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September 2007

September 29, 2007

NYT article of the day: What Ails the Short Story

What Ails the Short Story

 
By

STEPHEN KING

Published: September 30, 2007
 

The American short story is alive and well.

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Illustration by Wink

 

     

Do you like the sound of that? Me too. I only wish it were actually true. The art form is still alive — that I can testify to. As editor of “The Best American Short Stories 2007,” I read hundreds of them, and a great many were good stories. Some were very good. And some seemed to touch greatness. But “well”? That’s a different story.

I came by my hundreds — which now overflow several cardboard boxes known collectively as The Stash — in a number of different ways. A few were recommended by writers and personal friends. A few more I downloaded from the Internet. Large batches were sent to me on a regular basis by Heidi Pitlor, the series editor. But I’ve never been content to stay on the reservation, and so I also read a great many stories in magazines I bought myself, at bookstores and newsstands in Florida and Maine, the two places where I spend most of the year. I want to begin by telling you about a typical short-story-hunting expedition at my favorite Sarasota mega-bookstore. Bear with me; there’s a point to this.

I go in because it’s just about time for the new issues of Tin House and Zoetrope: All-Story. There will certainly be a new issue of The New Yorker and perhaps Glimmer Train and Harper’s. No need to check out The Atlantic Monthly; its editors now settle for publishing their own selections of fiction once a year in a special issue and criticizing everyone else’s the rest of the time. Jokes about eunuchs in the bordello come to mind, but I will suppress them.

So into the bookstore I go, and what do I see first? A table filled with best-selling hardcover fiction at prices ranging from 20 percent to 40 percent off. James Patterson is represented, as is Danielle Steel, as is your faithful correspondent. Most of this stuff is disposable, but it’s right up front, where it hits you in the eye as soon as you come in, and why? Because these are the moneymakers and rent payers; these are the glamour ponies.

I walk past the best sellers, past trade paperbacks with titles like “Who Stole My Chicken?,” “The Get-Rich Secret” and “Be a Big Cheese Now,” past the mysteries, past the auto-repair manuals, past the remaindered coffee-table books (looking sad and thumbed-through with their red discount stickers). I arrive at the Wall of Magazines, which is next door to the children’s section, where story time is in full swing. I stare at the racks of magazines, and the magazines stare eagerly back. Celebrities in gowns and tuxes, models in low-rise jeans, luxury stereo equipment, talk-show hosts with can’t-miss diet plans — they all scream Buy me, buy me! Take me home and I’ll change your life!+

I can grab The New Yorker and Harper’s while I’m still standing up, without going to my knees like a school janitor trying to scrape a particularly stubborn wad of gum off the gym floor. For the rest, I must assume exactly that position. I hope the young woman browsing Modern Bride won’t think I’m trying to look up her skirt. I hope the young man trying to decide between Starlog and Fangoria won’t step on me. I crawl along the lowest shelf, where neatness alone suggests few ever go. And here I find fresh treasure: not just Zoetrope and Tin House, but also Five Points and The Kenyon Review. No Glimmer Train, but there’s American Short Fiction, The Iowa Review, even an Alaska Quarterly Review. I stagger to my feet and limp toward the checkout. The total cost of my six magazines runs to over $80. There are no discounts in the magazine section.

So think of me crawling on the floor of this big chain store and ask yourself, What’s wrong with this picture?

We could argue all day about the reasons for fiction’s out-migration from the eye-level shelves — people have. We could marvel over the fact that Britney Spears is available at every checkout, while an American talent like William Gay or Randy DeVita or Eileen Pollack or Aryn Kyle (all of whom were among my final picks) labors in relative obscurity. We could, but let’s not. It’s almost beside the point, and besides — it hurts.

Instead, let us consider what the bottom shelf does to writers who still care, sometimes passionately, about the short story. What happens when he or she realizes that his or her audience is shrinking almost daily? Well, if the writer is worth his or her salt, he or she continues on nevertheless, because it’s what God or genetics (possibly they are the same) has decreed, or out of sheer stubbornness, or maybe because it’s such a kick to spin tales. Possibly a combination. And all that’s good.

