Book One of 2666 — “The Part About the Critics” — introduces four literary critics obsessed with a reclusive author named Benno Von Archimboldi. Archimboldi is as autobiographically unknown as Pynchon, and as built up with legendary accomplishments as Kurtz. Each of the four critics are introduced by way of their introduction to Archimboldi, as […]
Category: Writing Life
- Roberto Bolano 2666: Book One
- Roberto Bolano 2666: Names
Bolano’s 2666 packs more names per square foot of text than a Pynchon novel. It’s especially dense in the fourth book of the novel, “The Part About the Crimes” as Bolano relates the stories of the mysterious murders of women in the Sonora desert of Mexico. These women are occasionally anonymous, but usually have names, […]
- Roberto Bolano 2666: The Title
Everyone says Roberto Bolano’s 2666 is titled in a “mysterious” way. That’s a euphemism for not having any idea what it means. Part of the mystery is that 2666 never appears in any of the five sections of the novel. 2666 does, however, take on the form of a date, and by a date in […]
- Roberto Bolano 2666: The Novel Novel
In the New York Times, Steven Millhauser recently wrote about the distinctions between the genre of the short story and the novel. These distinctions are very well classified, although Millhauser manages to infuse some fresh poetic verve into the discussion. But there’s just as much difference between the compact, 300 page novel and the loose […]
- Roberto Bolano 2666: Introduction
I’m going to devote the entire upcoming week to Roberto Bolano’s magnum opus 2666, which FSG publishes in November. Perhaps because of its size, I’m not going to do anything as comprehensive as a book review. Instead, I’ll be posting disparate thoughts on various sections of the novel, posts with more of a conversational bent. […]
- “Blindness” Not Available in Braille?
The National Federation of the Blind is protesting the film adaptation of Jose Saramago’s Blindness. The director of the Federation, Marc Maurer, claims that “Blindness doesn’t turn decent people into monsters.” Jose Saramago has already dismissed the protesters quite emphatically, calling the protest a “display of meanness based on nothing at all.” The protest couldn’t […]
- Jewel of Medina Terrorism
So now that the British publishers of Sherry Jones’ “The Jewel of Medina” have been firebombed, do you think that Random House is congratulating themselves on a prudent decision? In terms of cost-analysis, and in terms of potential danger, and in terms of (some) public relations, Random House clearly took the correct path. If nothing […]
- Roundup: I’m Back!
Apologies for the scarcity of posts this week. I was up in Canada for a few days. But without any further ado, a roundup of stuff that has happened in my absence. A new Open Letters for the month of October. Oxford University Press is publishing “As They Say in Zanzibar: Proverbial Wisdom from Around […]
- Recent Journalism
Pop over to PBS’s Channel Thirteen website for my recommendations on the new high school reading canon. Feel free to critique my list or offer a book you wish you were assigned in high school. UPDATE: The link to PBS is dead. I’ve reposted the article below. The New Canon John Matthew Fox Selecting reading […]
- Roundup with Silverblatt
I’ve been listening to Michael Silverblatt’s interviews with David Foster Wallace for Bookworm, and they are quite rewarding. I especially like that Silverblatt starts out the interview on “Infinite Jest” by asking Wallace straight out whether the structure of the book is based on fractals. (!?) The National Book Foundation highlights five very talented writers […]