On the Nightstand, Again.

Sometimes you have to reread a book. Sometimes you have reread a book even if you don’t want to, because you know it will make you literally sick. Rereading this heartbreakingly beautiful and harrowing book, I fall asleep every night sobbing. In part because it is just so hard to believe that anything this intolerable actually existed in reality. Also because the two men whose love story this is – Paul and Roger –  are so familiar, so much like so many friends I had; psychotically educated, seethingly smart, overachievers who excelled at everything, from the halls of Ivy League privilege, yet bohemian also – the way no one is now – erudite, polemical, social, warm, with ideas and taste and joie de vivre, who were interesting and read and liked to have conversations. I miss them. For those who have been touched by this personally and moreover for those who weren’t, this book is a historical document as well as a literary one, a searing history and a touchstone reference to a grim time that we can’t allow to be forgotten.

Borrowed Tim an Aids Memoir by Paul Monette

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Keep Texas Reading, Part 2

Last year, I held a Book Drive at my studio to benefit a used bookstore in Laredo, Texas, after the town of over a quarter of a million people lost their one and only bookstore, a  B. Dalton. Thanks to book donations from the community, The Laredo Center for the Arts opened a store, now called The Book Nook. The Book Nook operates solely through the generosity of donations and its volunteers are grateful for any help. Let’s help the good people of Laredo have access to books. Besides books, they accept dvds, videotapes and magazines. Your used children’s books are especially appreciated. Please contact AnnaIsabel Alvarez at (956) 725-1715 for more information.

This week, the artists and crews on Family Guy, American Dad and The Cleveland Show really came through, and we are sending off piles of dusty tomes   – from Foucault to Trixie Belden and the Mysterious Visitor to Weightlifting for Dummies – to the Wild West.

My assistant Lindsay sorting books. We realized we can tell a lot of our co-workers by their books.

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What the Hell is Happening Here?

Okay, so it LOOKS like a dapper, pencil-moustached, gay male librarian is being attacked by 2 over zealous women “readers”, one plain one pretty, but no matter, he is not interested in either. Unusual that the librarian isn’t a hair-bunned, be-speckled spinster, but rather John Waters, but moving on, the ladies don’t have anything specific they want, just “books”. Where is the card catalog? This comic looks old enough that the Dewy Decimal System would still be being employed. Isn’t that where they ought to be looking rather than bum-rushing the librarian desk? OR if they don’t care what KIND or book, why not just pull random books off the shelves all around them? My guess is that they are romantically interested in the effete librarian, and said librarian is understandably terrified. Any other guesses?

strip via comically vintage

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Lijepa Ambasada Prekrasne Knjižnicu

Former French Embassy in Cetinje, Montenegro. Now a library.
photo via ESI

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Où tous les artistes sont ?

I rarely see a luxury NYC apartment for kazillions of dollars that I would look twice at, inured by the laughable prices and the overabundance of granite. But I could spend relaxing evenings in the library of this luxury duplex for sale in the Hotel Des Artistes building. I can see myself in bathrobe and deerstalker hat, blowing bubbles from a curly pipe. Proving that the previous owner had no interest in his collection of over 2,500 books – including rare first editions –  those are being tossed in with the sale. Price is your typical $6,950,000 plus $7,176 monthly “maintenance” – that weirdly uncontested NYC patented ripoff. I hope that maintenance includes dusting those old tomes with a feather duster.

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Warning: Contains Offensive Words.

Most American schoolchildren still read The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and if they don’t, it’s because it’s one of the most frequently banned books in the US. If it seems paradoxical that a book could be both its nation’s most frequently banned and its most beloved, remember that Are You There God It’s Me, Margaret also holds that paradoxical trophy!

If you haven’t read either Huck Finn or The Adventures of Tom Sawyer – I hate you and get off my blog- Huck and Tom are Central Casting rednecks. The demotic language depends on American vernacular, vulgarity and verisimilitude for comedy. It’s why those books are so popular (WHY THEY ARE “GOOD”). For 120 years, readers have been able to distinguish between a book with racist characters and a racist book; the fact that the novels sympathies are clearly with Huck and runaway slave Jim, and against all the slave-owners (who are also all the white adults in the entire book), doesn’t escape them, nor are they offended by its casual use of the word “nigger” –  the only word that illiterate, backwoods white boys in the 1840s would have known to use to describe a slave.

Welcome to the new America. US editions of  Huckleberry Finn are to be run through a proprietary software program called i-nigger (and its Windows based counterpart injun-for-windows*) that eradicates all uses of the offending term. The deliberately derogatory term rings with irony in all of its 200 usages in Huckleberry Finn – first published in 1884 – and its 1876 precursor, Tom Sawyer. What benign word will be slotted in as it’s replacement? The more innocuous “SLAVE” (think I’d be more upset being called a “slave”: “nigger” is just a label, the other a rather grim state of being). The new edition’s Alabama-based publisher, scarily called “NewSouth Books”, says the cut/copy/replace will have the effect of supplanting “two hurtful epithets” in order to “counter the ‘pre-emptive censorship’ that has caused these important works of literature to fall off curriculum lists worldwide.” Go fuck yourself, Samuel Langhorne Clemens!

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Give me your old, your tattered, your dusty tomes

I became aware of  Between The Covers Rare Books when I bought a long sought book from my childhood from their online store. I was touched by the meticulous attention they paid to wrapping the book which – in my book – denotes a rare and old fashioned respect for the dusty old tome.

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On the er….IPad

Better for air travel.

“If I knew I had to go through those experiences again, I’d kill myself.” – Louis Zamperini

If you think you’ve been rocked to your core by a memoir before, think again. Ingrid Betancourt’s story of her captivity in the Colombian jungle; In Harm’s Way  – which until Unbroken I considered the most harrowing shark on man story ever told; Phillip Gourevitch stories from Rwanda, all blur under the crystalline focus of this saga of an Army bombardier in World War II. It’s like something out of Greek mythology. Laura Hillenbrand  – who wrote the stellar “Seabiscuit” which was made into the horrendous movie “Seabiscuit” – uses the same inspirational, crystalline writing that she used to tell the “horses tale”, that renders complicated, technical equine or wartime topics not just readable, but hard-to-put-downable.

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Of Tomes and Trash. 2010 Rap-up.

2010 was a good reading  year for me, thanks to ADD medication. Some tomes, some trash, no regrets:

Reality and Dreams by Muriel Spark

Bat Boy: Coming of Age with the New York Yankees by Matthew McGough

Faith of our Founding Fathers by David L. Holmes

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card catalog.

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