Adieu, Reading Rainbow

Bulletins by Eugenia on Saturday 29 August 2009 at 8:39 am

I found out today on my most favoritest blog in the universe, Videogum (love that sweary vitriol!) that Reading Rainbow is kaput. Let’s all have a moment of respectful silence as we listen to the theme song.

Was anyone else completely transfixed by that wicked awesome animation? Watch out, kiddos! The glowing book-orbs will transport you into a cartoon dimension wherein dudes with Colonial hats lasso Columbus’s ship and dragons totally waste your picnic lunch. I don’t even want to know what that king would do to you when the cameras stopped rolling.

In all seriousness, I loved that show so much! I have total recall of my favorite episode, “Miss Nelson is Missing.” Do you?

Those kids deserved what they got. Poor Miss Nelson. So blond and timid! She’s like the proto-Buffy!

Now that Reading Rainbow is gone, how will the grade school set find out what their peers are reading? Might they launch NYRB Kidz?

After the Deluge, Graphic Novel Book Release

Calendar Listings by Gretchen on Thursday 27 August 2009 at 10:20 pm

030737814401_delugeWhat: A.D.: New Orelans After the Deluge, graphic novel book release
Where: The Book Cellar, 4736-38 North Lincoln Ave, Chicago, IL 60625
When: Friday, August 28, 7pm
How Much: Free

Our lateness in posting about this event in no way indicates our excitement level about it (which is high). In A.D., graphic novelist Josh Neufeld pretty much proves the value of graphic novels as a form of journalism, with his stunning illustrations and poignant prose. Neufeld was a Red Cross volunteer right after Katrina hit and the blog entries he kept about that experience led to this book. At tomorrow’s event, Neufeld (who’s a longtime artist for Harvey Pekar’s American Splendor), will present a visual presentation on his graphic novel “A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge.” A few reviews follow and you will note they are not lukewarm, and neither are the frenzied emails from my coolest Chicago friends demanding my attendance at this event.

“Josh Neufeld follows a half dozen denizens of the Big Easy as they choose between fleeing the impending hurricane and hunkering down to wait out the storm. Acts of folly and bravery are depicted, and Neufeld makes a striking political point without tipping over into didacticism.” —San Francisco Chronicle “Best in Comics”, July 10, 2009

“A.D. is one of the best-ever examples of comics reportage, and one of the clearest portraits of post-Katrina New Orleans yet published. An essential addition to the ongoing conversation about what Katrina means, and what New Orleans means.” —Dave Eggers, author of Zeitoun and What Is the What

Short Notice: Friday Night Naked Lunch

Calendar Listings by Katrina on Thursday 27 August 2009 at 4:43 pm

william_burroughsIn celebration of one of the twentieth century’s most influential novelists, our junky who always found his way to a pen, Peter Weller hosts a the 50th anniversary party for William S. Burroughs‘ grotesquely fragmented Naked Lunch.

Join a few of Burroughs’ friends to view a never-before-seen exhibit of the writer’s paintings and drawings and the trailer to the upcoming documentary, William Burroughs: A Man Within (which sounds awesome, by the way. Among others, Sonic Youth, Iggy Pop, Laurie Anderson, John Waters have gotten involved). Included with your donation is food, drink, live music, readings, performances, and “happenings.” We’re most excited to see Penny Arcade (because the event invitation describes her as a “wild-hearted demoness bad-girl bitch”), Bill Ayers (best known as a radical activist with the Weather Underground, now known as a professor well-versed in teaching little’uns), and, of course, RoboCop (he will be dressed as him, right?).

What: 50th Anniversary of Burroughs’ Naked Lunch (fundraiser)
Where: Th!nkArt Salon, 1530 N. Paulina, Suite F, Chicago, IL.
When: Friday, August 28. 5:30-9:30
How Much: $60 online, $75 at the door (includes afterparty: see below)

What: Burrough’s Celebration After-Party
Where: Stop Smiling storefront, 1371 N. Milwaukee Ave. Chicago, IL
When: Friday, August 28. 9:30 – ?
How Much: $10 suggested donation
(featuring members of Tortoise, Ms. Penny Arcade, and other DJ’s)

