Thursday, January 28, 2010

Another Giant Has Fallen

Unfortunately, the literary world has lost another great today. J.D. Salinger has passed away at the age of 91 after becoming one the most renowned post-war American writers as well as one of the most elusive.

For a proper good-bye to Salinger I've decided to re-post Charles McGrath's obituary that ran in today's New York Times in full:

J. D. Salinger, Literary Recluse, Dies at 91

Published: January 28, 2010

J. D. Salinger, who was thought at one time to be the most important American writer to emerge since World War II but who then turned his back on success and adulation, becoming the Garbo of letters, famous for not wanting to be famous, died on Wednesday at his home in Cornish, N.H., where he had lived in seclusion for more than 50 years. He was 91.

Mr. Salinger’s literary representative, Harold Ober Associates, announced the death, saying it was of natural causes. “Despite having broken his hip in May,” the agency said, “his health had been excellent until a rather sudden decline after the new year. He was not in any pain before or at the time of his death.”

Mr. Salinger’s literary reputation rests on a slender but enormously influential body of published work: the novel “The Catcher in the Rye,” the collection “Nine Stories” and two compilations, each with two long stories about the fictional Glass family: “Franny and Zooey” and “Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction.”

“Catcher” was published in 1951, and its very first sentence, distantly echoing Mark Twain, struck a brash new note in American literature: “If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is where I was born and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth.”

Though not everyone, teachers and librarians especially, was sure what to make of it, “Catcher” became an almost immediate best seller, and its narrator and main character, Holden Caulfield, a teenager newly expelled from prep school, became America’s best-known literary truant since Huckleberry Finn.

With its cynical, slangy vernacular voice (Holden’s two favorite expressions are “phony” and “goddam”), its sympathetic understanding of adolescence and its fierce if alienated sense of morality and distrust of the adult world, the novel struck a nerve in cold war America and quickly attained cult status, especially among the young. Reading “Catcher” used to be an essential rite of passage, almost as important as getting your learner’s permit.

The novel’s allure persists to this day, even if some of Holden’s preoccupations now seem a bit dated, and it continues to sell more than 250,000 copies a year in paperback. Mark David Chapman, who killed John Lennon in 1980, even said the explanation for his act could be found in the pages of “The Catcher in the Rye.” In 1974 Philip Roth wrote, “The response of college students to the work of J. D. Salinger indicates that he, more than anyone else, has not turned his back on the times but, instead, has managed to put his finger on whatever struggle of significance is going on today between self and culture.”

Many critics were more admiring of “Nine Stories,” which came out in 1953 and helped shape writers like Mr. Roth, John Updike and Harold Brodkey. The stories were remarkable for their sharp social observation, their pitch-perfect dialogue (Mr. Salinger, who used italics almost as a form of musical notation, was a master not of literary speech but of speech as people actually spoke it) and the way they demolished whatever was left of the traditional architecture of the short story — the old structure of beginning, middle, end — for an architecture of emotion, in which a story could turn on a tiny alteration of mood or irony. Mr. Updike said he admired “that open-ended Zen quality they have, the way they don’t snap shut.”

Mr. Salinger also perfected the great trick of literary irony — of validating what you mean by saying less than, or even the opposite of, what you intend. Orville Prescott wrote in The New York Times in 1963, “Rarely if ever in literary history has a handful of stories aroused so much discussion, controversy, praise, denunciation, mystification and interpretation.”

As a young man Mr. Salinger yearned ardently for just this kind of attention. He bragged in college about his literary talent and ambitions, and wrote swaggering letters to Whit Burnett, the editor of Story magazine. But success, once it arrived, paled quickly for him. He told the editors of Saturday Review that he was “good and sick” of seeing his photograph on the dust jacket of “The Catcher in the Rye” and demanded that it be removed from subsequent editions. He ordered his agent to burn any fan mail. In 1953 Mr. Salinger, who had been living on East 57th Street in Manhattan, fled the literary world altogether and moved to a 90-acre compound on a wooded hillside in Cornish. He seemed to be fulfilling Holden’s desire to build himself “a little cabin somewhere with the dough I made and live there for the rest of my life,” away from “any goddam stupid conversation with anybody.”

He seldom left, except occasionally to vacation in Florida or to visit William Shawn, the almost equally reclusive former editor of The New Yorker. Avoiding Mr. Shawn’s usual (and very public) table at the Algonquin Hotel, they would meet under the clock at the old Biltmore Hotel, the rendezvous for generations of prep-school and college students.

After Mr. Salinger moved to New Hampshire his publications slowed to a trickle and soon stopped completely. “Franny and Zooey” and “Raise High the Roof Beam,” both collections of material previously published in The New Yorker, came out in 1961 and 1963, and the last work of Mr. Salinger’s to appear in print was “Hapworth 16, 1924,” a 25,000-word story that took up most of the June 19, 1965, issue of The New Yorker.

