Reflecting in yesterday's Times Union on the highlights of the local arts scene during the
Saturday, December 31, 2011
Storytellers Gathered Around a Fire
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Gazette's Best Books of 2011
Friday, December 23, 2011
Inside Their Personal Libraries
The most recent issue of Atlantic offers a glimpse inside the homes and personal libraries of several of our visiting writers.
Featured authors include Steven Pinker and Rebecca Goldstein, Jonathan Lethem, Claire Messud and James Wood, and Gary Shteyngart.
See the article.
Books That Authors Love to Give and Receive
The New York Times tells which books a number of authors love to give and receive.
Francine Prose, who visited in February 2010, favors artful objects like Robert Walser's Microscripts and Brassai in America.
Former New York State Poet Billy Collins says, "Because I’m still an only child, I have trouble thinking deeply enough about other people to be any good at figuring out what they would like for a gift." For himself, he likes the Animal Series from Reaktion Books.
Jane Smiley, who visited in 2005, sensibly advises us to get gift certificates for our friends.
More.
Thursday, December 22, 2011
TU's Top Moments in the Arts
The Times Union's "Top Moments in the Arts" cover story feature (in its Preview entertainment guide) highlights a number of Writers Institute events of the past year.
Among his top five picks, Joseph Dalton selects Bill Kennedy's reading of Chango's Beads on October 3rd. See the YouTube clip.
Amy Griffin's top five include Gary Shteyngart's reading on February 17th. YouTube clip here.
And Michael Janairo's top five include Ken Johnson's November 7th lecture, a cosponsorship with the University Art Museum. UAlbany News Center Page here.
See the Preview section here.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Workshop Spotlight: "Copernicus at Occupy"
photo:timesunion |
COPERNICUS AT OCCUPY
How stark and broad a profile on the screen
among the heavens of eclipse and moon
of the sole man in 1514 who
knew revolution grew inside the brain,
knew we are smaller than we think and struck
“a cascade of diminishments” to earth—
I ran glissando through the leafy camp,
a part of brave— the park all galaxy
and dressed in tents, blue headlamps lit the way.
Drums glanced around and craved the dancing girls.
Mike check announced the careful tendering
of food and fuel and water
and what else?
“What do you want?” blasted from cops all night.
A call for gathering the truth. Be real!
a masked man said You know we own the streets.
Gone to the sidewalks all the righteous ones.
Gone to the war on greed. Another revolution of
the mind Love lights a fuse—
a need to put frail bodies on the line.
"Copernicus at Occupy" was first written as an assignment for Rebecca Wolff's fall 2011 advanced poetry workshop, asking for fifteen lines of iambic pentameter. Of the workshop, Marea says, "I loved the invitation to bring in a section of a manuscript for critique...because it forced me to…organize and revise a logical section. I appreciated the discussions, the introduction to published poetry that was new to me, and the generosity of spirit of the class. I especially appreciated Rebecca’s laser-like critique which I completely trusted."
Read More......
The Story of Albany, The Book
The Times Union's collaborative community history, The Story of Albany, began life as a website hosted by Paul Grondahl.
It is now available in book form. You may purchase copies online, or as a download, or the old-fashioned way: the book will be on sale from noon to 2 p.m. Friday, Dec. 23, in the lobby of the Times Union, 645 Albany Shaker Road.
Times Union Senior Writer Paul Grondahl, who wrote parts of the book and helped lead the project, will be on hand to sign copies.
Among the book's highlights: an account of the filming of Ironweed.
The New Yorker's Favorite Books of 2011
Writers Insititute visitors who appear on the New Yorker's "Best of" list include Russell Banks, Julian Barnes, Don DeLillo, and Anne Enright.
An author above, plus two others on the New Yorker list will be featured in our upcoming Spring 2012 Visiting Writers Series.... not to be coy, but we can't announce them yet!
Read the list here.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Vaclav Havel (1936-2011)
Grayce Burian, friend of the Writers Institute, reminisced about her friend Vaclav Havel, Nobel Prize-winning playwright and the first President of the Czech Republic (1993-2003), who passed away this past Sunday, December 18th.
