-Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich, assistant editor
A Collective Blog of Literary Experiences from Identity Theory
2/25/09
"The Flu Season" + Drown
-Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich, assistant editor
2/17/09
Eudaemonic reading
I recently purchased The Art of Happiness (by the Dalai Lama) at a tiny local used bookstore after watching an older man have an unemployment-related breakdown at the cash register because the manager would not give him a job application. It's a pretty insightful book-length conversation between His Holiness and a Western psychologist (though the psychologist is a little over the top in his lionization of the mystical lama).Sticking with the Tibetan Buddhist theme, I also picked up No Time to Lose by Pema Chodron at the local library. The older lady working the checkout counter's eyes lit up when she saw this book in my pile. "You should come to the Shambala Center," she said. "We have FREE meditation for an hour every weeknight."
Yeah, isn't meditation supposed to be free?
The Chodron book isn't quite as compelling as The Art of Happiness, but it's a more analytical text.
I enjoy reading fiction from small presses, so this month I'm taking in Midnight Picnic by Nick Antosca (Word Riot Press) and Hymn California by Adam Gnade. Antosca's book was written entirely at night and therefore it's fitting that it sorta gives me nightmares; Gnade's work is Kerouacian and pretty fun to read.
My girlfriend recently gave me a copy of Ondaatje's The English Patient, so that's the next fiction coming up. I'm also looking forward to Marielitos, Balseros and Other Exiles by Cecilia Rodriguez Milanes.
For my current web design projects, I'm rereading Don't Make Me Think! by Steve Krug and Avinash Kaushik's Web Analytics: An Hour a Day.
Other good books I've recently read include The Four-Hour Workweek, Nickel and Dimed, and The Collected Stories of Amy Hempel.
-Matt Borondy, editor-in-chief
This Is Your Brain on Music
-Sherry Saturno, interviews editor
2/16/09
Midnight Picnic
Midnight Picnic by Nick Antosca (a book trailer) from brothercyst on Vimeo.
Just finished Midnight Picnic by Nick Antosca (my review forthcoming at PopMatters.com) -- in the middle of Walt Disney: Triumph of the American Imagination by Neal Gabler (fascinating tale about one ambitious fellow...unfortunately, the story's often about business, with many numbers crunched) -- just read Pinter's The Homecoming: what an odd little tale told in beautiful language; favorite line: "You'll drown in your own blood"...how's that for assonance -- just finished reviewing Scorsese by Ebert (pub. TBD) -- all this within a boatload of reading for my graduate course in the History of Childhood: the latest, Children and Childhood in Western Society by Hugh Cunningham -- also going through Flashback: a Brief History of Film by Gianetti and Eyman with my Honors Sem. in Film Crit. at Rutgers-Camden, and am about to teach Fast Food Nation to my freshmen at Camden County College (day job).
-Matt Sorrento, film editor
2/15/09
The Graveyard Book
Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book (just received a well-deserved Newberry Medal). The Happy Prince and Other Tales (Oscar Wilde) and on my adult bookshelf, Hardboiled and Hard Luck (Banana Yoshimoto - her writing is just so clean!)
-Sarah Weissman, assistant fiction editor
2/13/09
Notes from No Man's Land
-Amy Lee Scott, assistant editor
2/12/09
The White Tiger
-James Warner, assistant fiction editor
2/11/09
Memoirs of My Nervous Illness and Recommended V-Day Reading
-Summer Block Kumar, contributing editor
2/10/09
Sloths, comics, and The Lagoon
-Sumanth Prabhaker, assistant fiction editor
2/9/09
David Foster Wallace and a Quiet Purging
I started off well--beautifully, sadly, amazingly, actually--with Yiyun Li's A Thousand Years of Good Prayers and Jennifer Pashley's States.
I had intended then to fold back the cover of Doris Lessing's The Golden Notebook, but before I got to it, I was sucker punched--we all were--by David Foster Wallace's death. In that dark and magnetic immediacy, that feeling-knowing-thinking he will never write another word, I sank into "Incarnations of Burned Children." I kept the Harper's Magazine link of his essays open on my laptop for a week, barely sleeping so I could read it all, afraid, I guess, that his words would disappear, too. My recommendation: start here--and have your dictionary handy. Then read his Brief Interviews with Hideous Men.
After that it's felt like a quiet purging. I moved on, forgetting about gender, to those works that enticed me with darkness, thoughtfulness, more beauty and sadness. Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha, Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game, David Mura's "A Male Grief: Notes on pornography and addiction": an essay, and, for a dash of wildly, sickly funny in the dark, Rick Moody's The Ice Storm.
And here we are. Next is (for the first time) Miquel de Cervantes Saavedra's Don Quixote, and (for the second time) Richard Selzer's Notes on the Art of Surgery.
A little healing, imaginary or otherwise, never hurt anybody.
-Stacy Muszynski, copy editor
2/6/09
Roberto Bolano, Jim Harrison, and more
-Robert Birnbaum, editor-at-large
2/5/09
The Way Through Doors, The Elephant Vanishes
-Anna-Lynne Williams, music editor
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle + War and Peace
-Alexandra Tursi, visual arts editor
Thelonious Monk, Neil Gaiman, Neal Stephenson
I'm also reading Smoke and Mirrors, Neil Gaiman's short story collection. And also Neal Stephenson's ginormous book Anathem, which honestly I can't imagine finishing--turns out I'm not so much a fan of 900-page novels with 70-page glossaries.
-Andrew Whitacre, fiction editor
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