Now I've written about Rhett Miller on the Hobart blog.
February 24, 2008
February 21, 2008
February 18, 2008
Flipping Out for Etgar Keret
I've written more about Etgar Keret for the Hobart blog.
Posted by Sean Carman on Monday, February 18, 2008 0 comments
February 10, 2008
"Enough. Grateful."
Late Show writer and Strike Captain Bill Scheft on the end of the writers' strike:
"I am a writer, which means my very nature is to be a self-obsessed isolator whose most free exchanges are among the voices in my head. If this is indeed over, the end is even more humbling than the hours spent walking in circles toward it. The best definition of success I ever heard was service plus faith. By our actions and the belief in our actions, we have taken care of ourselves and the generations of self-obsessed isolators who will follow us."
Read the rest of Bill's eloquent post here.
Posted by Sean Carman on Sunday, February 10, 2008 0 comments
File Under: self-obsessed isolators, writers' strike, writing vicariously
February 8, 2008
Literary Roundup!
You can't beat the classics. "The Mouse That Roared" is Leonard Wibberly's 1955 satire of the cold war. Read it and learn that, sadly, but also beautifully and hilariously, in more than 50 years nothing has really changed. The whole book is as touching and as whimsical as its dedication, which Wibberly wrote "to all the little nations who over the centuries have done what they could to attain and preserve their freedom. It is from one of them that I am sprung." In the movie adaptation (Netflixing on my coffee table as we speak) Peter Sellers plays three parts and the Duchess of Grand Fenwick is played by Jean Seberg.
"The Nimrod Flipout" is the first Etgar Keret book I've read. How have I never heard of this guy? These stories are short, quirky, hilarious, touching, and profound.
Atonement is as good as everyone says. What I'm noticing is how elegantly plotted the story is. By about page 70 every turn starts to feel inevitable, and from then on it's like watching fate unfold. Yes the writing is beautiful, but I think McEwan's real achievement is the great choices he mades in writing his characters and their story. Not a single false step.
"A Matter of Detail" is the fourth novel by Maniza Naqvi, who is living proof that having a day job needn't slow you down. Earlier this week Maniza gave a delightful reading at Candida's World of Books in Logan Circle. She joked about knowing everyone in the audience, lit a candle to the memory of Benazir Bhutto, and read three beautiful passages from her new novel about life in Karachi. Maniza is a terrific writer and her novel will tell you things about Pakistan you'll never read in the news.
Fiction tells the truth in a way that nothing else can.
Posted by Sean Carman on Friday, February 08, 2008 0 comments
February 4, 2008
My Brother's Music
My brother the folk musician has a Myspace page. Check out his excellent music here.
Posted by Sean Carman on Monday, February 04, 2008 0 comments
File Under: awl, peg, peg and awl, younger brothers get all the talent
February 2, 2008
Lucy, Daughter of the Devil
I love this show.
Posted by Sean Carman on Saturday, February 02, 2008 0 comments
File Under: Catholicism, ephemera, things I wish I'd written or could write