Grayce's husband, the late Jarka Burian-- longtime Professor in the the Department of Theatre at UAlbany and America's foremost authority on Czech theatre-- spent a great deal of time with Havel during two extended visits to Czechoslovakia in the 1960s when Havel was a young playwright and Jarka was a visiting scholar.
At SUNY Albany's Arena Summer Theatre, Jarka directed the first American performance of a play by Vaclav Havel, "The Memorandum," in 1966. The play was later performed at the Public Theater in New York City in 1968, where it received widespread international attention.
Grayce and Jarka were invited to meetings of the Czech underground during the Prague Spring prior to the Soviet invasion in 1968. Grayce recalled one meeting in Havel's apartment. In a hushed voice Havel asked Jarka not to speak and had him climb up a ladder to a chandelier where Havel showed him wires and a bugging device. Grayce said he wanted Jarka to know about the device not only for their safety, but also so that Jarka could write about the experience after his return to the United States.
Over the years, the Burians continued to receive letters from Havel thanking Jarka for his scholarly work on the history of the Czech theater. This correspondence is preserved in the Archives of the University at Albany Libraries.
Monday, December 19, 2011
Workshop Spotlight: "Can't sleep for all this sleeping..."
Friday, December 16, 2011
Workshop Spotlight: "We must go mining, trolling, netting the debris..."
"What I enjoyed about Rebecca Wolff's poetry workshop was that each of the paricipants was invited to submit several poems in a group for comments and suggestions, instead of just one poem at a time, which helped us each to gain perspective on the direction our work is taking. One of our workshop exercises was to write 15 lines of unrhymed iambic pentameter with variations. I include mine here, altered somewhat from the original."
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Defending Independent Bookstores
Richard Russo, friend of the Institute and upstate New York native, contributes a New York Times op-ed about Amazon's price comparison tool and the new assault on independent booksellers.
"I wondered what my writer friends made of all this, so I dashed off an e-mail to Scott Turow, the president of the Authors Guild, and cc’ed Stephen King, Dennis Lehane, Andre Dubus III, Anita Shreve, Tom Perrotta and Ann Patchett. "These writers all derive considerable income from Amazon’s book sales. But when the responses to my query started coming in it was clear Amazon’s program would find no defenders in our ranks." More.
Also, Chris Churchill of the Times Union gets a reaction to the new Amazon promotion from Book House and Market Block Books proprietor Susan Novotny.
Monday, December 12, 2011
"A lonesome jazz riff— raw and tender"
Audiophile, a magazine devoted to audiobooks, has bestowed an Earphones Award on Bill Kennedy's own narration of Chango's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes. Here's the review that will appear in the next issue:
CHANGO'S BEADS AND TWO-TONE SHOES
This eighth novel in Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Kennedy's Albany Cycle leaves familiar locales for 1957 Cuba. There, freelance journalist Daniel Quinn meets his hero, Ernest Hemingway, and falls in love with a beautiful gunrunner. He's also introduced to the Santeria religion and Changó, a mythic warrior, and finds himself well placed for a world-changing revolution. But it’s not long before we’re back on familiar Albany turf. Kennedy’s own narration is like a lonesome jazz riff—raw and tender. His natural delivery avoids theatrics and proves comforting yet edgy. When he relates significant moments—Bobby Kennedy’s assassination, race riots, Albany politics—we know he’s been there. His representation of Quinn’s aging father, who dominates the second part of the book, is spot-on. A terrific listen! S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
Friday, December 9, 2011
Tell Us Your Favorite Books of 2011
Anything readable "wow" you in 2011? If so, let us know. We're primarily interested in new books in any genre, but if you've rediscovered something that deserves rediscovery, we're interested in that also.
And if you'd like to divide your list into categories, feel free.
Here are some suggested categories:
Best Fiction
Best Nonfiction
Best Science Writing
Best Book of Poetry
Best Holiday Gift
Best Beach Reading
Best New Discovery
Best Rediscovery
And please feel free to come up with your own categories. Enjoy!