What’s not so good is that writers write for whatever audience is left. In too many cases, that audience happens to consist of other writers and would-be writers who are reading the various literary magazines (and The New Yorker, of course, the holy grail of the young fiction writer) not to be entertained but to get an idea of what sells there. And this kind of reading isn’t real reading, the kind where you just can’t wait to find out what happens next (think “Youth,” by Joseph Conrad, or “Big Blonde,” by Dorothy Parker). It’s more like copping-a-feel reading. There’s something yucky about it.

Last year, I read scores of stories that felt ... not quite dead on the page, I won’t go that far, but airless, somehow, and self-referring. These stories felt show-offy rather than entertaining, self-important rather than interesting, guarded and self-conscious rather than gloriously open, and worst of all, written for editors and teachers rather than for readers. The chief reason for all this, I think, is that bottom shelf. It’s tough for writers to write (and editors to edit) when faced with a shrinking audience. Once, in the days of the old Saturday Evening Post, short fiction was a stadium act; now it can barely fill a coffeehouse and often performs in the company of nothing more than an acoustic guitar and a mouth organ. If the stories felt airless, why not? When circulation falters, the air in the room gets stale.

And yet. I read plenty of great stories this year. There isn’t a single one in this book that didn’t delight me, that didn’t make me want to crow, “Oh, man, you gotta read this!” I think of such disparate stories as Karen Russell’s “St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves,” John Barth’s “Toga Party” and “Wake,” by Beverly Jensen, now deceased, and I think — marvel, really — they paid me to read these! Are you kiddin’ me???

Talent can’t help itself; it roars along in fair weather or foul, not sparing the fireworks. It gets emotional. It struts its stuff. If these stories have anything in common, it’s that sense of emotional involvement, of flipped-out amazement. I look for stories that care about my feelings as well as my intellect, and when I find one that is all-out emotionally assaultive — like “Sans Farine,” by Jim Shepard — I grab that baby and hold on tight. Do I want something that appeals to my critical nose? Maybe later (and, I admit it, maybe never). What I want to start with is something that comes at me full-bore, like a big, hot meteor screaming down from the Kansas sky. I want the ancient pleasure that probably goes back to the cave: to be blown clean out of myself for a while, as violently as a fighter pilot who pushes the eject button in his F-111. I certainly don’t want some fraidy-cat’s writing school imitation of Faulkner, or some stream-of-consciousness about what Bob Dylan once called “the true meaning of a pear.”

So — American short story alive? Check. American short story well? Sorry, no, can’t say so. Current condition stable, but apt to deteriorate in the years ahead. Measures to be taken? I would suggest you start by reading this year’s “Best American Short Stories.” They show how vital short stories can be when they are done with heart, mind and soul by people who care about them and think they still matter. They do still matter, and here they are, liberated from the bottom shelf.

Stephen King is the author of 60 books, as well as nearly 400 short stories, including “The Man in the Black Suit,” which won the O. Henry Prize in 1996.

 

September 27, 2007

Books of the past three days: Yellow and Country of Origin by Don Lee

Here's a link to Don Lee's nice-looking site: http://www.don-lee.com/

Go out and buy these books and read them immediately! I loved them. I really did. They are...mature. I couldn't put them down. If you like Haruki Murakami but with less nihilism and less (or no?) misogyny (not sure if that's exactly the right word for Murakami's take on female characters), you'll like Lee's work a lot.

Here's an engaging interview with Don Lee from 2004, while he was working on Country of Origin: http://www.identitytheory.com/printme/leeprint.html

Coocover Yellowcover

September 23, 2007

Novel of the day: Annie John by Jamaica Kincaid

  I have wanted to read this slender book for a long time. Yesterday I picked it up from the library and then read it one sitting. It was an excellent experience. I found it haunting and it reminded me very favorably of Carson McCullers' Member of the Wedding.

Synopsis
Annie John is growing up on the magical island of Antigua. It should be a sojourn in paradise for her but adolescence takes the brilliant, headstrong girl into open rebellions and secret discoveries, and finally to a crisis of emotions that wrenches her away from her island home.