In 1997 Mr. Salinger agreed to let Orchises Press, a small publisher in Alexandria, Va., bring out “Hapworth” in book form, but he backed out of the deal at the last minute. He never collected the rest of his stories or allowed any of them to be reprinted in textbooks or anthologies. One story, “Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut,” was turned into “My Foolish Heart,” a movie so bad that Mr. Salinger was never tempted to sell film rights again.

Befriended, Then Betrayed

In the fall of 1953 he befriended some local teenagers and allowed one of them to interview him for what he assumed would be an article on the high school page of a local paper, The Claremont Daily Eagle. The article appeared instead as a feature on the editorial page, and Mr. Salinger felt so betrayed that he broke off with the teenagers and built a six-and-a-half-foot fence around his property.

He seldom spoke to the press again, except in 1974 when, trying to fend off the unauthorized publication of his uncollected stories, he told a reporter from The Times: “There is a marvelous peace in not publishing. It’s peaceful. Still. Publishing is a terrible invasion of my privacy. I like to write. I love to write. But I write just for myself and my own pleasure.”

And yet the more he sought privacy, the more famous he became, especially after his appearance on the cover of Time in 1961. For years it was a sort of journalistic sport for newspapers and magazines to send reporters to New Hampshire in hopes of a sighting. As a young man Mr. Salinger had a long, melancholy face and deep soulful eyes, but now, in the few photographs that surfaced, he looked gaunt and gray, like someone in an El Greco painting. He spent more time and energy avoiding the world, it was sometimes said, than most people do in embracing it, and his elusiveness only added to the mythology growing up around him.

Depending on one’s point of view, he was either a crackpot or the American Tolstoy, who had turned silence itself into his most eloquent work of art. Some believed he was publishing under an assumed name, and for a while in the late 1970s, William Wharton, author of “Birdy,” was rumored to be Mr. Salinger, writing under another name, until it turned out that William Wharton was instead a pen name for the writer Albert du Aime.

In 1984 the British literary critic Ian Hamilton approached Mr. Salinger with the notion of writing his biography. Not surprisingly, Mr. Salinger turned him down, saying he had “borne all the exploitation and loss of privacy I can possibly bear in a single lifetime.” Mr. Hamilton went ahead anyway, and in 1986, Mr. Salinger took him to court to prevent the use of quotations and paraphrases from unpublished letters. The case went all the way to the Supreme Court, and to the surprise of many, Mr. Salinger eventually won, though not without some cost to his cherished privacy. (In June 2009 he also sued Fredrik Colting, the Swedish author and publisher of a novel said to be a sequel to “The Catcher in the Rye.” In July a federal judge indefinitely enjoined publication of the book.)

Mr. Salinger’s privacy was further punctured in 1998 and again in 2000 with the publication of memoirs by, first, Joyce Maynard — with whom he had a 10-month affair in 1973, when Ms. Maynard was a college freshman — and then his daughter, Margaret. Some critics complained that both women were trying to exploit and profit from their history with Mr. Salinger, and Mr. Salinger’s son, Matthew, wrote in a letter to The New York Observer that his sister had “a troubled mind,” and that he didn’t recognize the man portrayed in her account. Both books nevertheless added a creepy, Howard Hughesish element to the Salinger legend.

Mr. Salinger was controlling and sexually manipulative, Ms. Maynard wrote, and a health nut obsessed with homeopathic medicine and with his diet (frozen peas for breakfast, undercooked lamb burger for dinner). Ms. Salinger said that her father was pathologically self-centered and abusive toward her mother, and to the homeopathy and food fads she added a long list of other enthusiasms: Zen Buddhism, Vedanta Hinduism, Christian Science, Scientology and acupuncture. Mr. Salinger drank his own urine, she wrote, and sat for hours in an orgone box.

But was he writing? The question obsessed Salingerologists, and in the absence of real evidence, theories multiplied. He hadn’t written a word for years. Or, like the character in the Stanley Kubrick film “The Shining,” he wrote the same sentence over and over again. Or like Gogol at the end of his life, he wrote prolifically but then burned it all. Ms. Maynard said she believed there were at least two novels locked away in a safe, though she had never seen them.

Early Life

Jerome David Salinger was born in Manhattan on New Year’s Day, 1919, the second of two children. His sister, Doris, who died in 2001, was for many years a buyer in the dress department at Bloomingdale’s. Like the Glasses, the Salinger children were the product of a mixed marriage. Their father, Sol, was a Jew, the son of a rabbi, but sufficiently assimilated that he made his living importing both cheese and ham. Their mother, Marie Jillisch, was of Irish descent, born in Scotland, but changed her first name to Miriam to appease her in-laws. The family was living in Harlem when Mr. Salinger was born, but then, as Sol Salinger’s business prospered, moved to West 82nd Street and then to Park Avenue.