On Hunter Thompson: "I never called him a swine."
Bill Kennedy on the Bat Segundo Show today talks about turning down his friend Hunter S. Thompson for a job at the San Juan Star in 1959 (you may already know the story but fans of both never get tired of it):
Correspondent: [Hunter S. Thompson] said, “He refused to hire me. Called me swine, fool, beatnik. We go way back.” But I also know that he wrote you a quite hubristic letter. How did you two patch things up after this early exchange of invective and all that?
Kennedy: Well, I never called him a swine.
Correspondent: (laughs)
Kennedy: It’s possible in a letter, in later years, I might have called him a swine. But that was his terminology. More.
Hello Chatter, My Old Friend
Our friend Maureen Dowd invokes Virginia Woolf and philosopher Max Picard in her discussion of the pleasures of silence and her review of the new silent film, The Artist, by French writer and director Michel Hazanavicius.
"As far back as half-a-century ago, the Swiss philosopher Max Picard warned: 'Nothing has changed the nature of man so much as the loss of silence,' once as natural as the sky and air.
As fiendish little gadgets conspire to track our movements and record our activities wherever we go, producing a barrage of pictures of everything we’re doing and saying, our lives will unroll as one long instant replay.
There will be fewer and fewer of what Virginia Woolf called “moments of being,” intense sensations that stand apart from the 'cotton wool of daily life.'"
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Pearl Harbor: What Did FDR Know?
Writing in the New York Times in 2004, the Capital Region's own Joe Persico talked about intelligence failures in the FDR administration in advance of the attack on Pearl Harbor, with comparisons to intelligence failures in advance of 9/11.
"THE president was receiving intelligence that an attack might occur imminently, probably not on the United States mainland, but abroad. Intercepted communications pointed to an adversary with a deadly history of surprise attacks. And, it did happen, the most horrific assault ever on American territory, and one that would lead to war. An investigation as to how so large a blow could have gone undetected was begun while the nation was still fighting the war. One objective was to find out what the president knew about the threat, when did he know and what did he do to counter it?
The date in question, Dec. 7, 1941; the president, Franklin D. Roosevelt." More.
Comedy and Performance Art
Ken Johnson, who visited on November 7, interrogates the term "performance art" with regard to comedy in a piece that appeared last month in the New York Times.
"Comedy must at least be funny, and if it is not, it fails. Must comic performance art be funny? Can it be called art if it aims primarily for laughs? A lot of nonperformance art these days is humorous. Maurizio Cattelan’s work often is, and his retrospective at the Guggenheim, in which almost everything he’s done as an artist is suspended high above the rotunda floor, might be seen as a big joke." More.
Books as Art Objects
The New York Times has an article about how, in an age of e-books, publishers are attempting to sell physical books as giftable, displayable art objects, much as they were a century ago.
"If e-books are about ease and expedience, the publishers reason, then print books need to be about physical beauty and the pleasures of owning, not just reading." More.
The article also makes mention of the "deep red endpapers" of Dava Sobel's new book on Copernicus, A More Perfect Heaven.
Wayne Koestenbaum on Alec Baldwin's Humiliation
In an eerie coincidence, Wayne Koestenbaum talked extensively on the Bat Segundo show, Monday Dec. 5, about Alec Baldwin's public humiliations one day before Baldwin was kicked off an American Airlines flight on Tuesday Dec. 6.
Koestenbaum visited the Institute on October 20 to talk about his new book, Humiliation (2011).
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
The Invasion of New York
Willard Sterne Randall, who visits today, writes of Alexander Hamilton's efforts to defend Manhattan against the British navy in the January 2003 issue of Smithsonian Magazine.
"On August 8, Hamilton tore open orders from Washington: his company was to be on round-the-clock alert against an imminent invasion of Manhattan. “The movements of the enemy and intelligence by deserters give the utmost reason to believe that the great struggle in which we are contending for everything dear to us and our posterity, is near at hand,” Washington wrote.
