comic adaptation of Kafka's The Trial

Music

David Bowie: BBC's 1975 Omnibus documentary, Cracked Actor, available online

Joy Division: Peter Saville and Studio Parris Wakefield's beautiful design work for the Joy Division back catalogue

Thank you to all link contributions, which can be found on the A Piece of Monologue Twitter page.
10.11.10

The Handmaid's Tale celebrates 25th Anniversary

Woman's Hour discusses Margaret Atwood's dystopian science fiction classic
Margaret Atwood is interviewed on BBC's Woman's Hour
This year marks the 25th anniversary of Margaret Atwood’s landmark science fiction novel, The Handmaid’s Tale. Winner of numerous awards, including the 1986 Booker Prize, the novel imagines an alternative America of the near future. Set in the Republic of Gilead, where pollution has sterilized most of the female population, a class struggle arises for the ownership and dominion over women who remain fertile. The protagonist, Kate, is captured while attempting to cross the border into Canada with her family. As she is unaffected by pollutants, she is separated from her husband and daughter, and becomes an enforced surrogate mother for another family. Her name is changed to Offred and she becomes a Handmaid, a mutated functionary of Old Testament values, expected to provide children for a Commander and his wife.

Atwood’s dark reflections on gender roles and sexual politics are often read as a satirical snapshot of the 1980s American landscape, and the novel has since become a central text in the classroom. In 1990, her dystopian vision found its way onto the silver screen, starring Faye Dunaway and Robert Duvall. We might even see some trace of the book’s influence on contemporary Hollywood today, in dystopic science fiction enterprises like Children of Men (2006). The themes of the novel, which run from ecological catastrophe, to human rights, to religious fundamentalism, are perhaps more relevant now than ever, and have assumed a new kind of political urgency. The Handmaid’s Tale is a cautionary book. In a tradition that includes Huxley’s Brave New World and Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, Margaret Atwood’s warning of the future is perhaps just as much a warning for the present.

Also published on The Spectator Book Blog

Woman's Hour celebrates the Anniversary

BBC Radio 4 celebrates the twenty-fifth anniversary of Magaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale on Woman's Hour: 'Atwood’s dystopian classic The Handmaid’s Tale imagines a future America under the violently oppressive rule of a far-right Christian sect. Women are back in the home and divided into domestic and reproductive functions, branded by coloured robes. They are banned from working, having money, or even reading and writing, and the fertile are forced to provide children for the elite, on pain of death. The book was a huge global success and is still regarded as a ground-breaking work of fiction. 25 years on, Margaret Atwood speaks to Jenni about why its central message has never been more relevant, with the journalist and literary critic Alex Clark.' [Read more]

Source: Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4, 10 November 2010
16.5.10

Disjecta: This week's links

Design by Roi Driscoll

This week, Margaret Atwood boycotts the boycott, Mrs Dalloway celebrates her 85th birthday and Woody Allen reflects on ageing and death. A free academic has also been launched online, exploring Samuel Beckett's work in English and French. Alain de Botton has commissioned a series of modernist buildings to be used as British holiday homes. And graphic designer Roi Driscoll has contributed a desktop wallpaper to One Down, One Up, inspired by Miles Davis and Haruki Murakami. Enjoy!

Literature:

Margaret Atwood: Boycotter of Boycotts
Samuel Beckett: A new online and bilingual academic journal, Limit(e) Beckett
Samuel Beckett: What do Nick Clegg and Beckett have in common?
Samuel Beckett: Review of Conversations between Samuel Beckett and Bram van Velde
Philip K. Dick: Film trailer for The Adjustment Bureau, based on a Dick short story
Don DeLillo: News on another film adaptation, this time David Cronenberg's Cosmopolis
Anthony Burgess: Celebrating the anniversary of A Clockwork Orange's publication
Virginia Woolf: Mrs Dalloway celebrates 85th anniversary
James Joyce: Copy of Finnegans Wake goes on auction
Happy 50th Anniversary, Ambit Magazine
Wiki-Books: Creating customized books from Wikipedia
Is poetry still relevant?: From an anxiety of influence to an anxiety of relevance
Waterstones Bookstore Rebrand

Philosophy & Critical Theory:

Jacques Lacan: Video lectures and discussion from Lacan.com
Michel Eyquem de Montaigne: A Philosopher of Life, Part 1
Cyborg Theory, Cyborg Practice

Theatre:

Samuel Beckett: Sir Ian McKellen mistaken for homeless man outside Godot

Film:

Woody Allen: Allen cheerfully reflects on the trauma of ageing and death
David Lynch: New commercial for Dior's Lady Blue Shanghai, starring Marion Cotillard

