As beautiful as haiku. (via MeFi)
Year / 2005
National Book Awards Finalists
Holy shit! Vollmann gets nominated, as does Christopher Sorrentino. We got us some surprises this year for that National Book Awards. Here’s the full list:
FICTION
E.L. Doctorow, The March (Random House)
Mary Gaitskill, Veronica (Pantheon)
Christopher Sorrentino, Trance (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Renè Steinke, Holy Skirts (William Morrow)
William T. Vollmann, Europe Central (Viking)
NONFICTION
Alan Burdick, Out of Eden: An Odyssey of Ecological Invasion (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Leo Damrosch, Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Restless Genius (Houghton Mifflin)
Joan Didion, The Year of Magical Thinking (Alfred A. Knopf)
Jim Dwyer and Kevin Flynn, 102 Minutes: The Untold Story of the Fight to Survive Inside the Twin Towers (Times Books)
Adam Hochschild, Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire’s Slaves (Houghton Mifflin)
POETRY
John Ashbery, Where Shall I Wander (Ecco)
Frank Bidart, Star Dust: Poems (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Brendan Galvin, Habitat: New and Selected Poems, 1965-2005
(Louisiana State University Press)
W.S. Merwin, Migration: New and Selected Poems (Copper Canyon Press)
Vern Rutsala, The Moment’s Equation (Ashland Poetry Press)
YOUNG PEOPLE’S LITERATURE
Jeanne Birdsall, The Penderwicks (Alfred A. Knopf)
Adele Griffin, Where I Want to Be (Putnam)
Chris Lynch, Inexcusable (Atheneum)
Walter Dean Myers, Autobiography of My Dead Brother (HarperTempest)
Deborah Wiles, Each Little Bird That Sings (Harcourt)
I Am Knut!
[Translated from the Swedish by an anonymous reader. Culled from remarks given at a press conference this week.]
I am Knut Ahnlund and you’re not. I pity you for not being me. You don’t know what it’s like having to wade through books, turning every Nobel committee meeting into a fistfight. The Americans think that when someone spits in their face or slaps some puny little man like Dale Peck that it’s some sort of literary brawl, that it’s the subject of an important debate. But here in Sweden, we argue over literature and draw blood! Have you dislocated a shoulder because you cared that much about a book? I have. Several times. That’s integrity, dammit! And don’t even consider it an accident that I haven’t smiled for decades.
I am Knut! Witness the golden halo above my head and the tension in my stride. I haven’t paid for a breakfast in years and I eschew jellybeans and walks on the beach. I know pornography when I see it and I can tell you quite adamantly that Elfriede Jelinek is a shameless hussy. When these parvenus unleash the next Nobel laureate, you will know that I, Knut, will be there, maligning the disgraceful winner at every opportunity!
I am Knut! And I know what is grand for the human race. They may force me to return to my chair. They may tell me that this Nobel stuff is something I can’t get out of. But I’ll be the one biting without warning into your calf, ensuring that I draw the appropriate amount of blood with my bicuspids. Do not mess wth me or mock my name! For I control the hidden levers and still have considerable influence!
You will never find me disgracing the weekly book review pages. You will find me instead hunkered over an obscure book. I do not read these popular darlings. I do not even consider you part of my universe. For you are not Knut! Only I am! And if you would like to deify me, you know where to send the elegies and the checks.
Knut Ahnlund: Make Sure He Gets His Room Service
A Harder DC Universe
Just when you thought you were getting comfortable with the DC universe, and just when you finally decided that Crisis on Infinite Earths was either a bad memory or a much needed purge (and, for that matter, did Brad Metlzer’s Identity Crisis happen or not happen), word on the street is that another major continuity overhaul is going down. Infinite Crisis plans to rewrite the continuity, doing away with the goodie-goodie origins of its characters and making them…well, amoral sons of bitches. So does this mean that Superman will finally throw off his “truth, justice and the American way” ethos to get a little bit 0f hot action with Wonder Woman in her invisible jet? Possibly.
I honestly don’t know how I feel about this. On one hand, I really enjoy seeing the canon being given a solid dose of amorality (Frank Miller’s reinterpretation of Batman comes to mind). If you keep a superhero completely good, he will inevitably grow stagnant and boring. And yet, invariably, decency (and, by this, I don’t mean Moral Majority-style fundamentalism crammed down your throat, but basic ethical values common to all groups of humanity) does serve as a helpful reference point for maintaining an ongoing and interconnected battle between good and evil.
The proof, as they say, is in the pudding. I’m waiting for the results. This may prove to be either the best or the worst move that DC Comics has ever made.