"But early on the morning of August 27, 1776, Hamilton watched, helpless, as the British ferried 22,000 troops from Staten Island, not to Manhattan at all, but to the village of Brooklyn, on Long Island. Marching quickly inland from a British beachhead that stretched from Flatbush to Gravesend, they met little resistance. Of the 10,000 American troops on Long Island, only 2,750 were in Brooklyn, in four makeshift forts spread over four miles. At Flatbush, on the American east flank, Lord Charles Cornwallis quickly captured a mounted patrol of five young militia officers, including Hamilton’s college roommate, Robert Troup, enabling 10,000 redcoats to march stealthily behind the Americans. Cut off by an 80-yard-wide swamp, 312 Americans died in the ensuing rout; another 1,100 were wounded or captured. By rowboat, barge, sloop, skiff and canoe in a howling northeaster, a regiment of New England fishermen transported the survivors across the East River to Manhattan. More.
Monday, December 5, 2011
Top Ten Lists of 2011 in the Times
Recent NYS Writers Institute Visiting Author Karen Russell's Swamplandia makes the NY Times Top Ten for 2011 as well as Janet Maslin's personal Top Ten. Other books on Maslin's list include former New York State Author Russell Banks's Lost Memory of Skin, and Walter Isaacson's bio of Steve Jobs (Isaacson visited with a biography of Einstein in 2007).
Michiko Kakutani's personal list includes recent visitor Don Delillo, who has a new book of short stories, The Angel Esmerelda. Dwight Garner's picks include Townie: A Memoir by Andre Dubus III, and a book of essays, Otherwise Known as the Human Condition, by former UAlbany Writer-in-Residence Geoff Dyer.
A Cub Reporter in Albany in 1963
Paul Grondahl talks to two-time Pulitzer-winning biographer Robert Caro, who visits today, about his days as a young reporter covering the New York State Legislature in 1963.
"It was fascinating to see how state government worked," he said. "I learned a lot working under Newsday's chief political reporter, Dick Zander. What I discovered was that Robert Moses, who was not elected, had a tremendous amount of power up in Albany. Nobody really understood where that power came from. That spurred my initial interest in Moses."
"That was the first time I saw how political power works," Caro said. "It was not what you read about in textbooks. The bridge was a destructive idea, and yet I could see that it was moving forward and I had to understand why. I started thinking who is this Moses guy? He's not elected to anything. How'd he get so much power?" More.
Friday, December 2, 2011
Kurt Vonnegut, And So It Goes
Writing in the New York Times, Janet Maslin reviews a new biography of Kurt Vonnegut who served as New York State Author under the auspices of the Writers Institute from 2001 to 2003, and whose visit to Albany (speaking to a packed Page Hall) was a memorable occasion.
"Mr. Shields is not shy about using the words 'a definitive biography of an extraordinary man' to describe his book. And So It Goes is quick to trumpet its biggest selling points. Mr. Shields means to separate image from perception: He depicts Vonnegut as an essentially conservative Midwesterner, proud of his German heritage and capitalist instincts, who developed an aura of radical chic. He also describes a World War II isolationist who aligned himself with Charles A. Lindbergh yet became an antiwar literary hero. And he finds a life-affirming humanist sensibility in a writer celebrated for black humor. How this man would eventually be recruited to brainstorm with the Jefferson Airplane and be hipper than his own children are among the mysteries on which Mr. Shields casts light." More.
Courageous Learning: William Patrick
Bill Patrick, director of the NYS Summer Young Writers Institute at Skidmore, has a new book coming out: Courageous Learning: Finding a New Path through Higher Education, an exploration of the brave new world of adult education and online learning. The book was written with Excelsior College President John Ebersole.
A launch party and signing will be held at The Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza on Wednesday, December 14 at 7:00 pm. Light refreshments will be served.
"Our nation is facing a great education crisis, and if we fail to respond quickly and seriously, we can expect our economy to grow weaker and our standard of living to decline. Courageous Learning is for those adults who, seeking to face this challenge, are considering returning to school, either to finish an undergraduate degree or to start a graduate one." More on the Excelsior College Press website.