Music:

Jazz: The Dave Brubeck Quartet performs 'Take Five' in London, 1964
Jazz: Roi Driscoll's exclusive desktop wallpaper, designed for One Down, One Up
Joy Division: Peter Saville's design for Unknown Pleasures as audio visualizer

Art:

Architecture: Alain de Botton commissions modernist holiday homes
Avigdor ArikhaThe Guardian profiles artist and friend of Samuel Beckett
J. G. Ballard: Simon O'Carrigan's digital montage, The Drowned World
Dear Diary Exhibition


Thank you to all link contributors, who can be found on the
A Piece of Monologue Twitter page.
11.4.10

Disjecta: This week's links

Photograph: Richard Beymer

Welcome to a bumper edition of Disjecta! I've spent the last three weeks in Los Angeles, so haven't been able to update A Piece of Monologue as much as I would have liked. But I did manage to post links on Twitter from time to time, so I've gathered together the best of them here. Included is an original piece of writing by Joyce Carol Oates, published in the New Yorker; there's an article by Richard Crary on Christopher Rick's Beckett's Dying Words; and your guide to the best literary T-shirts this spring. As if that wasn't enough, there's a selection of links related to American filmmaker David Lynch, whose Twin Peaks television series celebrated its twentieth anniversary this week.

Literature:

Paul Auster: This month's featured artist
Paul Auster: James Warner on The Music of Chance
Paul Auster: Auster on continual commissions for prefaces
Don DeLillo: Tom LeClair on DeLillo's novel, Mao II
Don DeLillo: Hermione Hoby of The Observer on Point Omega
Joyce Carol Oates: Original piece, 'I.D.' in the New Yorker
Joyce Carol Oates: Interviewed in The Paris Review
Great Novels of Waste
William Faulkner reads As I Lay Dying
William Faulkner: On Faulkner's The Wishing Tree
Writing in a Room of One's Own
Whatever happened to Modernism?
Margaret Atwood: 'You don't deke Margaret'
Margaret Atwood: On the Twittersphere
Will Self: On Self's Wilde homage, Dorian
Peter Orlovsky is Unwell
Faber & Faber Catalogue 1951
Literary T-Shirts: Spring Round-Up
William S. Burroughs: Dead Fingers Talk: The Tape Experiments
William S. Burroughs: A selection of links celebrating Naked Lunch
Samuel Beckett: On Faber's new edition of Beckett's poetry
Samuel Beckett: Richard Crary on Christopher Ricks' Beckett study
Sam Shepard: Actor and playwright's regret at never meeting Samuel Beckett
James Joyce: The enduring allure of Finnegans Wake
Paul Celan: ReadySteadyBook on Under the Dome: Walks with Paul Celan
50 Places to Find Literary Criticism Online

Philosophy & Critical Theory:

Søren Kierkegaard: Clare Carlisle on Fear and Trembling
Judith Butler: Symposium video
Slavoj Žižek: LRB on Žižek's critiques of films he hasn't seen
Academia.edu: A social-networking site for academics

Film:

David Lynch: A new David Lynch website, Industrial Symphony
David Lynch: Interviewed on The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder in 1997
David Lynch: The official website at davidlynch.com
Paul Shrader: Taxi Driver writer donates to Harry Ransom Center
Stanley Kubrick: Playing Chess with Kubrick
Werner Herzog: A review of Herzog's Book of a Lifetime: Walking on Ice
Alfred Hitchcock: Secrets of the Psycho shower
Alfred Hitchcock: BFI celebrates 50th Anniversary of Psycho with a season of films

Television:

David Lynch: Andrew Anthony on the legacy of Twin Peaks, 20 years on
David Lynch: A History of Twin Peaks on home video

Theatre:

William Shakespeare: Lost play, Double Falsehood
William Shakespeare: Shakespeare and Wales Symposium this April
William Shakespeare: Hamlet at the MET

Etc.:

A Piece of Monologue: Interview with Design Feaster
iPadPeek: See how the iPad displays websites


Thank you to all link contributors, who can be found on the
A Piece of Monologue Twitter page.
20.2.10

Ten Rules for Writing Fiction

Leading writers and critics offer their advice

The Guardian has helpfully distilled the wisdom of some of the world's most distinguished contemporary writers, and published a self-help guide to coax aspiring novelists to put pen to paper. The article, published in two parts, asked a diverse range of authors for their ten rules for writing fiction. Here are just a few that caught my eye:

Will Self:

Will Self1. Don't look back until you've written an entire draft, just begin each day from the last sentence you wrote the preceeding day. This prevents those cringing feelings, and means that you have a substantial body of work before you get down to the real work which is all in . . .

