Monday, April 28, 2008
"provided that he sticks out his tongue
to the hilt."
Benjamin Péret, To Sleep Standing Up
Sheheryar is obsessed with Mexican artists. Diego Rivera; Frida Kahlo; Manuel Alvarez Bravo. Right now he is reading everything he can find about Remedios Varo. I am sitting on the couch reading Benjamin Péret. He shows me pictures and makes me read snippets. Suddenly, I come across Péret's name. I read closer. What? Varo and Péret were married? Talk about synchronicity! Now I am reading his book and he is reading mine.
Saturday, April 26, 2008
"Souls burning in hell,
Appear to me in comparison
To that of a firebombed city."
~Charles Simic, Medieval Miniature
I just got back from a reading by Charles Simic, held downtown at the Chicago Public Library. I am stupid with wonder. Wonderstruck. Frankly gaga. I was sort of hoping for a more intimate venue, but in retrospect, I think the basement auditorium was the right way to go. Every 10 minutes of so, another homeless guy would shuffle in with his bags and take a seat. It seemed fitting, somehow - like a Simic poem: part parody, part tragedy.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Misadventure
What a strange and wonderful little word. An adventure that went awry. Death by misadventure; it feels nobler than an accident, doesn't it? As if you were out there, carpe-ing the diem, when, woops! Misadventure. And really, it's a nice reminder that every adventure has a "mis" out there, waiting for it.
Monday, April 21, 2008
What happens when we read
I, for one, am grateful my parents didn't censor my reading. Anything and everything was allowed, however grown-up, or, frankly, objectionable. Maybe that's why I don't worry too much about stereotypes and problematic politics in the literature my kids read. I'm holding out hope that what we learn from reading great books is not so much "manners and customs" or "social norms" as it is, well, empathy - that intangible thing that happens when we step into someone else's story and try to make sense of it. From what I understand, readers tend to identify with the main character of a story, regardless of race, gender, etc. Just as we are the subjects of our own self-narratives, so we place ourselves in the subject position when we read (that's why Indian children watching westerns identify with the cowboys). Our ability to switch between social categories in this process of identification is actually very interesting.
What I would like to spare my kids is the plethora of insipid literature written in the name of social change - those clumsily written stories that have nothing more going for them than that the princess rescues the prince. When it comes to change or progress, I'd wager that politically correct plot-lines have had way less impact on the world than, say, female literacy.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
A Walking Fleetwood Mac Song
Okay. Makes sense. But frankly, I like Sheheryar's answer better:
"You make loving fun."
Don't you just miss Bill Clinton?
I wish all candidates had been required to use a Fleetwood Mac song in their presidential campaigns. I've got the perfect one for George W.:
"Over my head."
Saturday, April 12, 2008
"You get kewpie doll notions
Dress them in the rags of my skin"
~Vasko Popa
I am reading Homage to the Lame Wolf, thanks to a recommendation from Sarah. Now I am reading it again. I eat it too fast, like an ice cream cone. I get brain freeze. Now I am reading it again. Small bites. I chew each bite twenty times.
I am agog. Also objects have attitudes.
Friday, April 11, 2008
Another thing I was wrong about
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Sigh
The Bonesetter's Daughter
The Communist's Daughter
The Cantor's Daughter
The Parson's Daughter
The Horse Dealer's Daughter
The Gravedigger's Daughter
The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter
The Marsh King's Daughter
The Tiger's Daughter
Burger's Daughter
The General's Daughter
The Miller's Daughter
The Abortionist's Daughter
The Pirate's Daughter
The Captain's Daughter
The Ringmaster's Daughter
The Winemaker's Daughter
Somehow, it makes me sad.
Monday, April 7, 2008
Mood Music
Friday, April 4, 2008
e.g. Fabio
Names are fun. Poe, Minor, Elias; Chuzzlewit and Pecksniff; the Captain and Tenille; Linwood, Hazel, Sprague. My grandmother's name, Mary Estelle, means "rebel star." (That is so cool). Then there are the Pakistani names that end in "ish," like Daanish, Naazish, and Beenish. (Beenish; that's a neat one). Bronwen, Cormac, Nicola; Xochitl (pronounced So-cheel), Santiago, and ooh, Alberto.
Novelists have it good. Yeah, that's the life - doling out names left and right. Romance novelists in particular, since they don't seem to be hindered by probability or good taste.