A Letter from Martha Rozett
UAlbany English Professor Martha Rozett sent us an e-letter about her new book, When People Wrote Letters: A Family Chronicle:
I am writing to tell you about my new book, WHEN PEOPLE WROTE LETTERS: A FAMILY CHRONICLE. If you can, please come to my book signing on December 8th at Book House in Stuyvesant Plaza from 7:00 to 9:00 PM.
Many of you have heard me talk about this project during the past few years. It is a tale told through wonderfully witty and moving letters, photographs, clippings and pamphlets, excerpts from an unpublished autobiography and from family history narratives, along with other saved objects. The main characters are Betty and Edith Stedman, my mother and her aunt, two eloquent and adventurous women whose relationship serves as the book’s central narrative. Their travels, and the travels of other family members, take the reader from 19th and early twentieth century New England, to Key West in the 1830s, to the Minnesota Territories in the 1860s, to France during World War I, to small towns in Texas and to China in the 1920s, to Spain in the 1930s, and across America during World War II.
WHEN PEOPLE WROTE LETTERS is also an account of my great aunt Edith’s extraordinary career during the early years of medical social work, and a love story in which the religious and cultural differences between New England Episcopalians and New York Jews threaten to disrupt my parents’ romance in the 1940s. And finally, it is about how family chronicles emerge in piecemeal fashion from the objects and documents people save and pass on.
My book will be available after December 8th for $19.95 from the Troy Book Makers (TBMBooks.com), from Book House and other local independent bookstores, and from Amazon and B&N online. It will be available in e-book format in mid to late January. My husband (and very patient tech consultant) John has created a WHEN PEOPLE WROTE LETTERS Facebook page which will tell you more about how I came to write the book. I hope you will join my community of readers and spread the word to others.
Boozer, brawler, blasphemer, bully
Ethan Allen is an inspirational (if malleable) figure for Vermonters in general, and particularly for self-styled "free thinkers" and individualists across the political spectrum, from tea party activists to "off-the-grid" hippies.
Here's a review of Willard Sterne Randall's new biography of Allen on the Vt Digger blog by John McClaughty, VP of the libertarian thinktank, the Ethan Allen Institute:
"How one views Ethan depends a lot on one’s own preferences. Boozer, brawler, blasphemer, bully. 'Lover of liberty and property.' Bold, brave, hot headed, intemperate, philosopher, pamphleteer, commanding presence. Remarkably self-educated, a friend of scientific inquiry and calumniator of Puritan divines. Military hero, foolish adventurer, scourge of Tories, prisoner of war, author of the second most widely read work of the revolutionary era (after Paine’s Common Sense), “A Narrative of Col. Ethan Allen’s Captivity.” Successful and failed businessman, absentee father, enthusiastic land speculator. Duplicitous negotiator (with the British). Father of independent Vermont."
"Randall’s work gives ample coverage to all these features and more. It portrays Ethan not only as he saw himself — heroic — but as others saw him, ranging from George Washington to the Albany Junto [the landed Dutch gentry] to his British captors in England." More.
Randall visits Tuesday, December 6.
Ethan Allen Named a "Best Biography" in the WSJ
Carl Rollyson talks up Willard Sterne Randall's Ethan Allen in the Wall Street Journal "Gift Guide: Best of Biography" last month. Randall visits Tuesday, December 6.
"With every publishing season hailing another biography of some already well-documented Founder, it was a pleasure to descend into the trenches of American history with Willard Sterne Randall. His absorbing and comprehensive "Ethan Allen: His Life and Times" (Norton, 617 pages, $35) puts a good deal of flesh on the New England hero who captured the British-held Fort Ticonderoga in May 1775. A spirited man, Allen was, like many of his contemporaries, not averse to profiting from land speculation and accumulating family wealth in ways that allied him as much with the old world as the new. Allen was also notable for his unconventional guerrilla warfare and his searing accounts of his time as a British prisoner of war." WSJ
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Oliver Stone Filming "The Power Broker" for HBO
Oliver Stone is making an HBO film based on Robert Caro's biography of New York urban planner Robert Moses, The Power Broker.
