APS 15: Maud Casey in fugue country; Leslie Jamison on the WM3; Joel Rotenberg translates Ernst Weiss; Martha Cooley reads Berlin Alexanderplatz; Jeroen Toirkens’s Nomads; new work by Mary-Beth Hughes, Sarah A. Strickley, and Tania James; poems by Jorie Graham, W. G. Sebald, Timothy Donnelly, and others.
"The essential work of interpretation is best found in a culture’s quieter spaces," Teju Cole says. "We need reports in fiction, nonfiction, and photography that are engagé without being ephemeral and are steeped in a proper thoughtfulness. Small magazines are among the guarantors of these habits of liberty." This work at A Public Space wouldn't have been possible without your support.
Thank you to everyone—writers, readers, supporters, mentors, friends—who has been a part of A Public Space this past year. Please join us for another year of art and argument, fact and fiction, by contributing to our annual fundraising campaign, or giving a subscription to all the writers, readers, travelers, and dreamers on your list this holiday season.
1878: Eadweard Muybridge photographs the racehorse Sallie Gardener at a gallop. John Haskell’s essay “The Persistence of Muybridge” appears in APS 12: “I believed I could find, somewhere in his armor of control, a crack, and in that crack I could find his desire, and by giving him that desire, I could make him happy.”
1886: Arthur Rimbaud writes Illuminations. John Ashbery’s translation appears in APS 13.
1887: Walt Whitman’s poems are the subject of a Contemporary Humor column in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Omaha Girl: “Why, they are not even rhymed.” Eastern Man: “Nevertheless they are marvels, considering that they were written in a place where the poet had to stop between every word to fight mosquitoes.” Therese Stanton imagines the poet’s swarming tormentors in APS 14.
1903: Marcel Proust and Jean Gabriel-Louis Pringué attend a party hosted by MMe Deiulaffoy (“the only woman in France then authorized to wear male attire”). Jeffrey Lependorf translates Pringué’s Trente ans de dîners en ville, the socialite’s memoir about the people and parties that Proust fictionalizes for In Search of Lost Time in APS 12.
1909: The Grand Concourse in the Bronx is completed. One hundred years later, Katie Holten walks the four and a half mile boulevard with a forester, selecting one hundred trees for her Tree Museum. Robert Sullivan reports on the project, public art in the city, and chance connections in APS 13.
1932:Eva Zeisel, living in Berlin and, according to her grandmother, inebriated on amusements, decides to visit Moscow to “see what was beyond the mountain.” Accused of plotting to assassinate Stalin, she is arrested in 1936 and held for sixteen months. Shortly before her 105th birthday, her Prison Memoir is published in APS 14.
1957: Photographer W. Eugene Smith moves into 821 Sixth Avenue in New York City and begins recording life in the building, a late-night haunt of jazz musicians. APS contributor Sam Stephenson spends a decade researching Smith’s archives for The Jazz Loft Project, and A Public Space collaborates with him and director Chris McElroen on Chaos Manor, a multimedia theater installation based on the book, in September 2011.
1976: John Gardner reviews Charles Newman in the Washington Post, calling him “one of the most interesting, intelligent, and, I suspect, secretly optimistic prophets of doom now writing fiction.” A Public Space partners with the Brooklyn Philharmonic to present a concert inspired by his novella “The Five-Thousandth Baritone” (APS 11) in January 2011.
1979: Jane Byrne is elected mayor of Chicago. APS 14 contributor (and Chicago native) Peter Orner’s novel Love and Shame and Love, “an hommage to my family’s obsessions, which were divorce, falling out of love and politics,” is published in November 2011: “Remember Jane Byrne? Fighting Jane, Mike Royko called her. Mayor Bossy. She ran against the Democratic machine and squashed it, the whole goddamned machine.”
1994:Tom Drury introduces the Darling family and Grouse County, Iowa, in The End of Vandalism and is hailed as one of the most original writers in America. The Darlings return in “Joan Comes Home” in APS 12.
1994:Dorthe Norsreads Kirsten Ekman. “Few writers possess the ability to truly change the lives of their readers, even if we’d love to do so. But Ekman changed me and, more than that, she opened the box that became my writing. Most writers have their own literary midwives.... It’s a beautiful thought: a young person must first encounter the literature to release the talent.” Dorthe’s stories appear in APS 12 and APS 14.
