An enormous book maze, created in the shape of the fingerprint of writer Jorgé Luis Borges. Via Robert E. Stutts, who has a cool blog.
aMAZEme: A Labyrinth Made from 250,000 Books from Christopher Jobson on Vimeo.
An enormous book maze, created in the shape of the fingerprint of writer Jorgé Luis Borges. Via Robert E. Stutts, who has a cool blog.
aMAZEme: A Labyrinth Made from 250,000 Books from Christopher Jobson on Vimeo.
Eric Orchard is an outstanding cartoonist and illustrator who is self publishing a beautiful and eerie series called Marrowbones. This is fantastic stuff. I can’t rave with enough ravery. That’s not a word, but whatever. I know there are a lot of artists out there doing this sort of Tim Burtonesque creepy and yet-oh-so-cutesie stuff, but Eric’s work has a real depth of feeling and a sense of world building that many other artists just can’t touch. I like Tim Burton, but if I want Tim Burton, I’ll go to Tim Burton. Eric Orchard is original. His whimsy is not manufactured, and his stories are not preachy parables. Saying what his work is not is not enough praise, but saying what his work is is hard. He’s his own man.
Eric’s website with Paypal buttons to purchase directly RIGHT HERE.
Arlene Harris is an award-winning author whose checkered publishing history is the lot of many eccentric creators to whom traditional publishing has not been kind. A damn shame, because she is genuinely talented. She is a big supporter of my work on A Distant Soil, and though we’ve only met a few times, I’ve always appreciated her letters and insights.
Arlene has spent many years working on her very interesting, entertaining, and lovingly written sequel to Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables entitled Pont-au-Change. It is very good.
In 1855, when Victor Hugo moved to the Isle of Guernsey rather than live under Napoleon III, the trunk containing his unfinished masterwork Les Misérables was almost lost overboard when a careless sailor tossed it haphazardly into the longboat; fortunately for the world, the trunk tipped back into the boat at the last second.
The pivotal word is “almost.” What if–by caprice, by wind, by a swell of the sea–the trunk had actually gone the other way, straight to the bottom of the Channel? And what if, in coincidence of Hugoesque proportions, the person responsible for this accident–was Jean Valjean?
Here then is a six volume work that takes that idea and runs with it across 40 years and circumnavigates the globe with it. Why does Hugo write that Valjean is dead in 1833 when he is alive in 1855? And how does he publish the book when the manuscript is lost? Hugo has to recreate it, and Valjean will help him do it.
There’s only one catch. Jean Valjean is not the only one to still be alive twenty years after he shouldn’t be, according to the book. Valjean’s traveling companion is the last person on earth one would imagine.
Arlene has completed three volumes of her series, and hopes you will drop a few bucks her way to bring her self published works some love at Kickstarter. The target amount is very modest. The dedication and love she brings to her work is one thing, but the great entertainment you will get out of it is every reason to support this project. HERE IS THE KICKSTARTER PAGE.
Dave Sim brings his groundbreaking comic Cerebus back to life with a new digital series packed with amazing extras. This is a very smart and successful Kickstarter campaign, already well past its goal. It doesn’t need any more support from me, but that is not the point. Cerebus was the most important book of the self publishing movement, and Dave Sim is the single most important person in the history of the creator rights movement. Everybody else who contributed is much appreciated, but no one was a more outspoken – or original – advocate.
While Dave’s views on many important issues have changed over the years, and while Dave and I have had a parting of the ways over some of them, this in no way diminishes my great respect for his incredible accomplishments. Cerebus is an important work of outsider art.
There are longer comics, especially those from Japan. However, a self published, entirely creator-controlled work of this magnitude just doesn’t exist anywhere else. I’ve never read all of Cerebus, and would often skip about looking for the funny parts. I always meant to read it, but never did. It’s quite a commitment at 6000 pages. But, I still remember the incredible experimental layouts.
I will also never forget the fact that Dave Sim was one of only a handful of creators who stood up publicly and spoke for me when I had a creator rights dispute with an early publisher of A Distant Soil, a company which wanted to own all rights to my work. Dave wrote essays about the exploitation of creators, and gave me a very well paying job on a Cerebus short story at a time I really needed it. It was an extremely generous page rate, far more than I deserved.
Outside of Dave, the only other creators who made a public stand on my behalf were Jim Valentino, Mark Wheatley, and Mark Hempel. I wasn’t famous in the 1980′s, and without a name, you don’t have a cause most people care about. There were a handful of people who treated me kindly behind the scenes (very notable among them, Marvel Comics VP Mike Hobson, Walt and Louise Simonson, and Archie Goodwin, as well as a few others,) but most of the industry threw me under a bus. It would be almost a decade before the rest of the Big Boy’s Club decided I was worthy.
For all that, Dave, I thank you.