Caro will appear at the Egg on Monday, December 5.
From ArtInfo on the Huffington Post:
"Every robber baron is probably green with envy for the late Robert Moses, a powerful and polarizing force who shaped New York as we now know it, because Oliver Stone just signed on to direct a movie about him...." More.
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Caro and Vonnegut Barefoot at the Beach
Caro and Vonnegut in Sagaponack. (Photo originally appeared in Hamptons Shorts, 1999) |
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Writers Institute Authors dominate NYTimes Notable Books of 2011
Tom Perrotta's New Novel To Be HBO Series
HBO is developing a series based on author Tom Perrotta's upcoming novel "The Leftovers."
Hourlong drama explores the Rapture and how the sudden disappearance of loved ones in a suburban town affects everyone left behind. Perrotta, who is writing the pilot, will exec produce with Ron Yerxa and Albert Berger.
The author has Hollywood connections, having written "Little Children" and then adapting the screenplay for the Kate Winslet-Patrick Wilson starrer. Earlier in his career, Perrotta wrote the novel "Election," which was turned into Alexander Payne's feature starring Reese Witherspoon. Both pics were Oscar nominated. More in Variety.
Not Writing What You Know
Tom Perrotta, who makes two appearances in Albany today, dispenses some free advice on the "big think" website:
Question: Should you always write what you know?
Perrotta: I’m always wary of any kind of generalization like that. There’re some people who… I think somebody once said there are two kinds of writers, you know, that there’s somebody who lives home and somebody who stays home, and I’ve always been the kind of writer who stayed home but I don’t necessarily feel like that’s going to work for everybody. I think you have to do a lot of reading and you have to do a lot of writing and if you’re lucky you’ll eventually find a voice or find a subject matter that you’re passionate about. I mean that to me is really the crucial thing, it’s somehow, you know, having your work connect with your obsessions and your passions and, you know, it’s… if you teach writing, sometimes it’s just very mysterious because you’ll see somebody, you can see that they have talent, you can see that they want very much to write but somehow there’s a kind of psychological disjunction between the work and what really matters to them and it’s scary, you know, when your work starts to interact with the unruly parts of your subconscious..... More.
Tom Perrotta Tonight
Tom Perrotta visits the Writers Institute today for two events.
November 29 (Tuesday)
Seminar — 4:15 p.m., Assembly Hall, Campus Center, Uptown Campus
Reading — 8:00 p.m., Assembly Hall, Campus Center, Uptown Campus
Tom Perrotta is the author of masterpieces of satirical fiction set in the American suburbs. His new novel is The Leftovers (2011), the story of ordinary suburbanites who are forced to cope when they are left behind after “the Rapture,” the New Testament apocalypse. The Kirkus reviewer called it Perrotta’s “most ambitious book to date...,” and said, “The premise is as simple as it is startling.” His previous novels include The Abstinence Teacher (2007), and two that were adapted as major motion pictures, Little Children (2004) and Election (1998).
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Cod for Thanksgiving
Mark Kurlansky, who visited in 2004, may have started a movement with his 1997 nonfiction book, Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World.
Perhaps we should all be eating cod with cranberry sauce.
Jennifer Kennedy of About.com Marine Life cites and paraphrases Kurlansky on a page devoted to cod and the Pilgrims (here):
"In a move that eventually led to their displacement, local Native Americans took pity on the starving Pilgrims and assisted them, believing they would 'receive blessings' for their generosity. They showed the Pilgrims how to catch cod and use the uneaten parts as fertilizer. They also introduced the Pilgrims to quahogs, 'steamers,' and lobster.
Tom Perrotta on Fresh Air
Tom Perrotta, who visits the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, 11/29, spoke to Terry Gross on NPR's "Fresh Air" in August about his new novel, The Leftovers....
