reading


2
Jan 09

The Year of the Write

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I took this iPhone screenshot at 8:09pm for the visual pun.

As I mentioned in yesterday’s entry, I want to stop procrastinating. It is my goal for this year, even if I might not cut out all of my bad habits. The idea is to start.

One manifestation of living on Procrastination Street is writer’s block. It is easy to put off writing because the rewards aren’t so immediate. Twittering my time away or posting witticisms on Facebook get more response, but those sentences are sent out on the quick and don’t take much process to make it into a story or a poem that expresses an idea.

Continue reading →


17
Jun 08

This Summer

What am I going to do this summer?

Well, I’ve already done one thing I’ve wanted to do, which was to visit Washington DC. I will definitely come back; I just don’t know when. Perhaps, some time in the near future, I’ll go to some overrated travel destination. No specific cities metioned, but I’ll be sure to look up people I know there or there and say hello.

As for what I will do, I’m teaching an eight week English Skills course at the urban college. I don’t mind dealing with grammar, sentence skills, paragraphs, and perhaps working towards essay skills in a class specifically designed to address those issue. I have the most experience with this course, and I often like my students. The big challenge is having to dole out the basic writing medicine in a compressed pill form. Not literally, of course.

Regarding my spare time, I want to get a lot of reading done. I just want to read fiction, especially that of William Faulkner. I’m not out to Southern-fry my writing. To me, Faulkner has a lot in common with science fiction or fantasy writers who have concentrated their works in specific worlds (i.e. J.R.R. Tolkien, Ursula K. Le Guin). Yoknapatawpha County, as a made-up place, is definitely a character in his works, complete with a history (and people who shape it). On that level, it’s not much different from Middle Earth or the Ekumen.

I also plan to take some time to write, especially some fiction. I’m not going to discuss my projects, but I may put stuff up from time to time. No promises or threats here, but doing the writing is more important than making it available for consumption.

As for some noteworthy things this summer, Pride has yet to happen in San Diego and I’m going to attend Comic-Con. I’ll take lots of pictures and you’ll be able to view them through Flickr. If I attend some panel or screening, then watch out for spoilers.


11
Feb 08

Ursula K. Le Guin in Harper’s

It’s almost been a year since I commented on an article in Harper’s. While there’s no shortage of great writers and articles featured, it’s not very often when I see one of my favorite writers in one of my favorite magazines. Last year, Jonathan Lethem explored the definition of plagiarism in the 21st century, but this time, Ursula K. Le Guin tackles the popularly elitist idea that reading is declining.*

Le Guin establishes that “Books are social vectors.” Along with other “social vectors,” such as television, film, and music, people do talk about what they have gained from this solitary activity. However, she questions if many people read less than they did back then. In addition, there is the modern problem of the book being made into a commodity by publishers. The literary establishment also seems to get off on a moralistic doom and gloom about how people don’t read.

That books are a social vector is evident in Goodreads, a website where people share what they’ve been reading. One can list what they’ve read, what they are currently reading, and what they will/hope to read. I found out about it through Rob and I put my own list up. Then there are book clubs, like Oprah’s which Jonathan Franzen made some comments about. Books in the hands of students still makes them a social vector even if they are a captive audience. People do discuss the books they’re reading, even if other media compete for their attention.

I don’t doubt that as long as we can kill some trees, we’ll still have the codex. Use them, read them, and love them. Oh, and don’t forget to thank the trees that were felled so you can hold a book in your hands.

*In order to access the full texts of Lethem and Le Guin from the Harper’s website, you need to have a subscriber account and login. “Staying Awake” by Ursula K. Le Guin is available in the print edition of February’s issue.


22
May 07

The Best Way To Not Read A Book Is To Buy It

My friend Sharon said that the best way to not read a book is to buy it.

Oh God, I think she is right. Over the years, I have developed the classic problem that creative writing students, English majors, classicists, writers, and book lovers in general have—I have accumulated too many books. As an English major and an MFA creative writing student, I have kept many of the books purchased for coursework. I have gone to Barnes & Noble and Borders, perused their shelves, and given them my money. I have also scoured used and abused bookstores with an agenda or have left things to chance and found that perfect book way too many times. Library books sales have yielded interesting choices. Some friends would occasionally give me books as gifts, and others leaving town have bequeathed me theirs. This left me with a constant bookshelf and space problem.

If clutter is a sign of unfulfilled potential, then the overflow in the bookshelves represented it in my life as a writer and a reader. I was very catholic in my interests, and there were always recommendations and ideas of novels that would help me model my own writing or books that seemed fun to read. Work, studies, and a personal life all have their demands, and as the books piled up, so did the procrastination. With every book, the collection became a daunting to-do list.

It was too easy to look at the shelves and feel overwhelmed. I hadn’t read this book nor this one, and I felt like it never was going to happen. Plus, I was crowded out by the things I once loved. The bookshelves took up too much room, and there was not enough space for all my books.

I needed to get rid of them. Taking them to used book sellers would be a full-time job because they can be picky. As someone who has worked in a used bookstore, I can say they won’t take any book. They have to know they can sell it. I could have gone the Amazon.Com route, but I didn’t want to deal running books to the post office. So, I simply donated them.