Never much of a student, Mr. Salinger, then known as Sonny, attended the progressive McBurney School on the Upper West Side. (He told the admissions office his interests were dramatics and tropical fish.) But he flunked out after two years and in 1934 was packed off to Valley Forge Military Academy, in Wayne, Pa., which became the model for Holden’s Pencey Prep. Like Holden, Mr. Salinger was the manager of the school fencing team, and he also became the literary editor of the school yearbook, Crossed Swords, and wrote a school song that was either a heartfelt pastiche of 19th-century sentiment or else a masterpiece of irony:

Hide not thy tears on this last day

Your sorrow has no shame;

To march no more midst lines of gray;

No longer play the game.

Four years have passed in joyful ways — Wouldst stay those old times dear?

Then cherish now these fleeting days,

The few while you are here.

In 1937, after a couple of unenthusiastic weeks at New York University, Mr. Salinger traveled with his father to Austria and Poland, where the father’s plan was for him to learn the ham business. Deciding that wasn’t for him, he returned to America and drifted through a term or so at Ursinus College in Collegeville, Pa. Fellow students remember him striding around campus in a black chesterfield with velvet collar and announcing that he was going to write the Great American Novel.

Mr. Salinger’s most sustained exposure to higher education was an evening class he took at Columbia in 1939, taught by Whit Burnett, and under Mr. Burnett’s tutelage he managed to sell a story, “The Young Folks,” to Story magazine. He subsequently sold stories to Esquire, Collier’s and The Saturday Evening Post — formulaic work that gave little hint of real originality.

In 1941, after several rejections, Mr. Salinger finally cracked The New Yorker, the ultimate goal of any aspiring writer back then, with a story, “Slight Rebellion Off Madison,” that was an early sketch of what became a scene in “The Catcher in the Rye.” But the magazine then had second thoughts, apparently worried about seeming to encourage young people to run away from school, and held the story for five years — an eternity even for The New Yorker — before finally publishing it in 1946, buried in the back of an issue.

Meanwhile Mr. Salinger had been drafted. He served with the Counter-Intelligence Corps of the Fourth Infantry Division, whose job was to interview Nazi deserters and sympathizers, and was stationed for a while in Tiverton, Devon, the setting of “For Esmé — with Love and Squalor,” probably the most deeply felt of the “Nine Stories.” On June 6, 1944, he landed at Utah Beach, and he later saw action during the Battle of the Bulge.

In 1945 he was hospitalized for “battle fatigue” — often a euphemism for a breakdown — and after recovering he stayed on in Europe past the end of the war, chasing Nazi functionaries. He married a German woman, very briefly — a doctor about whom biographers have been able to discover very little. Her name was Sylvia, Margaret Salinger said, but Mr. Salinger always called her Saliva.

A Different Kind of Writer

Back in New York, Mr. Salinger moved into his parents’ apartment and, having never stopped writing, even during the war, resumed his career. “A Perfect Day for Bananafish,” austere, mysterious and Mr. Salinger’s most famous and still most discussed story, appeared in The New Yorker in 1948 and suggested, not wrongly, that he had become a very different kind of writer. And like so many writers he eventually found in The New Yorker not just an outlet but a kind of home and developed a close relationship with the magazine’s editor, William Shawn, himself famously shy and agoraphobic — a kindred spirit. In 1961 Mr. Salinger dedicated “Franny and Zooey” to Shawn, writing, “I urge my editor, mentor and (heaven help him) closest friend, William Shawn, genius domus of The New Yorker, lover of the long shot, protector of the unprolific, defender of the hopelessly flamboyant, most unreasonably modest of born great artist-editors, to accept this pretty skimpy-looking book.”

As a young writer Mr. Salinger was something of a ladies’ man and dated, among others, Oona O’Neill, the daughter of Eugene O’Neilland the future wife of Charlie Chaplin. In 1953 he met Claire Douglas, the daughter of the British art critic Robert Langdon Douglas, who was then a 19-year-old Radcliffe sophomore who in many ways resembled Franny Glass (or vice versa); they were married two years later. (Ms. Douglas had married and divorced in the meantime.) Margaret was born in 1955, and Matthew, now an actor and film producer, was born in 1960. But the marriage soon turned distant and isolating, and in 1966, Ms. Douglas sued for divorce, claiming that “a continuation of the marriage would seriously injure her health and endanger her reason.”

The affair with Ms. Maynard, then a Yale freshman, began in 1972, after Mr. Salinger read an article she had written for The New York Times Magazine titled “An 18-Year-Old Looks Back on Life.” They moved in together but broke up abruptly after 10 months when Mr. Salinger said he had no desire for more children. For a while in the ’80s Mr. Salinger was involved with the actress Elaine Joyce, and late in that decade he married Colleen O’Neill, a nurse, who is considerably younger than he is. Not much is known about the marriage because Ms. O’Neill embraced her husband’s code of seclusion.