1999: APS 8 contributor Danielle Evans calls her parents in tears, “having exhausted my willingness to pretend that I wanted to do something practical with my life, and told them I wanted to be a writer when I grew up, and who essentially said, Well then I guess you better stop crying and write something.” She receives the 2011 PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for her debut collection of stories, Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self.
2005: APS debut author Jesmyn Ward’s hometown of DeLisle, Mississippi, is hit by Hurricane Katrina. It becomes the central event in her novel Salvage the Bones, which receives the 2011 National Book Award.
2006: After working on the Focus: Japan portfolio in APS 1, Motoyuki Shibata decides to start a magazine of his own in Tokyo. Monkey Business debuts in 2007, and Monkey Business: New Writing from Japan, a special English-language edition, is published in April 2011.
2011:Teju Cole goes walking in the city. “Epigraphs of the Eye,” a photo essay about sites of troubled memory, appears in APS 14.
\"The essential work of interpretation is best found in a culture’s quieter spaces,\" Teju Cole says. \"We need reports in fiction, nonfiction, and photography that are engagé without being ephemeral and are steeped in a proper thoughtfulness. Small magazines are among the guarantors of these habits of liberty.\" This work at A Public Space wouldn't have been possible without your support. \n\nThank you to everyone—writers, readers, supporters, mentors, friends—who has been a part of A Public Space this past year. Please join us for another year of art and argument, fact and fiction, by contributing to our annual fundraising campaign, or giving a subscription to all the writers, readers, travelers, and dreamers on your list this holiday season. \n\n1878: Eadweard Muybridge photographs the racehorse Sallie Gardener at a gallop. John Haskell’s essay “The Persistence of Muybridge” appears in APS 12: “I believed I could find, somewhere in his armor of control, a crack, and in that crack I could find his desire, and by giving him that desire, I could make him happy.”\n\n1886: Arthur Rimbaud writes Illuminations. John Ashbery’s translation appears in APS 13.\n\n1887: Walt Whitman’s poems are the subject of a Contemporary Humor column in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Omaha Girl: “Why, they are not even rhymed.” Eastern Man: “Nevertheless they are marvels, considering that they were written in a place where the poet had to stop between every word to fight mosquitoes.” Therese Stanton imagines the poet’s swarming tormentors in APS 14.
Subscribe now to A Public Space, or renew, and ensure a year of great reading.
It had a great feeling of unreality. I mean, I was a designer of china; I was not in the business of killing Stalin. Imagine yourself!
The designer Eva Zeisel's Prison Memoir. In APS 14. Order your copy today.
Brian Edwards revisits Tahrir Square, in Public Culture: Without the aperture of retrospective history, there is a kind of freedom. Narrative tahrir (liberation).
Autobiography in fiction: Eudora Welty ("that’s the thing what would chain me back the most—if I had real life staring me in the face") and William Maxwell ("I think Eudora may have had a moral disapproval If I had had to write only about imaginary people, I would have had to close up my typewriter") disagree. (via Maud Newton’s archives)
“Always I thought, how long before I go out? Because when you wake up in the same room every day it’s the same thing, ‘When I can get out?’ It’s always depressing. But day by day, day by day, you don’t need to worry about what will happen, because when you wake up it’s always the same room.”
Baum's Bazaar: Jaime Clarke's new project attempts to create an underground economy for the written word.
On Tagore's 150th anniversary, revisiting Yeats's introduction to his work: "Other Indians came to see me and their reverence for this man sounded strange in our world, where we hide great and little things under the same veil of obvious comedy and half-serious depreciation."
Sunday night: Boardwalk Empire and Sienese Shredder. "When art historians write about figurative art in the Renaissance, they tend to follow the moribund prejudice that realism is what every naturalistic figuration must seek to achieve.... What gets emphasized is skill in rendering form: realism as work and not as feeling": David Carbone on the Sienese tradition and Giovanni di Paolo (painter and illustrator of Dante's manuscripts)—"alternate models to the clichés of the Western realist tradition."
“It is only when the imagination is dragged away from what the eye sees that a picture becomes interesting”: Tom Stoppard, Artist Descending a Staircase
"One senses that for her, worldly failure is less of a soul-killer than failure to find grace": Stacey D'Erasmo's review of Mary-Beth Hughes's Double Happiness (catching up)
John Cassavetes: “To tell the truth as you see it, incidentally, is not necessarily the truth. To tell the truth as someone else sees it is, to me, much more important and enlightening. Some documentaries are fantastic. Like Lionel Rogosin’s pictures, for instance; like On the Bowery. This is a guy who’s probably the greatest documentary filmmaker of all time, in my opinion.” At Film Forum this week only.