Eliminating them was easy. Deciding what to keep was hard. One rule was that they have to be able to fit on one shelf. Books on writing (such as John Gardner’s The Art of Fiction), grammar, and the Norton Anthologies on British literature remained, though I bid farewell to both Janet Burroway’s staidly conventional book* and Lance Olsen’s crazy one on creative writing. Ursula K. le Guin, Jonathan Lethem, and Neil Gaiman and a few other novelists are still here, but I said goodbye to much of my C.S. Lewis and Toni Morrison. There were tons of books I can’t even remember; however, I am pleased that I kept Walt Whitman, Frank O’Hara, American Splendor, and Tom Hardy’s Tess of the D’Urbervilles. I did happily get rid of Hardy’s Jude. I’ll probably mention other items in the remaining inventory sometime later.

Instead of building up a library, I’ll simply use the library. I can check out books, read them, and return them. It’s simple logic any child can understand. I read some books for free and I won’t have them to weigh me down. If I buy a book, I should put it back in circulation after I’m done reading it. I could either donate it (library, thrift shop, etc) or take it to a used bookstore to see if I could get some change for some coffee and a scone. The main idea is to get what I need from the book.

Here’s to reading and not having an attachment to books!


*This is one of those books that constantly appears in a new edition almost every year, though the first edition is absolutely fine. Unlike my response to John Gardner’s The Art of Fiction, I was not in a hurry to seek out the wonderful literary accomplishments of Ms. Burroway. I get the idea she’s now a one note writer who does creative writing books, especially revisions to the one that sells so well.


23
Feb 07

"The Ecstasy of Influence: A Plagiarism" by Jonathan Lethem

Ah, Harper’s. Definitely one of my favorite magazines and one I haven’t read in a long time. I picked up this month’s issue from the bookstore last night and found an article by Jonathan Lethem, a very prolific author whose first novel, Gun With Occasional Music, was marketed as science fiction, but appropriated elements from other genres. The detective mystery novel with its pulp tones were his most obvious source, though Lethem also plundered genetic dystopias as well. While Gun With Occasional Music was obviously a derivative work, the way Lethem put together his influences was original and quirkily his own. In his essay for Harper’s, he seamlessly cobbles together various sources to form an article on plagiarism and appropriation, putting forth very legitimate arguments for how art and literature constantly take from other works and that some aspects of copyright laws are ludicrous. At the end, he reveals his sources and how they factor into his collage.

The Ecstasy of Influence” reveals the our cultural hypocrisy in insisting on originality of content, yet plundering abounds. The highest profile culprit Lethem indicts is Disney, who appropriates fairy tales, legends, and literary works, yet strongly asserts its own hold on its icons, such as Mickey Mouse. His example of Dennis Oppenheim being sued for making sculptures of Disney Characters and Disney’s prevention of Holly Crawford from using images for her book on the art of Mickey Mose are baffling. Both point to Disney’s influence on the consciousness of contemporary culture. Also, it seems that Disney has more of chance of benefitting from these works than being injured. Though Disney may not profit directly from these works, they receive an acknowledgement of their impact in the ongoing discussion in culture, which appropriation is.

In academia, plagiarism is anathema, especially in policy. Students are regularly punished for stealing work without crediting another, and scholars stand to lose everything (especially their credibility) if they were caught pilfering another source. Then industries sprout up to protect the integrity of the ivory tower, such as Turnitin. Plagiarism is treated as a crime, but another form of appropriation is not. What about the research paper full of quotes, paraprhases, and a long list of works cited? While more legitimate in academic eyes, this type of document also appropriates other sources and creates a collage of sorts that should, of course, include the author’s insightful analysis. This then brings up the question of what’s the difference between appropriation and cheating? Could borrowing from another source be considered cheating? Perhaps.

Sampling in its various forms was controversial in the 1980′s and 1990′s, though it has gained acceptance in recent years (provided the source is properly compensated). Could sampling be considered a form of musical cheating? Maybe, but taking a melody, a bass line, or a chorus out of its context and rearranging it takes a very good ear and imagination. There are myriads of bad songs that are “original.” Shouldn’t a creative take on a song or its parts be applauded?

Appropriation is sometimes the only way a source becomes known. This is clearly the case with Tom Tom Club’s “Genius of Love,” which only became a cult hit after it was sampled. In literature, TS Eliot’s The Waste Land brings attention to Edmund Spenser’sProthalamion,” and W.H. Mallock’s The Human Document would be forever obscure if were not for Tom Phillips taking the text, plundering it, and rendering upon it artistic treatments.

My creative project for my MFA was one of appropriation. Like a lot of young writers, I sought to incorporate the influences in popular culture I was exposed to in my work. My protagonist’s sole obsession was the Gold Lady, an iconic figure whose image was borrowed from an abstract mannequin in a Nordstrom’s window display, and whose attributes were an amalgamation of various famous women. The prose occasionally had lines taken from pop songs (one of which was Tom Tom Club’s “Genius of Love”), and even a line borrowed from Walt Whitman (the same one used by Ray Bradbury in one of his titles). The work itself was not innocent of other influences. Blake was a big influence in presenting image and text, and Adolf Wölfli’s work also served to inform the insanity of my own.

That authors, artists, and musicians are informed by the works of others is Lethem’s point. How many literary titles reference a work of William Shakespeare’s, for example? Brave New World and The Sound and the Fury are some famous examples. These titles serve as epigrams, but then there are are also the quotes authors choose to introduce their works with, the one line quote that says it all. These acknowledged, but appropriated thoughts used to show what influenced this writer. In order for a writer to effectively write, reading is necessary. Writing, like speech, is a language that comes through use. The writer speaks (by writing), but she also hears and listens (by reading). By taking in books, journals, magazines, newspapers, and Internet text, the writer is informing her own work. In essence, no work exists in a vacuum and all works are part of the ongoing discussion in our culture.