Besides his son, Matthew, Mr. Salinger is survived by Ms. O’Neill and his daughter, Margaret, as well as three grandsons. His literary agents said in a statement that “in keeping with his lifelong, uncompromising desire to protect and defend his privacy, there will be no service, and the family asks that people’s respect for him, his work and his privacy be extended to them, individually and collectively, during this time.”

“Salinger had remarked that he was in this world but not of it,” the statement said. “His body is gone but the family hopes that he is still with those he loves, whether they are religious or historical figures, personal friends or fictional characters.”

As for the fictional family the Glasses, Mr. Salinger had apparently been writing about them nonstop. Ms. Maynard said she saw shelves of notebooks devoted to the family. In Mr. Salinger’s fiction the Glasses first turn up in “A Perfect Day for Bananafish,” in which Seymour, the oldest son and family favorite, kills himself during his honeymoon. Characters who turn out in retrospect to have been Glasses appear glancingly in “Nine Stories,” but the family saga really begins to be elaborated upon in “Franny and Zooey,” “Raise High the Roof Beam” and “Hapworth,” the long short story, which is ostensibly a letter written by Seymour from camp when he is just 7 years old but already reading several languages and lusting after Mrs. Happy, wife of the camp owner.

Readers also began to learn about the parents, Les and Bessie, long-suffering ex-vaudevillians, and Seymour’s siblings Franny, Zooey, Buddy, Walt, Waker and Boo Boo; about the Glasses’ Upper West Side apartment; about the radio quiz show on which all the children appeared. Seldom has a fictional family been so lovingly or richly imagined.

Too lovingly, some critics complained. With the publication of “Franny and Zooey” even staunch Salinger admirers began to break ranks. John Updike wrote in The Times Book Review: “Salinger loves the Glasses more than God loves them. He loves them too exclusively. Their invention has become a hermitage for him. He loves them to the detriment of artistic moderation.” Other readers hated the growing streak of Eastern mysticism in the saga, as Seymour evolved, in successive retellings, from a suicidal young man into a genius, a sage, even a saint of sorts.

But writing in The New York Review of Books in 2001, Janet Malcolm argued that the critics had all along been wrong about Mr. Salinger, just as short-sighted contemporaries were wrong about Manet and about Tolstoy. The very things people complain about, Ms. Malcolm contended, were the qualities that made Mr. Salinger great. That the Glasses (and, by implication, their creator) were not at home in the world was the whole point, Ms. Malcolm wrote, and it said as much about the world as about the kind of people who failed to get along there. - NYT

So long J.D., hopefully one of us will step up to the plate and be the Joe D. to your Baby Ruth.


- Andrew

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

My Take: The Good Soldiers by David Finkel

Not surprisingly, the most obvious theme running through David Finkel’s The Good Soldiers is conflict, however; it’s not the obvious conflict of the Iraq War as a whole. Instead, Finkel focuses on the internal conflict within the soldiers fighting the war on the ground and on the Iraqi citizens of Rustamiyah trying to find their footing in a world turned upside down by war...


Thanks, and keep reading.

- Andrew

Monday, January 4, 2010


L.A. Times "Jacket Copy" gives an update on Liu Xiaobo's status/case. Maybe the continuing attention will hasten our fellow writer's release.


- Andrew

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

A Christmas Wish List of Sorts (for Book People)

It's that time of year again, and if you're wondering what to get your favorite literary buff (or me!) here is the short list for the books I want to find under my stocking when I wake up this Christmas morning.

A few even have clever little twists on the titles of older classics - if you don't know which ones do you need to boost your literary IQ.

This list by no means covers all of the books you should, or should want, to read from this year but it's a start.

I've also copy and pasted all the books descriptions, mostly from Amazon.com unless otherwise noted, I would write them myself but I have yet to read them all and don't have as much time as I used to these days.

Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem

Jonathan Lethem, the home-grown frontrunner of a generation of Brooklyn writers, crosses the bridge to Manhattan in Chronic City, a smart, unsettling, and meticulously hilarious novel of friendship and real estate among the rich and the rent-controlled. Lethem's story centers around two unlikely friends, Chase Insteadman, a genial nonentity who was once a child sitcom star and now is best known as the loyal fiancé of a space-stranded astronaut, and Perkus Tooth, a skinny, moody, underemployed cultural critic. Chase and Perkus are free-floating, dope-dependent bohemians in a borough built on ambition, living on its margins but with surprising access to its centers of power, even to the city's billionaire mayor. Paranoiac Perkus sees urgent plots everywhere--in the font of The New Yorker, in an old VHS copy of Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid--but Chronic City, despite the presence of death, politics, and a mysterious, marauding tiger, is itself light on plot. Eschewing dramatic staples like romance and artistic creation for the more meandering passions of friendship and observation,Chronic City thrives instead on the brilliance of Lethem's ear and eye. Every page is a pleasure of pitch-perfect banter and spot-on cultural satire, cut sharply with the melancholic sense that being able to explain your city doesn't make you any more capable of living in it. --Tom Nissley

