Showing posts with label McSweeney's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McSweeney's. Show all posts

14.4.08

Is Me Really Monster?

From the delightful folks at McSweeney's here's "Cookie Monster Searches Deep Within Himself and Asks: Is Me Really Monster?" by Andy F. Bryan:

Me know. Me have problem.

Me love cookies. Me tend to get out of control when me see cookies. Me know it not natural to react so strongly to cookies, but me have weakness. Me know me do wrong. Me know it isn't normal. Me see disapproving looks. Me see stares. Me hurt inside.

Read the whole piece here.

26.3.08

Text Messages That Would Have Been Helpful

Text messaging would have solved a lot of problems back in the day.

From McSweeney's:

hey u, horse = greeks. dont let in. did i leave my toga @ ur place? txt me back

Read more "Text Messages That Would Have Been Helpful" by Jen Statsky.

3.2.08

Super Bowl Sunday and Charles Dickens?

With Super Bowl XLII looming on the horizon, I think a Football-themed post with a slight literary twist is just what the doctor ordered and the good folks at McSweeney's have the cure for what ails you.

Read "NFL Players Whose Names Sound Vaguely Dickensian, and the Characters They Would Be in an Actual Dickens Novel (2007-2008 Regular Season Edition)" by Susan Schorn at McSweeney's.

29.1.08

Pet Peeves

My ultimate pet peeve: having to unwrapping that clear, plasticy cellophane stuff that they wrap DVDs and CDs in only to have to deal with those damn unopenable seals. I hate them so much.

Read "My Pet Peeves" by Dan Liebert at McSweeney's.

18.1.08

Art Movements Inspired by 2008 Presidential Hopefuls

The closer the US gets to electing a new president, the more I appreciate folks who don't mind poking fun at it all. Thank goodness for McSweeney's...

Read "Art Movements Inspired by 2008 Presidential Hopefuls by Eric Feezell."

8.12.07

Unpopular Poetry Anthologies By Unpopular Poets

Found this on McSweeney's. It made me laugh.

View it here.

5.11.07

Bowl of Cherries


In October, McSweeney's published the novel Bowl of Cherries by first-time novelist, Millard Kaufman. It's receiving a big push from McSweeney's, much like Chris Adrian's magical novel The Children's Hospital did last year.

What makes Bowl of Cherries interesting from a marketing standpoint is that the author, Millard Kaufman, is 90 years old and has lived quite the unique life. Before publishing his first novel, he was a U.S. Marine in WWII, a test subject in a cobra venom experiment, and is the co-creator of the cartoon character, Mr. Magoo.

Does Kaufman's colorful background overshadow the quality of the novel? Only time will tell, but Bowl of Cherries still looks like a quirky addition to anyone's McSweeney's library.

Watch an interview with Millard Kaufman here.

Listen to Millard Kaufman on NPR here.

Read more about Bowl of Cherries and Millard Kaufman here.

23.6.07

Ways in Which the Hunter Becomes the Hunted

Hunter finds hunted attractive. (Their forbidden love spawns a child with the speed of a gazelle and the jaws of a lion. It is called a gazellion.) ...

More here.

13.6.07

Help Out McSweeney's

Usually when I write a post about indie publisher, McSweeney's, it's to have a good laugh. However, this time around, it's more serious. McSweeney's has been hit hard by the bankruptcy of their distributor, AMS. They're holding an inventory sell-off and are going to be auctioning some rare items, so please read the details and stop by to help them out.

12.6.07

29.5.07

From McSweeney's:

Conversations between famous people as imagined by someone with an American public-school education who didn't pay too much attention in school but who did just enough to pass the exam.

Read it here.

24.4.07

Miscellaneous McSweeney's

Maria happily sings and frolics among the Alps... meanwhile back at the convent, her fellow nuns are secretly plotting behind her back...

Here's a whole bunch of fun McSweeney's stuff. Happy reading!



And finally a poetry themed one:

24.2.07

Moondoggy Recommends #7

McSweeney's #22
McSweeney's might very well be the largest independent publishing house in North America and is responsible for four regular publications: the not-quite-quarterly journal Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, the daily-updated literature and humor site McSweeney's Internet Tendency, the monthly magazine The Believer, and the new quarterly DVD magazine, Wolphin. They also run two additional imprints: Believer Books and Collins Library, which publishes unusual out-of-print books.

What I love about McSweeney's is that they are constantly reinventing the book form (one of their past issues comes in a cigar box, another looks like a pile of mail) and pushing the boundaries of creative experimentation. Their most recent issue, McSweeney's #22 continues this playfulness with a three-part exercise in restriction, publishing three books held together by magnets.

In Book 1, a number of writers, including Miriam Toews, Sam Lipsyte, and many more, are given writing prompts provided by a list of unused and unusual story premises (for instance "girl and giraffe", "fairy who fell for a wax dummy", "girl whose ear is so sensitive she can hear radio") taken from F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Crack-Up. The stories in this collection are great and I was debating over which ones to recommend as highlights but since they're all outstanding, just read the whole thing, you won't be disappointed.