Much Love for Lorrie Moore

Calendar Listings by Eugenia on Thursday 27 August 2009 at 1:44 pm

I just finished A Gate at the Stairs, the new Lorrie Moore novel that’s been reviewed rapturously by any and all who have read it (look for Jonathan Lethem’s review in next week’s Sunday Book Review, but discard the very last part of Jonathan Dee’s review in the latest Harper’s). My verdict: instant classic. Especially for Midwestern girls who were once insecure college students (who wasn’t?). A Gate at the Stairs is easily the best novel I’ve read in the last two years — nothing comes close (well, maybe The Sky Below or How to Sell, but not really. Sorry, Stacey. Sorry, Clancy.). This book is so good it’s taken the edge off of waiting for a galley of The Ask. This book is so good I might actually hit my boyfriend if he waits any longer to read it. This book is so good I’m going to tell you to BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW for Lorrie Moore’s November 7th appearance at the Harold Washington Library. I even made a blingee to convey how much you’ll love it.
For realz.
Add Glitter to Pictures

As the fall catalogs arrive, we ponder “Survivalist Lit”

Essays by Scott on Thursday 27 August 2009 at 11:56 am

[ED NOTE: The following is the first in what we hope will be a series of general essays on not-necessarily-Chicago literature.-Gretchen]

intothewild2_ssKeep Yourself Alive: The Solitary in Survivalist Lit

By: Scott Stealey

The hallmark of the literature of survival is the removal from society. But within this assumption lies a nasty little undercurrent of belief: it is society that keeps you alive. You can eat because society established the Whole Foods or the Jewel on the corner near where you live. You don’t get a cold from being out in the rain because society provided the condo developments or low-rent shingleboard duplexes to cover your head. You don’t even get a little sick, but if you somehow happen to, there’s CVS. Or Walgreens.

When we think of survival stories, we think of the solitary castoff or castaway, like Robinson Crusoe, or we think of the stranded group, like the pubescent savages in Lord of the Flies. However there is another important division to consider when looking at this genre’s “lost” characters: their choice. The survivor’s choice of getting away is not present enough in the literature of survival, for too often our survivors have no say in their removal from society. Catastrophic circumstances drop them out, expelling them via shipwreck, plane crash, natural disaster.

Those survivors in the “stranded group” side of Survivalist Lit still have each other, and so a microcosm results, society in miniature, but a society just the same. These stories shape a smaller (and often by default, satirical) representation of what we already know. The group is still isolated, but the characters themselves don’t face utter isolation; in conflict terms, it’s still man vs. nature, but man vs. man definitely works its way in as well (think Jack vs Locke in Lost…wouldn’t they still be at odds off-island?). All of which is still interesting, but to me, the “stranded group” doesn’t get to the real heart of the escape from society, the gist of Survivalist Lit. I am thinking more about the freedom that results, about one solitary survivor’s conflict, man vs. himself. The one completely alone. When faced with only your free will, how do you live as a society of one? And more importantly, what does isolation do for the hermit? Can the hermit feel truly free and not share that with anyone? Which leads down a slope into the solitary: why must freedom tie itself so closely to being alone? Just what is the literature of survival trying to tell us about facing life alone?

Into The Wild is one of the examples in Survivalist Lit that presents one character who opts out, a definitive solitary man, (allegedly) disenchanted enough with civilization’s foibles that he feels a Thoreau-urge to disappear away from the things of man. Being citizens of society we all know there are going to be contradictions. We all know that sometimes we are told lies by the trustworthy, we all know that the cogs spin backwards sometimes, we all know you cannot be a sane individual alive today and believe that this is indeed the best of all possible worlds. But we don’t opt out. We do our best. Because we want to live. Key word here being “we.” When Chris McCandless goes off to Alaska to be a hermit, he makes a choice that “we” don’t keep him alive. He wants to live without us, but more importantly, he still wants to live. His will to live is that much more enviable because he wants only his choices to keep him alive. Obstinate, sure, unloving, maybe, but enviable: we just don’t know if our creature comforts are really what’s keeping us comfortably living. What if we lost the internet or our mobile service, or both, depending on our carriers? If the Walgreens closed? If the HVAC person never came? So: looking at a list of canonical literary-fiction Survival Lit, let’s divide that “loner” side further into those tales of surviving alone not by choice, like Robinson Crusoe, Hatchet, the first act of The Black Stallion—and those of surviving alone by choice, by the character’s free will, like Walden, Into the Wild, Kerouac’s Desolation Angels, and recently, The Other (Knopf, $24.95) by David Guterson.

Guterson’s novel is a refreshing new entry into this “loner’s choice” slice of Survival Lit simply because it is fictional and not based on actual accounts like its predecessors. The Other is about a young man (John William Barry) wishing to be a hermit and survive in the woods alone and escape his dutiful society self, a trust-fund baby full of guilt who feels too hard and sees the contradictions and decides he “does not want to participate.”