Half Broke Horses: A True Life Novel by Jeannette Walls

From Publishers Weekly:

For the first 10 years of her life, Lily Casey Smith, the narrator of this true-life novel by her granddaughter, Walls, lived in a dirt dugout in west Texas. Walls, whose megaselling memoir, The Glass Castle, recalled her own upbringing, writes in what she recalls as Lily's plainspoken voice, whose recital provides plenty of drama and suspense as she ricochets from one challenge to another. Having been educated in fits and starts because of her parents' penury, Lily becomes a teacher at age 15 in a remote frontier town she reaches after a solo 28-day ride. Marriage to a bigamist almost saps her spirit, but later she weds a rancher with whom she shares two children and a strain of plucky resilience. (They sell bootleg liquor during Prohibition, hiding the bottles under a baby's crib.) Lily is a spirited heroine, fiercely outspoken against hypocrisy and prejudice, a rodeo rider and fearless breaker of horses, and a ruthless poker player. Assailed by flash floods, tornados and droughts, Lily never gets far from hardscrabble drudgery in several states—New Mexico, Arizona, Illinois—but hers is one of those heartwarming stories about indomitable women that will always find an audience. (Oct.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

The Good Soldiers by David Finkel

It was the last-chance moment of the war. In January 2007, President George W. Bush announced a new strategy for Iraq. He called it "the surge." "Many listening tonight will ask why this effort will succeed when previous operations to secure Baghdad did not. Well, here are the differences," he told a skeptical nation. Among those listening were the young, optimistic army infantry soldiers of the 2-16, the battalion nicknamed the Rangers. About to head to a vicious area of Baghdad, they decided the difference would be them.

Fifteen months later, the soldiers returned home forever changed. Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter David Finkel was with them in Bagdad almost every grueling step of the way.

What was the true story of the surge? Was it really a success? Those are the questions he grapples with in his remarkable report from the front lines. Combining the action of Mark Bowden's Black Hawk Down with the literary brio of Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried, The Good Soldiers is an unforgettable work of reportage. And in telling the story of these good soldiers, the heroes and the ruined, David Finkel has also produced an eternal tale--not just of the Iraq War, but of all wars, for all time.

Lit: A Memoir by Mary Karr

The Liars' Club brought to vivid, indelible life Mary Karr's hardscrabble Texas childhood. Cherry, her account of her adolescence, "continued to set the literary standard for making the personal universal" (Entertainment Weekly). Now Lit follows the self-professed blackbelt sinner's descent into the inferno of alcoholism and madness--and to her astonishing resurrection.

Karr's longing for a solid family seems secure when her marriage to a handsome, Shakespeare-quoting blueblood poet produces a son they adore. But she can't outrun her apocalyptic past. She drinks herself into the same numbness that nearly devoured her charismatic but troubled mother, reaching the brink of suicide. A hair-raising stint in "The Mental Marriott," with an oddball tribe of gurus and saviors, awakens her to the possibility of joy and leads her to an unlikely faith. Not since Saint Augustine cried, "Give me chastity, Lord-but not yet!" has a conversion story rung with such dark hilarity.

Lit is about getting drunk and getting sober; becoming a mother by letting go of a mother; learning to write by learning to live. Written with Karr's relentless honesty, unflinching self-scrutiny, and irreverent, lacerating humor, it is a truly electrifying story of how to grow up--as only Mary Karr can tell it.

The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon by David Grann

Amazon.com review by Jonathan Grisham:

In April of 1925, a legendary British explorer named Percy Fawcett launched his final expedition into the depths of the Amazon in Brazil. His destination was the lost city of El Dorado, the “City of Gold,” an ancient kingdom of great sophistication, architecture, and culture that, for some reason, had vanished. The idea of El Dorado had captivated anthropologists, adventurers, and scientists for 400 years, though there was no evidence it ever existed. Hundreds of expeditions had gone looking for it. Thousands of men had perished in the jungles searching for it. Fawcett himself had barely survived several previous expeditions and was more determined than ever to find the lost city with its streets and temples of gold.

The world was watching. Fawcett, the last of the great Victorian adventurers, was financed by the Royal Geographical Society in London, the world’s foremost repository of research gathered by explorers. Fawcett, then age 57, had proclaimed for decades his belief in the City of Z, as he had nicknamed it. His writings, speeches, and exploits had captured the imagination of millions, and reports of his last expedition were front page news.