"I spent a lot of time thinking about contemporary Christianity, and obviously the rapture kept coming up," he says. "My first impulse was ... to laugh it off — it's sort of a funny idea, people just floating away. But I kept thinking: What if it did happen? ... I thought, I'm such a skeptic that even if it did happen, I would resist the implications of it, and I also thought that three years later, everyone would have forgotten about it. No matter what horrible thing happens in the world, the culture seems to move on." More.
Real Bedtime Stories
Sunday's New York Times Business Day had an article about the preference of parents for print-and-paper children's books....
"Print books may be under siege from the rise of e-books, but they have a tenacious hold on a particular group: children and toddlers. Their parents are insisting this next generation of readers spend their early years with old-fashioned books."
This is the case even with parents who themselves are die-hard downloaders of books onto Kindles, iPads, laptops and phones. They freely acknowledge their digital double standard, saying they want their children to be surrounded by print books, to experience turning physical pages as they learn about shapes, colors and animals." More.
Family Dysfunction: Literature for Thanksgiving
The literary magazine Ploughshares serves up a banquet of dysfunctional family literature for your Thanksgiving gathering in its November issue.
Lydia Davis, New York State Writers Institute Writing Fellow, provides one of the appetizers:
"If your taste for dysfunction veers toward the quietly lethal, I urge readers to pick up a copy of anything by Lydia Davis. 'Meat, My Husband,' which appears in her Collected Stories, and originally in Almost No Memory, is the ideal amuse-bouche for a family gathering." More.
Why Violence Has Declined
Cognitive scientist Steven Pinker's new book, The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined (2011) is being discussed everywhere.
Pinker visited the Institute to talk about his book How the Mind Works in 1997.
From the Christian Science Monitor:
In his latest book The Better Angels of our Nature, Steven Pinker argues that the world has never been a safer place to live in. Looking back at the history of violence from prehistoric times up the present day, Pinker says it became far more beneficial for human beings to be less violent.... More.
Monday, November 21, 2011
In Case You Missed the Torrente Ballester Celebration....
Unbeknownst to most Albany residents, one of Spain's major writers lived among us from 1966 to 1972 (and, as it happens, spent an inordinate amount of time hanging out at Stuyvesant Plaza because he didn't own a car). In Spain, Gonzalo Torrente Ballester's image appears on postage stamps; while in the U.S., it is difficult even to find his literary works in English translation.
Thanksgiving Reading
Popular historian David O. Stewart, who visited the Writers Institute in 2007, and delivered the History Department's Fossieck Lecture, picked three books of American history for Thanksgiving reading on NPR's "All Things Considered" this evening:
Friday, November 18, 2011
"The Best Film Ever Made About Filmmaking"
Roger Ebert proclaims Federico Fellini's 8 1/2, which will be screened tonight at 7:30PM at Page Hall (free and open to the public) the best film ever made about filmmaking.
Read the full Chicago Sun-Times reappraisal from May 28, 2000, here.
"8 1/2 is the best film ever made about filmmaking..... The critic Alan Stone, writing in the Boston Review, deplores Fellini’s 'stylistic tendency to emphasize images over ideas.' I celebrate it. A filmmaker who prefers ideas to images will never advance above the second rank because he is fighting the nature of his art. The printed word is ideal for ideas; film is made for images, and images are best when they are free to evoke many associations and are not linked to narrowly defined purposes. Here is Stone on the complexity of 8 1/2: 'Almost no one knew for sure what they had seen after one viewing.' True enough, but true of all great films— while you know for sure what you’ve seen after one viewing of a shallow one.." More.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Slaughtering Each Other by the Hundreds of Thousands
Tony Horwitz, who speaks at the New York State Museum tonight, talked Tuesday on the PBS NewsHour about his new book on John Brown's raid.
Situation Normal, All Fracked Up
Eliza Griswold (who visited September 27) contributes an article about fracking in Pennsylvania to this coming Sunday's New York Times Magazine.