However, Guterson does not tell the story from John William’s personal survivalist account, instead he cleverly narrates from the point of view of the hermit’s best friend, Neil Countryman, effectively giving us something that the nonfiction “loner choice” books don’t offer: a more expansive interpretation of the people who choose to leave “us.” Guterson doesn’t want the hermit to be seen objectively, as Krakauer wanted McCandless—something to point at and wonder about and draw your own conclusions over—he wants to celebrate the discipline and attention present in solitary survival. His narrator Countryman even remarks in the novel, when going over a newspaper report of John William’s self-isolation, that he cannot believe his friend to have ever been “deranged,” as the newspaper (and by extension, most of society) suggests of the hermit’s state of mind.

Reading the novel, John William becomes a sort of incredibly-believable McCandless, a character who is more than the results of his stubborn choices. He shines with developed flaws and relatable experiences that only a novel can provide, filling in those gaps of humanity with meaningful scenes of his will to live through social contact with his best friend. Once a hermit can have friends, his escapism is splintered. He does live, somewhat, because of the people around him. Sean Penn’s film version of Into The Wild also tried to widen these same voids within the myth of McCandless, effectively rendering the film historical fiction more than adaptation. Don’t get me wrong, I think Krakauer was sincerely fascinated with McCandless, and wanted to respect the man, but as an author recounting true events, he could only report on his research and on what McCandless scribbled in a journal. In short, he was never his subject’s friend. He couldn’t listen (like Countryman does) to his hermit wax on about something like Gnostic purity and get closer to his possible motivations. He couldn’t consider his hermit’s choices with the respect that friendship allows. That doesn’t take away from the merit of Krakauer’s book, it just leaves more for someone like Penn or Guterson to work with as they shape a more believable freedom-seeker.

Like Guterson’s story, Penn’s film had the hermit make friends, probably because that hermit likely did so, and like John William, McCandless wasn’t just some negative grouse or Luddite who felt wronged by the contradictions and changes society dished out. These men are complicated enough to care about how to live without others, but also, they know that they can’t get there alone. They have some of Thoreau’s same disenchantment with the way things are heading in the civilized world, but that isn’t what defines their isolation. They leave for freedom, not for spite. They don’t have a death wish, they have a life wish. Through narratives like theirs it is possible to glean that people are actually what keeps us living, and as such, the freedom these men seek is totally interior: they wish for comfort within themselves. They want to be free of distraction, sure, but their solitary nature is more about the ability to be comfortable when faced with only their thoughts. Which is admirable, when you consider the historical context: Guterson’s book and Penn’s film may have come at this time in civilization because of the coinciding boon of social networking.

While social networking might just be a distraction for some of us, a way to peep or to show off, the themes present in Guterson’s novel expose something a little sinister about our tweets and status updates—aren’t they a dissociative way of being connected with society? You’re alone at your computer or mobile device after all. But, you’re also constantly and immediately available to the network and its second-by-second update. Are we half-assing real human connection, or half-assing being a hermit? I submit that Guterson’s novel also works as a commentary on the contemporary inability to be comfortable alone. Having an online and offline brain should call for more attention to ourselves. For all that social networking can provide, can’t it also take away from our ability to just sit still?

Maybe all our lives have certain dissociative aspects to them, but not big problematic ones that send us off into the wilderness. Survivalist Lit often seeks to understand our most base desires, and with The Other, Guterson may have wanted us to appreciate the hard work it takes to be comfortable alone. Because when you get better at being alone, when you can be attentive and not distracted, when you find that feeling McCandless and John William were searching for, maybe then, remarkably, society gets all the more richer and meaningful.

Tuesday Funk

Calendar Listings by Lara on Wednesday 26 August 2009 at 1:31 pm

Billy LombardoWho: Gothic Funk Nation
What: Tuesday Funk monthly reading series
Where: Flourish Bakery in Edgewater – 1138 W. Bryn Mawr Ave.
When: 7:00 pm, Tuesday, September 1

No, this isn’t a dance party. This is a reading series dedicated to supporting Chicago writers and local publishers. The monthly Tuesday Funk reading series has been in production for a year and a half now, boasting names like Parneshia Jones, winner of the Gwendolyn Brooks poetry award, and William Allegrezza, poet and editor of Cracked Slab Books, amongst other heavy hitters on their roster. The upcoming September reading doesn’t fail to impress, either. It will feature Robyn Detterline, writer, champion of the Chicago arts community, and co-founder of Another New Calligraphy Press, and hotshot writer Billy Lombardo from the Chicago based OV Books. What? You haven’t seen a reading by Billy Lombardo yet? I demand that you scribble this one on your calendar now, literary fan. Grab a slice of Derby Pie at Flourish and sit your tush down for a reading that’s sure to cure whatever funk ails you.