His expeditionary force consisted of three men--himself, his 21-year-old son Jack, and one of Jack’s friends. Fawcett believed that only a small group had any chance of surviving the horrors of the Amazon. He had seen large forces decimated by malaria, insects, snakes, poison darts, starvation, and insanity. He knew better. He and his two companions would travel light, carry their own supplies, eat off the land, pose no threat to the natives, and endure months of hardship in their search for the Lost City of Z.

They were never seen again. Fawcett’s daily dispatches trickled to a stop. Months passed with no word. Because he had survived several similar forays into the Amazon, his family and friends considered him to be near super-human. As before, they expected Fawcett to stumble out of the jungle, bearded and emaciated and announcing some fantastic discovery. It did not happen.

Over the years, the search for Fawcett became more alluring than the search for El Dorado itself. Rescue efforts, from the serious to the farcical, materialized in the years that followed, and hundreds of others lost their lives in the search. Rewards were posted. Psychics were brought in by the family. Articles and books were written. For decades the legend of Percy Fawcett refused to die.

The great mystery of what happened to Fawcett has never been solved, perhaps until now. In 2004, author David Grann discovered the story while researching another one. Soon, like hundreds before him, he became obsessed with the legend of the colorful adventurer and his baffling disappearance. Grann, a lifelong New Yorker with an admitted aversion to camping and mountain climbing, a lousy sense of direction, and an affinity for take-out food and air conditioning, soon found himself in the jungles of the Amazon. What he found there, some 80 years after Fawcett’s disappearance, is a startling conclusion to this absorbing narrative.

The Lost City of Z is a riveting, exciting and thoroughly compelling tale of adventure.

Saving God by Mark Johnson

Johnston is humane and philosophically nimble - James Wood New Yorker

Saving God is a rich and provocative book. . . . I found Saving God to be original, complex and insightful. However one reacts to Johnston's naturalistic reinterpretation of Christianity and the other monotheisms, one may still applaud his rejection of idolatrous uses of religion to serve human ends. - Mark Johnston Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

The Last Resort: A Memoir of Zimbabwe by Douglas Rogers

From Publisher’s Weekly:

Starred Review. Born in Zimbabwe, New York-based travel writer Rogers moves between two worlds with wit and grace while telling the dire-straits story of his childhood in Zimbabwe and his recent return. Zimbabwe's extremes of beauty and corruption will lure readers into the everyday struggle to preserve property and life against punishing weather, astronomical inflation, and the threat of other people. Angst, humor, beauty and terror mingle freely in his narrative: returning home he finds the family's backpacker lodge has become a brothel, and estates of "irises and tulips and acres of pruned white roses" have disappeared. He marvels at the "untamed roots of blazing flamboyant trees... buckling the city's pavement," the metamorphosis of the hardscrabble poor into diamond dealers, and his own parents: "instead of being crushed by this struggle, beaten down, they had been buoyed by it." This rousing memoir should win over anyone with a taste for exotic can't-go-home-again stories.

Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanassi by Geoff Dyer

A wildly original novel (what else would we expect from this fearless and funny writer?) that explores the underbelly of erotic fulfillment and spiritual yearning.

Every two years the international art world descends on Venice for the opening of the Biennale. Among them is Jeff Atman—a jaded, dissolutely resolute journalist—whose dedication to the cause of Bellini-fuelled party-going is only intermittently disturbed by the obligation to file a story. When he meets Laura, he is rejuvenated, ecstatic. Their romance blossoms quickly but is it destined to disappear just as rapidly?

Every day thousands of pilgrims head to the banks of the Ganges at Varanasi, the holiest Hindu city in India. Among their number is a narrator who may or may not be the Atman previously seen in Venice. Intending to visit only for a few days he ends up staying for months, and finds—or should that be loses?—a hitherto unexamined idea of himself, the self. In a romance he can only observe, he sees a reflection of the kind of pleasures that, willingly or not, he has renounced. In the process, two ancient and watery cities become versions of each other. Could two stories, in two different cities, actually be one and the same story?

Nothing Geoff Dyer has written before is as wonderfully unbridled, as dead-on in evocation of place, longing, and the possibility of neurotic enlightenment, as irrepressibly entertaining as Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi.


Merry Christmas and enjoy!

- Andrew

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Shame On You Switzerland

I know that usually AEW sticks to literature, literature related things, and an assortment of other cultural hodgepodge. But today I'm going to digress a bit because Switzerland, as well as Europe and the West in general, is in need of a stern talking to.

By no means will I masquerade as an expert on international politics, but the recent legislation that overwhelmingly passed in Switzerland's legislative body is too much for me to bite my tongue about. The bill in question bans the construction of minarets, prayer towers built for mosques, throughout the country by virtue of a constitutional amendment and a new law on its way as a result.