Annie_john_6


September 22, 2007

VACANCY: Horror rental of the week

Vacancy   

   

Director: Nimród Antal

Writer (WGA):Mark L. Smith (written by)

Release Date:

20 April 2007

How can you escape...if they can see everything?

Plot Outline:

A young married couple becomes stranded at an isolated motel and finds hidden video cameras in their room. They realize that unless they escape, they'll be the next victims of a snuff film ...

----

I found it scary, because it seemed totally plausible. Generally, I'm not a fan of horror movies with a torture theme (too realistic) and prefer monster and sci-fi horror. Luke Wilson was appealing. Kate Beckinsale was also completely serviceable. I kept waiting for her to go all killer like she is in Underworld. She kind of gets there. Frank Whaley as the motel manager is believable. Nice hair.

September 21, 2007

Book of the day

I enjoyed this book and would recommend it, especially if you understand Seoul as a kind of underworld. -sys

I Have the Right to Destroy Myself
Young-ha Kim  Translated from the Korean by Chi-Young Kim

    0156030802 Trade Paperback
ISBN-13/EAN: 9780156030809
$12.00
132pages
Available
Trim Size: 5-5/16 x 8
Copyright Year: 2007
Territory: World English
Read an Excerpt

Synopsis
In the fast-paced, high-urban landscape of Seoul, C and K are brothers who have fallen in love with the same woman—Se-yeon—who tears at both of them as they all try desperately to find real connection in an atomized world. A spectral, nameless narrator haunts the edges of their lives as he tells of his work helping the lost and hurting find escape through suicide. Dreamlike and beautiful, the South Korea brought forth in this novel is cinematic in its urgency and its reflection of contemporary life everywhere—far beyond the boundaries of the Korean peninsula. Recalling the emotional tension of Milan Kundera and the existential anguish of Bret Easton Ellis, I Have the Right to Destroy Myself achieves its author’s greatest wish—to show Korean literature as part of an international tradition. Young-ha Kim is a young master, the leading literary voice of his generation.

Biography

YOUNG-HA KIM has published three novels and numerous short stories and has a daily radio show. He teaches drama at the Korean National University of Arts and has received all of Korea’s top literary awards. He lives in Seoul.

September 18, 2007

I'm reading tonight

SASE at Intermedia Arts Presents

Every Third Tuesday CAROL CONNOLLY Hosts

READINGS

BY WRITERS

 at the historic University Club Saint Paul 

420 Summit Avenue

www.universityclubofstpaul.com 651-222-1751

MEMBERS and NON-MEMBERS are invited for 5:00 Dinner - OPTIONAL - reservations necessary. Bar is open before, during, and after reading.  

7:30 Reading FREE and OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

This month we enter the 9th year of this series on                                                                           

Tuesday September18, 2007

Our Featured Readers are: 

TODD BOSS, poet and The Playwrights' Center Director of External Affairs, where he serves as grant writer, is widely published in prestigious literary journals and magazines, including THE NEW YORKER. Boss curates, in association with Garrison Keillor’s Common Good Books, a monthly readings series at Nina’s Cafe in

Saint Paul

. Boss, who grew up on a Wisconsin cattle farm, lives now with his family in

Saint   Paul

. His first book of poems has just been accepted for publication by WW Norton. Yes.

 

SUN YUNG SHIN poet, author of SKIRT FULL OF BLACK, Coffee House Press, is co-editor of OUTSIDERS WITHIN: Writing on Transracial Adoption, South End Press, and COOPER'S LESSON, a Korean/English children’s book. She is a 2007 Bush Artists Fellow for Literature, and taking a one-year leave from her position in the English department at the

Perpich

Center

for Arts Education. 