Sidewalk Sale der Kommunistischen

Calendar Listings by Katrina on Thursday 13 August 2009 at 8:31 am

Picture this: Ashland Avenue, just south of Division. No man’s land, you say? Hardware stores and Mexican seafood restaurants, solamente? Well, if we know our city, and we think that we do, that’s a recipe for some new, darn good, interesting businesses to roll in.

Revolution Books

One of these is Revolution Books, a bookstore with a taste for radical social change. This Saturday, from 2-10 p.m.,  they’re holding a sidewalk sale in the midst of Ashland Avenue’s Summer Party. Along with having a self-described “diverse, cutting edge selection of books,” the bookstore has a great selection of graphic novels and political theory, and holds events featuring writers and other social activists fairly frequently. This weekend, they’ll be giving out a card that gives you deals like 50% off a new book at their own store, 20% off your purchase at the hipster secondhand paradise Kokoroko, or 10% off of your purchase at the amazing and eclectic Dusty Groove Records, right across the street.

Stay for the nighttime art walk, with local artists and DJ’s, break dancing, and spoken word. Get your eat on across the street, at Novem’s BBQ.

It’s a good opportunity to check out this not-so-frequented neck of the woods and support some local businesses. Consider this event RECOMMENDED.

“Conquistador of the Useless”

Bulletins by Katrina on Thursday 6 August 2009 at 10:12 am

Fitzcarraldo

…So Werner Herzog dubbed himself during the burdenous filming of Fitzcarraldo in 1982. A slice of his life where the challenges of his film’s production mirrored its own plot, Herzog’s diaries from the time contain read-between-the-lines subtleties and the kind of “look at that bug, contemplate my own humanity” observations that viewers of Herzog gems such as Grizzly Man and Encounters at the End of the World are more than accustomed to.

Those diaries are exhibited in the recently published Conquest of the Useless (Ecco Press). From actor troubles, realities of the Peruvian jungle (at one point, natives offered Herzog to kill his principal actor), and actually, literally, carrying a steamboat over a small mountain, Herzog had more than enough fodder for frustrated journal entries. So where are they, then? Why didn’t the director’s private reflections directly address the major production snafus?   Do the mountains care if Herzog’s film gets made or not? Will one man’s failure set off a chain of events, butterfly-effect style? Herzog, though a persistant dreamer and a successful director, is fully aware of his insignificance in the grand scheme of our planet.

Read an excerpt here.

See the film’s trailer here.

QUIMBLOG Top 10 Way More Fun to Read Than The New York Times Bestseller List Is

Bulletins by Mairead on Thursday 6 August 2009 at 12:11 am

yeti7cover Did you also know! that QUIMBLOG, the swankpants Quimby’s Bookstore Blog, runs a weekly bestseller list? They do! Reading it is a supergreat way to see what all the cool kids are reading. And actually buying the merch is a super, supergreat way to support one of the country’s most fiercely weird and independent bookstores/distros.

This week’s list includes Cometbus #52 (a mere nine issues after #43, our very favorite, in which Aaron remembers his mom congratulating him for seeing an elephant in the sky – only he wasn’t pointing at a cloud; it was the blue space in-between. “She couldn’t have been happier,” he wrote, “than if I stood up and recited the encyclopedia”) and the face-melting-off-great Yeti #7, pictured here. It includes an 80-minute CD with Grouper and Dum Dum Girls and Jamaican gospel, AN INTERVIEW WITH JIM WOODRING OMG, and a comic starring Crookie Monster (”Behind him is his attack plane and his bad guy car. He kills people.”). We totally bought two copies, one for us and one for our little sister.

P.S. Quimby’s still has a huge rackfull of surplus magazines from Punk Planet, for sale for cheap. We recommend the heroin issue and the no-photos issue. If you go by CVS for Grape Nerds and a Sharpie before hopping the El home, it’s – awesomely – just like middle school all over again.

Incredibly sweet book job

Bulletins by Eugenia on Wednesday 5 August 2009 at 10:22 am

Via the MAPH listserv, an incredibly awesome job opening with the incredibly awesome Open Books. I’m talking about the bookstore manager position, since I would never be so bold as to tell anyone they should work for $23k  – though I did, once, for a certain nonprofit literary organization that has lots and lots of dough (cough), but I was right out of college and far more idealistic then. Enough about me! No, really. It’s all about you.

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