How this can stand in an allegedly neutral country that has built its reputation on being a bastion of tolerance and a haven from persecution, religious or otherwise, is beyond anything I can comprehend. Even worse is the government's rationalization of the referendum as merely a reflection of fear over Islamic terrorism and “not a rejection of the Muslim community, religion or culture," A rejection of the Muslim community, religion and culture is precisely what has come to pass in Geneva and it is just the latest symptom of the prejudice and hostility towards the Muslim community that is ravaging Europe and the West at the moment, as it has for as long as anyone can remember. This latest happening is nothing more than another symbolic means of unjustifiable aggression towards a people who do not deserve it.

What's more dangerous? These towers or the fact that someone seriously is holding this sign?

Switzerland has the dubious honor of becoming the latest European country to allow blatant fear mongering over terrorism to lead to a state sanctioned swipe aimed at Muslims, and by doing so joins the ranks of England, France and the Netherlands. While all of these governments and their elected officials have claimed that they're simply taking measures to counter terrorism their actions amount to nothing more than ignorant and reprehensible acts of aggression towards what is for the most part a peaceful community that often contributes to its country's welfare far more than its respective immigrant peer communities.

In fact, statistically Muslim immigrants tend to be better educated and wealthier than most other ethnic or religious groups. While their good name is often despoiled by the odd extremist that bastardizes and distorts his religion beyond recognition, they are by no means the only religious group to have to deal with fanatics. They are just the only group to be judged solely by their misfits instead of by their far more numerous merits. Christians have their fanatics and extremists too (think Hitler, Timothy McVey, etc.) and the Jews are no stranger to terrorists either (just ask Yitzhak Rabin if you don't believe me).

As far as I'm concerned the Swiss populace ought to be ashamed for letting a group of far-right wackos play so deeply upon their own insecurity and fears of those different from themselves to bully them into altering their constitution to single out and persecute a smaller, relatively helpless religious minority all so they could have a little more peace of mind. Their actions do nothing more than further alienate a community that has been systematically alienated and picked on for generations.

Which part of this isn't playing on irrational Islamaphobia? Trick question: none.

It is a slippery slope Europe and the United States have started down, and Switzerland ought to be ashamed to be the latest nation to concede any more false steps. Hopefully, they will see the error of their ways before it's too late for their transgressions to be undone and the Western world can begin making its way back towards the top of the moral mountain.

- Andrew

Friday, November 13, 2009

Poor Mr Van Voorhis

If any of you out there were going into teaching nursing the edgy, bad boy English teacher fantasy... well, I've got some bad news for you.

Greg Van Voorhis, our man of the hour so to speak, is getting his 15 minutes of fame because the Department of Education has suspended him for giving his 11th grade class a story deemed inappropriate. The young teacher, affectionately known as "Mr. V", gave his students copies of Chuck Palahniuk's short story "Guts" to read during their class at the Bronx School of Law and Finance.

The story is undeniably racy (as most of my favorite short stories are) but once again this seems a bit like overkill. I definitely read at least as raunchy stories for class in high school and I went to a Catholic prep school. The kids at the Bronx high school in question seemed to share the same sentiments.

His students have started a letter writing campaign to Joel Klein, the chancellor of schools in
the city, and unsurprisingly a "Save Mr V" group popped up on Facebook, I can only assume immediately. Maybe more surprisingly, though, it already has almost a thousand members.

One young student, apparently mature beyond his years, explained to the Post "We're not little kids. We are in high school, it's not like we've never read anything like that - we have." I don't doubt it, hence why I think this is another example of a teacher being punished for trying too hard, albeit he might've pushed the proverbial envelope a bit.

Seriously Mr. Van Voorhis? You old rebel in the guise of an English teacher you, giving your 15 year old students, half of whom are probably texting, tweeting, and facebooking in class to begin with, a story that can actually hold their attention and be used to teach them a thing or two about writing? Get with the program Mr. V., we've got a 3 step process already well in place: give them Dick and Jane, make them pass the Regent's Exam, start over with the next batch of kids. No more freestyling if we let you start teaching again, okay?

I thought we had bigger problems to worry about in the city's schools, but I guess that's just me.

- Andrew

Friday, November 6, 2009

A Myth Exposed, Courtesy of Mr. Moya

For all you literary nerds out there, here's a really thought provoking essay on Roberto Bolaño by his friend and fellow amazing Latino author Horacio Castellanos Moya.  The essay is a translated adaptation of Moya's piece that ran in the Argentine newspaper  La Nación and recently appeared in Guernica. Here's an excerpt:

I can tell you, though, that Bolaño would have found it amusing to know they would call him the James Dean, the Jim Morrison, or the Jack Kerouac of Latin American literature. Wasn’t the first novella that he wrote a quatre mains with García Porta called Advice from a Morrison Disciple to a Joyce Fanatic? Maybe he wouldn’t have found so amusing the hidden reasons that they called him that, but that’s flour for another sack. What is certain is that Bolaño was always a non-conformist; he was never a subversive or a revolutionary wrapped up in political movements, nor was he even a writer maudit. He was a non-conformist, just as the Royal Spanish Academy defines it: “One who polemicizes, opposes, or protests[...] anything established.”