"In Amwell Township, your opinion of fracking tends to correspond with how much money you’re making and with how close you live to the gas wells, chemical ponds, pipelines and compressor stations springing up in the area. Many of those who live nearby fear that a leak in the plastic liner of a chemical pond could drip into a watershed or that a truck spill could send carcinogens into a field of beef cattle. (According to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, 65 Marcellus wells drilled this year have been cited for faulty cement casings, which could result in leaks.) But for many other residents, including Haney’s neighbors, the risks seem small, and the benefits — clean fuel, economic development — far outweigh them." More.
Bill Kennedy at the Miami Book Fair Yesterday
"William Kennedy, a Miami Book Fair standout," writes Chuck Strouse of the Miami New Times.
"Also here this week are dozens of other important American writers, from John Barth to John Sayles, Chuck Palahniuk to Calvin Trillin, and Harry Belafonte, Jim Lehrer, and Michael Moore. Though Kennedy isn't the biggest name, his story [Changó’s Beads and Two-Tone Shoes] is among the most intertwined with South Florida. Not only does his tale wend through the Cuban revolution, which shaped Miami, but also it invokes SanterÃa, our Afro-Cuban soul, and the Fontainebleau Hotel of the stylish '50s. Fidel Castro, once a William Kennedy fan, and Bing Crosby make cameos. Hemingway plays a pivotal role too, decking one tourist "with a right and then a looping left" before mixing it up in a duel." More.
Hudson Valley Writers Guild Newsletter
The November edition of the HVWG Newsletter is out.
Events include a celebration of poet, publisher and peace activist Dan Wilcox on Saturday, Dec. 3 at 1:30PM at the Main Branch of the Albany Public Library, 161 Washington Ave., downtown Albany, sponsored by the Friends of Albany Public Library. Free and open to the public.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
The Trippiest Music Video of 1963
Check out the original American 1963 trailer for Federico Fellini's 8 1/2, which will be screened (at full length) on Friday, November 18 at 7:30PM in Page Hall on the downtown campus as part of the New York State Writers Institute's Classic Film Series.
The Woman Behind FDR, Friday, Nov. 18
Kirstin Downey, Washington Post reporter, will talk about her biography of Frances Perkins, the female architect of FDR's New Deal, a major historical figure now largely unknown to the public.
November 18 (Friday)Discussion — 4:00 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center, Uptown Campus
Kirstin Downey, Award-winning journalist for the Washington Post, will make an appearance at the 2011 Researching New York Conference to discuss her 2009 biography of Frances Perkins, The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life of Frances Perkins, FDR'S Secretary of Labor and His Moral Conscience.
The nation’s first female cabinet secretary, Frances Perkins (1880-1965) was one of FDR’s chief advisors, and the principal architect of the most important social welfare legislation in U.S. history. Named one of the best nonfiction books of 2009 by the Library of Congress and the American Library Association, the book was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award. In a starred review, Publishers Weekly said, “Downey provides not only a superb rendering of history but also a large dose of inspiration drawn from Perkins’s clearheaded, decisive work with FDR to solve urgent problems and to succeed in the face of insurmountable odds.”
Sponsored by UAlbany’s Department of History and the NYS Writers Institute.
For additional information on the Researching New York Conference click here.
Confederates in the Attic
In his frequently hilarious and occasionally disturbing book about the modern legacy of the Civil War, Tony Horwitz (who visits tomorrow) spends a great deal of time with hardcore Confederate reenactors:
"There's something in me that wishes we could really go the whole way," he said. "I'd take the chance of being killed just to see what it was really like to be under fire in the War." He paused, munching on salt pork and biscuits. "At least then we'd know for sure if we're doing it right."
Fred leaned over to spit out a bit of gristle and noticed something in the grass. "Rob's bloating," he announced. Rob lay splayed on his back, cheeks puffed and belly distended, eyes staring glassily at the sky. Joel walked over and poked a boot in his ribs. "Suck in your gut a bit," he said. "It looks like you sat on a bike pump." Fred rearranged Rob's hands. "They don't look rigor mortal enough," he said. Then the two men returned to their meal.
Rob sat up and wiggled his fingers. "Hands are a problem," he said. "It's hard to make them look bloated unless you've really been dead for a while." More.