While many people have serious issues with Dave’s personal beliefs and choose not to support his work, that is not something I care to discuss. I’m tired of people playing let’s-you-and-him-fight. The industry is full of eccentric thinkers, and your choices in art and entertainment are entirely your own. Do as you will.
Dave Sim’s Cerebus Kickstarter is HERE.
Here’s a series of links to some very interesting, boomarkable articles about women writers. Fantastic reading.
Margaret Fuller from rom The Nation:
In the first half of the nineteenth century, although a fair number of her sex among abolitionists and suffragists were brilliant, it was Margaret Fuller, world-class talker and author of the influential treatise Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845), who stood in the allotted space, alone in a sea of gifted men, most of whom chose to denature her—she thinks like a man—as they could not believe they had to take seriously a thinking woman.
Adrienne Rich at Slate.
No American poet has so fully created a body of work constellated around the notion that change is essential to being free. If A Change of World is mostly juvenilia, nonetheless Rich’s concerns are vibrantly alive in the shadows. Over and over one encounters in her early books the words that became the mature Rich’s touchstones: “will,” “change,” and “choice.” “The moment of change is the only poem,” she later wrote.
Fascinating essay on Susan Sontag at Tablet Mag.
It was not easy to be so serious. Sontag writes movingly and very candidly about the way her great intelligence made life and relationships difficult for her, starting from early childhood: “Always (?) this feeling of being ‘too much’ for them—a creature from another planet—so I would try to scale myself down to their size, so that I could be apprehendable by (lovable by) them.”
And another essay on Sontag at Book Forum.
The animating force at the heart of everything Sontag wrote—the cultivation of aesthetic and intellectual experience—is not properly speaking an idea; it’s a stance, or an attitude. It is itself a way of moving. There is no magnum opus or theoretical treatise that we can point to as Sontag’s distinct contribution, no “takeaway” we can pierce under glass. So it may not be very surprising that since her death eight years ago, the many provocations of her thinking have drifted out of view to make room for the more obvious fact of her celebrity. Besides, she’s a woman; we make good icons.
At The New Republic, statistics prove a literary bias against women.
The place of women in the literary world is still as urgent an issue as it has ever been. I worry that other women of my generation, having taken their admission to this world as a natural right, have grown as complacent as I have been. But admission is not the same thing as acceptance. And what the reception of literature by women over the last few decades—longer, of course, but let’s keep to a manageable scope—shows us is that acceptance is a long way off.
The gentlemen at Commentary disagree.
…the claim that “men publish the majority of the reviews in American literary publications,” advanced as if it were prima facie evidence of bias, obliterates the individual history of at least one man who has championed several women writers.
TONIGHT: Weds., Oct. 19th
7:00 p.m.
*The Wave in the Mind: A Tribute to Ursula K. Le Guin*
Authors John Wray, N.K. Jemisin, Ellen Kushner, Michael Swanwick, and
moderator David G. Hartwell discuss Ursula K. Le Guin’s legacy from
the Earthsea books to her influence on today’s new writers.
Wine & booksigning after:
http://www.centerforfiction.org/calendar/big-read-the-wave-in-the-mind-a-tribute-to-ursula-k-le-guin
TOMORROW: Thursday October 20, 2011 #
05:30 pm – 10:30 pm
*EARTHSEA Marathon Group Read & Party!!!*
Some of New York City’s finest actors, writers and musicians will
gather at the Center to read the entire novel aloud in a marathon five-
hour event. Drop in to listen, enjoy some party food and wine…maybe
even to read a page or two yourself! It’s a party plus a reading, a
chance for people to get together and enjoy good company and the work
of a contemporary American author whose work transcends genre. The
list of readers – which includes John Cameron Mitchell (Hedwig and the
Angry Inch), Dion Graham (The Wire) & Barbara Rosenblat (pretty much
every audiobook you’ve ever loved!) – and details are here:
http://www.centerforfiction.org/calendar/big-read-earthsea-group-read
# THIS EVENT will be STREAMED LIVE at http://www.centerforfiction.org
Both events are free and open to the public, though the Center puts
you on a special list if you RSVP via each event’s web page, and you
will be asked if you’d like to make a $5 donation when you arrive.
More information on the Le Guin Big Read events, which continue
through Oct. 26th:
http://www.centerforfiction.org/events/the-big-read/
J.K. Rowling Speaks at Harvard Commencement from Harvard Magazine on Vimeo.
I was jobless, a lone parent, and as poor as it is possible to be in modern Britain, without being homeless….I was the biggest failure I knew…failure meant a stripping away of the inessential. I stopped pretending to myself that I was anything other than what I was, and began to direct all my energy into finishing the only work that mattered to me. Had I really succeeded at anything else, I might never have found the determination to succeed in the one arena I believed I truly belonged.
Complete transcript at Harvard Magazine. Official Harvard Magazine embed. © J K Rowling.
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