The whole essay sort of blows the top off of the "Bolaño myth" that I think Moya and Sarah Pollock are rightfully exposing for what it is.  I am glad they're doing it too, because I don't think it takes anything away from the amazing work he created during his relatively brief lifetime.  Truth is sometimes even more remarkable than the myth it's reshaped into, and I think this is one of those instances.

Read the essay in it's entirety here at Guernica, it's not too long but, if you have the same kind of mind I do, you might be thinking about it for the next couple days.

Keep reading.

- Andrew

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Walt Whitman Stays Fresh

Just when it seemed like groundbreaking American bard Walt Whitman was all dried up, Levi's has thrust him to the forefront of the pop-culture scene again by reaching back in time for their latest ad campaign "Go Forth" featuring his iconic poetry. While it might seem like an anachronism to have Whitman in a Levi's ad, Levi Strauss & Co. did start producing denim overalls when Whitman was in his mid-30's, however; they didn't start producing modern jeans until the 1920's. In this case, a minor oversight.

Could those be Levi's Whitman's rocking?

You might've seen the commercials on TV or in the movie theater (if you can actually afford to go to a movie these days). They're a breath of fresh air of sorts, a break from upbeat pre-financial-calamity commercials by companies like McDonald's, The Gap, and even Levi's themselves. They're also perhaps the beginning of a move towards commercials with more weight and substance, reflecting the changing nation. "Go Forth" is more like a work of art than a traditional ad in the sense that it is chock full of commentary, symbolism, and culture mashing.

Slate carried an article today about the new "America" ad, which features a scratchy old-time recording of Whitman's poem "America". The advert, unlike its sister ad "O Pioneers! O Pioneers!" that's read by an actor, even utilizes an historical recording believed to be Whitman reading "America" himself.


In a new era that is starting to feel more jaded, hard, and gritty, as opposed to the glitz and glamour of the dotcom days, Levi's has managed to capture a bit of the angst and struggle gripping people nationwide. It's as though they're the first to realize that commercial spots featuring Sarah Jessica Parker dancing in her newest duds aren't going to resonate with most Americans these days. Instead, they've created a montage of substance that begs to be pulled apart so it can be fully appreciated.

As Slate points out, "Go Forth" rattles its viewers, confronting them and flirting with the uncomfortable unlike many contemporary ads. Filmed in black and white, a medium suggesting timelessness in and of itself, featuring Whitman's ageless words and footage drawn largely from post-Katrina New Orleans, "Go Forth" feels as though it could've been filmed during the Great Depression just as easily as it could've been filmed during the Oughts. It carries with it a sense of nostalgia that tugs at the heartstrings tied to the American ideals of freedom, middle-America, and pulling oneself up by the bootstraps. It somehow harkens back to a time when there wasn't such a gap between the have and have-nots although there really is no such time in America's history.

"Go Forth" makes a powerful commentary even from its opening scene in which a retro neon sign reading "America" glows half-submerged and sinking in dark water, a symbol of the decline of our once seemingly invincible nation. But all is not so simple, nor so depressing, there's an underlying theme of hope running throughout the ad, foreshadowed by the fireworks and the image of a young girl that replace the neon sign arousing the suggestion of a cultural rebirth that eventually comes full circle in the closing shot of "Go Forth". The neon sign appears again as the commercial closes, but this time it could just as easily be an America emerging from the darkness as sinking into it.

The commentary isn't all sugar and spice, however, particularly the shot of an angry mob of adults surrounding a man who appears to be a wealthy executive. Ironically, this is shown as Whitman reads his verses about a land of "equal sons, equal daughters,"

Still, as disturbing as the commercial may seem at first, it's uplifting in many ways. Not only does it successfully walk the tightrope of nostalgia that could easily be a trap for melancholia, it shows hope through the shining faces of the children it features. These are little boys and girls that - even among the ravaged neighborhoods of the country's worst natural and cultural disaster, in a time when poverty and hardship are once more on the rise rather than on the decline - are just innocent enough not to realize what they're living through. In a sense, they seem to not know any better, and that lets them hold on to the kind of hope that at times it seems only such children are capable.

Maybe one day these children and young people coming of age will be looked back upon with the same admiration and respect as those that pulled themselves out of the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression a few generations earlier. This is precisely what makes the commercial so powerful, "Go Forth" resonates with its audience because it is not all pop and glitter, it manages to capture the cyclical nature of American prosperity's ebb and flow.

Hopefully, this will be the starting point of a new trend in which advertisements start becoming more like art and less like the cookie-cutter products that American culture has come to accept in the past decade.

Either way, I think Whitman still probably would've been kickin' it in BK rocking some skinny 504's.


Levi's other commercial featuring Whitman's "O Pioneers! O Pioneers!"

- Andrew