2. The edit.

3. Always carry a notebook. And I mean always. The short-term memory only retains information for three minutes; unless it is committed to paper you can lose an idea for ever.

4. Stop reading fiction – it's all lies anyway, and it doesn't have anything to tell you that you don't know already (assuming, that is, you've read a great deal of fiction in the past; if you haven't you have no business whatsoever being a writer of fiction).

5. You know that sickening feeling of inadequacy and over-exposure you feel when you look upon your own empurpled prose? Relax into the awareness that this ghastly sensation will never, ever leave you, no matter how successful and publicly lauded you become. It is intrinsic to the real business of writing and should be cherished.

6. Live life and write about life. Of the making of many books there is ­indeed no end, but there are more than enough books about books.

7. By the same token remember how much time people spend watching TV. If you're writing a novel with a contemporary setting there need to be long passages where nothing happens save for TV watching: "Later, George watched Grand Designs while eating HobNobs. Later still he watched the shopping channel for a while . . ."

8. The writing life is essentially one of solitary confinement – if you can't deal with this you needn't apply.

9. Oh, and not forgetting the occasional beating administered by the sadistic guards of the imagination.

10. Regard yourself as a small corporation of one. Take yourself off on team-building exercises (long walks). Hold a Christmas party every year at which you stand in the corner of your writing room, shouting very loudly to yourself while drinking a bottle of white wine. Then masturbate under the desk. The following day you will feel a deep and cohering sense of embarrassment.

Joyce Carol Oates:
    Joyce Carol Oates
1. Don't try to anticipate an "ideal reader" – there may be one, but he/she is reading someone else.

2. Don't try to anticipate an "ideal reader" – except for yourself perhaps, sometime in the future.

3. Be your own editor/critic. Sympathetic but merciless!

4. Unless you are writing something very avant-garde – all gnarled, snarled and "obscure" – be alert for possibilities of paragraphing.

5. Unless you are writing something very post-modernist – self-conscious, self-reflexive and "provocative" – be alert for possibilities of using plain familiar words in place of polysyllabic "big" words.

6. Keep in mind Oscar Wilde: "A little sincerity is a dangerous thing, and a great deal of it is absolutely fatal."

7. Keep a light, hopeful heart. But expect the worst.

Magaret Atwood:
    Margaret Atwood
1. Take a pencil to write with on aeroplanes. Pens leak. But if the pencil breaks, you can't sharpen it on the plane, because you can't take knives with you. Therefore: take two pencils.

2. If both pencils break, you can do a rough sharpening job with a nail file of the metal or glass type.

3. Take something to write on. Paper is good. In a pinch, pieces of wood or your arm will do.

4. If you're using a computer, always safeguard new text with a memory stick.

5. Do back exercises. Pain is distracting.

6. Hold the reader's attention. (This is likely to work better if you can hold your own.) But you don't know who the reader is, so it's like shooting fish with a slingshot in the dark. What fascinates A will bore the pants off B.

7. You most likely need a thesaurus, a rudimentary grammar book, and a grip on reality. This latter means: there's no free lunch. Writing is work. It's also gambling. You don't get a pension plan. Other people can help you a bit, but essentially you're on your own. Nobody is making you do this: you chose it, so don't whine.

8. You can never read your own book with the innocent anticipation that comes with that first delicious page of a new book, because you wrote the thing. You've been backstage. You've seen how the rabbits were smuggled into the hat. Therefore ask a reading friend or two to look at it before you give it to anyone in the publishing business. This friend should not be someone with whom you have a romantic relationship, unless you want to break up.

9. Don't sit down in the middle of the woods. If you're lost in the plot or blocked, retrace your steps to where you went wrong. Then take the other road. And/or change the person. Change the tense. Change the opening page.

10. Prayer might work. Or reading something else. Or a constant visual­isation of the holy grail that is the finished, published version of your resplendent book.

Read more:
From The Guardian, 20 February 2010:
  • 'Ten rules for writing fiction', part 1: Elmore Leonard, Diana Athill, Margaret Atwood, Roddy Doyle, Helen Dunmore, Geoff Dyer, Anne Enright, Richard Ford, Jonathan Franzen, Esther Freud, Neil Gaiman, David Hare, PD James, AL Kennedy
  • 'Ten rules for writing fiction', part 2: Hilary Mantel, Michael Moorcock, Michael Morpurgo, Andrew Motion, Joyce Carol Oates, Annie Proulx, Philip Pullman, Ian Rankin, Will Self, Helen Simpson, Zadie Smith, Colm Tóibín, Rose Tremain, Sarah Waters, Jeanette Winterson