Peyton Marshall's Come and See the Legend on Five Chapters: "I wasn’t good at small talk and very rarely did I meet someone who put me at ease. My mother accused me of disliking company, which wasn’t true."
Ginsberg v. Ginsberg: From the PSA's archives, news clippings of a 1966 poetry competition between father and son.
Short stories on vinyl: the first release of Nathan Dunn's Underwood includes a story by APS contributor Clare Wigfall on Side B. “A record makes you slow down, sit back and pay attention to the words. Writers deserve that and the short story as a form deserves that.”
"I see movies as an extension of life. If I walk down a street and someone stops to talk with me, or I see someone bend down and pick up a guitar pick or someone in a movie refuses to light someone’s cigarette, it’s all part of the same canvas that I can use to transform what I experience into art, or at least into writing.... Because we make literature doesn’t mean that’s the only place to look for inspiration." A Q&A with APS favorite John Haskell.
To read: Alvin Levin's novel of 1930s NYC, Love Is Like Park Avenue. Admired by Tennessee Williams and William Maxwell, rediscovered by John Ashbery, republished by New Directions.
A Monday morning story: "One day the man wakes up and finds that he does not feel like going to work. He is not sick, exactly; he just doesn’t feel like going to work. He calls the office and makes an excuse, then he pours himself a bowl of cereal and sits down in front of the television." A friend recommends new writer Ben Loory in The New Yorker.
Two trailers, here and here, (two separate projects?) for Grace Paley documentaries.
"I believe that all fiction that lacks a strong foundation in autobiography will be science fiction": a conversation with Aharon Appelfeld in Haaretz.
Abdo Khal wins the International Prize for Arabic Fiction for Spewing Sparks as Big as Castles, "a brilliant exploration of the relationship between the individual and the state."
"I've always had this sense that my novels contain prophecy, a little thing for me and not for the reader": a conversation with Jeanette Winterson.
Zach Galifianakis, bearded comedian, helps John Wray try to be funny.
Sandpoint, Idaho: hometown of Marilynne Robinson, Keith Lee Morris, and the Tea Party Patriots. I wonder what Andy Munson would think of them.
Guest editors for 2010 Best American anthologies announced. Who's missing from this list?
The Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction finalists: the future of fiction is in good hands.
"One of the puzzles of Aidan Higgins is why, after the great critical success of his first novel, the classic Langrishe, Go Down, this prince of stylists has remained relatively obscure." Annie Proulx, along with John Banville, Derek Mahon, Dermot Healy, and loads of others, contribute to a "major reassessment" of the Irish writer.
Naomi J. Williams ("Lamanon at Sea") has a new story from her collection about the La Pérouse expedition in the next One Story.
Marie NDiaye: The first woman in a decade, and the first black woman ever, to win the Prix Goncourt. CL Jansen praised her work on Bookslut last year: "She returns to traditionally female topics—motherhood, the conjugal home, loneliness—but with a thoroughly modern approach.... They are anchored to the misunderstandings, the moral apathy, and the insecurity that plague us today. Ndiaye’s "fable of society and its discontents" is presented, once again, from the fantastical transposition of the everyday."
"I'm actually completely gobsmacked": Nam Le wins $100k fiction prize for The Boat—the only short story collection on the shortlist.
2009 is the 10th anniversary of the Caine Prize for African Writing: E.C. Osondu, Henrietta Rose-Innes, Monica Arac de Nyeko, Mary Watson, S.A. Afolabi, Brian Chikwava, Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, Binyavanga Wainaina, Helon Habila, and Leila Aboulela.
The World Digital Library: a free collection of cultural materials from libraries and archives around the world, including manuscripts, maps, rare books, films, sound recordings, prints and photographs.
BioShock 2: a video game inspired by Ayn Rand and Objectivism.
"There are truths to be found in all writing and I suppose the truth coming out of all these fake memoirs is that humans can't help themselves when it comes to telling stories": Michele Filgate interviews Samantha Hunt.
"I don't know who it was in what writer's workshop who first thought of this 'finding your voice' notion. I think it's destructive." Hugh Merwin interviews John Wray.