 

THOMAS R. SMITH is a poet and essayist living in

River Falls

,

Wisconsin

. His most recent books of poetry are WINTER HOURS and WAKING BEFORE DAWN, Red Dragonfly Press. Next year a chapbook of nature poems, KINNICKINNIC, will be published by Parallel Press in

Madison

,

Wisconsin

.  He has written poetry criticism for the STAR TRIBUNE, PIONEER PRESS, RUMINATOR REVIEW, and other publications. Smith is active in Poets Against the War and teaches in the Master Track program at the

Loft

Literary

Center

.

 

Readings

last one hour, never more.

 

For more information: 612- 874-2815 or www.saseonline.org

Some University Club reading sites are handicapped accessible.

Some are not. Best to check.



Intermedia Arts is a catalyst that builds understanding among people through art.

 

September 17, 2007

Evil adoptee

Ring_2 See it again!

September 13, 2007

Some notes

Hurray for libraries! This summer the neighborhood library reopened after being remodeled. It's great! Sadly, because of funding cuts, it's not open Saturday, Sunday, or Monday, and has limited hours T - F.

I wish it was open 24-7. And had food. And a napping couch. Wait a minute, why leave home at all? Oh right, the access to books for free...

Books read this last week: When the Emperor Was Divine, Julie Otsuka and Edinburgh by Alexander Chee.

I'm reading Crabcakes by James Alan McPherson right now. His writing is beautiful--classical, elegant. I also have been checking out tons of children's books each week for my kids. We love that.

Tonight, if anyone local is reading this, Rohan Preston and Angela Shannon will be reading from their work at 7 pm at Patrick's Cabaret. I hope it's a full house!





September 04, 2007

Koreas summit delayed because of floods

N Korea floods kill more than 220
                                                                                    

North Koreans repair road in flood-hit South Pyongan province (Photo from Xinhua news agency)
Many roads have been washed away by the floods
More than 220 people have been killed and 80 are still missing after severe flooding in North Korea, according to Red Cross officials in the country.

The province of Kangwon suffered the highest toll, with 181 confirmed deaths, the International Federation of the Red Cross's Terje Lysholm said.

Aid agencies are working with the Pyongyang government to get emergency relief to the many thousands affected.

But power cuts and washed out roads are complicating the aid effort.

The heavy flooding of recent days has left as many as 300,000 people without homes and destroyed one-tenth of the country's much-needed farmland, North Korea said on Wednesday.

       

                                 
                                                                         
How many people are still completely without shelter at this point is difficult to say because communication lines are down
                                                         
Terje Lysholm
IFRC, Pyongyang
                            
       

International aid workers have been carrying out assessments in the four worst-affected provinces and say the damage is extensive.

In one county alone, near the South Korean border, some 4,500 homes have been completely destroyed, affecting 18,000 people, Mr Lysholm told BBC News.

Many people will have been able to seek refuge in neighbours' homes and in public buildings such as schools and clinics, he said.

"How many people are still completely without shelter at this point is difficult to say, because communication lines are down," he added.

Red Cross teams and other agencies are trying to deliver more than 20,000 tarpaulins, kitchen sets, blankets and water purification tablets to the worst-hit areas.

Aid considered

Terje Lysholm said the assessment teams had confirmed figures of 221 dead and 82 missing in the southern provinces of Kangwon, North Hwanghae, South Pyongan and South Hamgyong.

But it is feared the death toll could rise. Last year's flooding, which affected a much smaller area, killed at least 500 people although the exact death toll was never officially released by the normally reclusive state.

       

                                 
                                   
                            Map                    
                                                            
                           
                        
                                         
                               
                            
       

International agencies and governments were also waiting for Pyongyang to confirm what is needed in terms of food aid.

Michael Dunford of the World Food Programme in Pyongyang said they were waiting for the government to finalise its assessment of what is needed and where, so they can start diverting their stocks of food supplies already in the country for emergency use.

South Korea, a key donor of aid to its impoverished northern neighbour, has offered emergency humanitarian assistance.

Japan and the US are also said to be considering what aid to send.

Pyongyang made a rare plea for international help after announcing on Monday that storms since 7 August had led to "huge human and material damage".

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  • © All rights reserved 2007 by Sun Yung Shin. Poems, essays and posts may not be republished, reprinted or repurposed without permission.
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