Category: Writing Life

  • Anthony Doerr wins The Story Prize image of tag icon

    Anthony Doerr just won The Story Prize for his collection “Memory Wall.” He wins $20,000, while the two runners-up win $5,000. Doerr is no stranger to accolades — Granta also named him in the Best of Young American Novelists. One unusual fact about this collection, other than its memory-centric theme, is that it only contains […]

    March 3, 2011

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  • Open City Closes image of tag icon

    The literary journal Open City has closed. Cue obvious puns on open/closed. They were a good literary journal, but their heyday had passed. I particularly saw the slide in the last few years, when slush pile submissions weren’t being accepted/rejected as much as sent into a type of purgatory. For instance, I ignored the prevalent […]

    March 1, 2011

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  • David Albahari’s Leeches + Ferenc Karinthy’s Metropole + Kafka image of tag icon

    In Ferenc Karinthy’s Metropole, a man named Budai takes the wrong flight and ends up trapped in a mysterious city in which the inhabitants speak an unplaceable dialect and the city itself seems to conspire against his escape. The novel bears the marks of Kafka, in particular Kafka’s depiction of bureaucracy as an unsolvable maze, […]

    February 15, 2011

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  • Julio Cortazar “The Winners” (And I’m moving) image of tag icon

    I apologize for the lethargic pace of posting in these parts — Mrs. BookFox and I are shifting residences, and my time has been filled with boxes and loan doc signings and moving vans. Also, it makes it more difficult to write when one can no longer find one’s desk, buried underneath mounds of miscelleana […]

    January 30, 2011

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  • Paintings of Books image of tag icon

    Mrs. BookFox pointed out to me the work of Stanford Kay, who paints books in a series called “Gutenberg Variations.” She paints quite a lot of books, actually. One might call it an obsession. An obsession that has been going on since 2003. Since I’m quite skeptical of the companies that sell beautiful hardback books […]

    January 17, 2011

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  • MLA Conference Los Angeles image of tag icon

    The MLA conference in Los Angeles just drew to a close. I didn't go. I've gone before and found both stimulation and irritation. When people suggest that I attend the MLA conference, I think they believe that since I work in the English Department, I must therefore be interested in what they do at such […]

    January 10, 2011

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  • Best Review Ever of 2010 Books (Involving Guns!) image of tag icon

    Forget thoughtful and nuanced book reviews. This Electric Literature video will tell you everything you need to know about the best canada drugs online safety books of 2010, and their ability to keep you safe from harm. Firearms and tomes involved.  

    January 3, 2011

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  • Anonymous Reviewing image of tag icon

    The restaurant critic S. Irene Virbila, who has preserved her anonymity over the last sixteen years of reviewing food for the LA Times, was outed by the manager at Red Medicine, who reported on his Tumblr: Our purpose for posting this is so that all restaurants can have a picture of her and make a decision […]

    December 23, 2010

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  • The Smell of Books image of tag icon

    New York Magazine highlights a woman smelling all the books in the MoMA library. She's smelled 150 books so far, and kept notes. Apparently, there's a history of this activity: Last year, in an article in the journal Analytical Chemistry, researchers led by a group from University College London’s Centre for Sustainable Heritage attempted to define the […]

    December 17, 2010

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  • Culturomics on the Short Story image of tag icon

    Culturomics has been well covered in the last few days, on the heels of a study published in the prestigious journal, Science. Using Google Ngram Viewer, powered by Google Books, the authors studied the rise, fall, and evolution of certain terms from 1800 – 2000 in a database of 5.2 million books. The danger of […]

    December 17, 2010

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