The president of France's experimental writing group, Oulipo (which stands for "Ouvroir de littérature potentielle", translated roughly as "workshop of potential literature") provides the basis for Book 2, offering North American readers a glimpse into the group's current experiments with linguistic constraints. Take a look at Paul Fournel's "Once Upon a Colony", which reminded me of those great Choose Your Own Adventure books from my childhood.

Lastly, the quarterly generally doesn't publish poetry but Dominic Luxford, a recent intern at McSweeney's, suggested that indeed it should be published and so was given the green light to introduce poetry to McSweeney's readers in an usual way. The result was Book 3, where contemporary poets are asked to pick a poem of their own and one of another poet, who will then do the same, and so on, until a poetry chain is made. I was most excited about this section because it includes works by poets I really admire like Michael Ondaaje, James Tate, Charles Simic, John Ashbery, and also introduced me to poets I have never heard of before.

By picking up McSweeney's #22 you won't just be getting a quarterly, but rather, three diverse and entertaining books for the price of one. What a bargain!

12.2.07

Philip Graham on meeting Jose Saramago

I recently stumbled on Philip Graham's fascinating writings about his experiences in Portugal in McSweeney's. Graham is a writer who teaches at the University of Illinois, and will be spending a year in Lisbon, Portugal. I have to catch up on all his dispatches but his most recent one sheds some light on what it's like to meet an author one admires - in his case, Nobel-prize winning novelist, Jose Saramago. I'd love to visit Portugal and Spain this summer so I'm looking forward to reading more about contemporary Portugal from a writer's point of view.

Read Dispatch 9: Those Tricky Subgestures by Philip Graham.

Read Graham's other dispatches from Portugal.

Click here for Philip Graham's video report from the International Short Story Conference.

11.12.06

Poems That Were Considered and Rejected Before 'Twas The Night Before Christmas Was Established As "The Official American Christmas Poem"

Just in time for the holidays, the good people at McSweeney's put up this little gem.

5.12.06

The Children's Hospital and a Deer Head

Last night I attended a reading by Chris Adrian and Heidi Julavits at St. Anthony's Hall on Yale campus. Adrian read from his most recent novel, The Children's Hospital and Jalavits from The Uses of Enchantment.

I'm still awed by how many of Yale's buildings look unnecessarily opulent and Gothic but it does certainly add to the mood. This time around, the reading took place amongst warm mahogany furniture, prints of American's battling redcoats on the walls, and of course, a large stag head mounted at the back of the room. I felt like donning a red, Hugh Hefner-esque robe, and smoking a cigar with a snifter of brandy.

Both readers were great, but since I couldn't shell out too much cash to buy a book, I ended up picking up a copy of Adrian's novel, and am looking forward to reading it during the Christmas holiday. The Children's Hospital is a huge book, at 615 pages, but there is something incredibly satisfying about the prospect of getting immersed in a large, sweeping novel.

I recently finished a number of whoppers, including Tom Wolfe's I Am Charlotte Simmons, Gabriel Garcia Marquez' One Hundred Years of Solitude, and Salmon Rushdie's Midnight's Children. All great. Well, I still have some issues with Wolfe's novel but it was still an interesting and infuriating read.

The premise of Adrian's novel is, shall we say, unique: "A hospital is preserved, afloat, after the Earth is flooded beneath seven miles of water. Inside, assailed by mysterious forces, doctors and patients are left to remember the world they’ve lost and to imagine one to come. At the center, a young medical student finds herself gifted with strange powers and a frightening destiny."

While the idea behind the novel is unusual, Chris Adrian's background also differs from the norm. I had a chance to speak with him and learnt that he attended the prestigious Iowa Writer's Workshop, is now a doctor (he recently completed a pediatric residency at the University of California San Fransisco) and is currently a student at Harvard Divinity School. All he needs now is to become a carpenter...

What amazes me is that Adrian wrote The Children's Hospital while he was in residency as a medical student. How did he find the time to write? I mean, W. Somerset Maugham did write Of Human Bondage but only after he was a med student. Which makes Adrian's accomplishment that much more impressive.

Read about Chris Adrian's The Children's Hospital.

Also, here's a great article by Heidi Julavits from The Believer (Julavits is a founding editor of the McSweeney's backed mag) and it is entitled: Rejoice! Believe! Be Strong and Read Hard!

Note: Julavits' article discusses topics as diverse as Tripe, George Orwell, The Badly Made Well Made Story, Hysterical Realism, Omelets, Fleas Weighers, Born Again Christians, Casual Master-Slave Metaphors, Anti-Intellectualism, Bunny Wilson, and Ambition.

4.12.06

Chris Adrian and Heidi Julavits

Chris Adrian, the author of Children's Hospital - a New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice - will be reading today, Monday December 4th at 7:30 pm at St. Anthony's Hall College and Walls Streets along with Heidi Julavits, author of The Uses of Enchantments. This reading is presented by The Writing Concentration New Occasional Reading Series. Refreshments will be served.

I've heard a lot about Chris Adrian and look forward to hearing him read. I don't know if you've seen Children's Hospital in bookstores yet but it's a monster of a book and also beautifully crafted.

Read about Chris Adrian's Children's Hospital here.