GOODBYE, GOOGLE
I've decided to move my blog to wordpress, so any future postings will be there. I am continuing the name "Random Literary Blog."
I hope you will find something interesting there.
RANDOM LITERARY BLOG
Books, short stories, and literature in general make the world a slightly better place and heaven knows we need all the encouragement we can get.
Friday, January 25, 2013
A BRIEF WORD ABOUT CENSORSHIP
As long as there have been writers and written material there has been censorship or attempts at censorship. Writers have been censored because they wrote about intimate matters, such as sex, or they wrote about politics and what they wrote offended the powerful.
Even in the twenty first century some books have come under constant attack. J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye has been a frequent target of censors. Vladimir Nabakov's Lolita offended the mores of many. John Steinbeck has been attacked as a "Marxist" for novels such as The Grapes of Wrath.
For a very long time writers were prohibited from using "bad words." Hemingway had a constant battle with his publisher because he wasn't allowed to use the more descriptive profane words in his fiction that people use in real life. I like the way he substituted the word "obscenity" for actual obscenities in For Whom the Bell Tolls.
We've come a long way since Rhett Butler shocked people in the movie version of Gone With the Wind. "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." Apparently, people did give a damn about the use of the word "damn."
As long as there have been writers and written material there has been censorship or attempts at censorship. Writers have been censored because they wrote about intimate matters, such as sex, or they wrote about politics and what they wrote offended the powerful.
Even in the twenty first century some books have come under constant attack. J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye has been a frequent target of censors. Vladimir Nabakov's Lolita offended the mores of many. John Steinbeck has been attacked as a "Marxist" for novels such as The Grapes of Wrath.
For a very long time writers were prohibited from using "bad words." Hemingway had a constant battle with his publisher because he wasn't allowed to use the more descriptive profane words in his fiction that people use in real life. I like the way he substituted the word "obscenity" for actual obscenities in For Whom the Bell Tolls.
We've come a long way since Rhett Butler shocked people in the movie version of Gone With the Wind. "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." Apparently, people did give a damn about the use of the word "damn."
Thursday, January 24, 2013
BOOKS YOU CAN'T PUT DOWN
I doubt there is anything really more pleasurable than a book that you find so compelling that you almost can't put it down. It's the kind of book you keep close by so you can read a little more when you have a moment, or it's the kind of book that you lie awake reading all night.
Not all the books that make such compelling reading are necessarily great literature. Sometimes they aren't even favored much by critics. But there is something in the story that keeps you hooked until the end.
A few books come to mind for me. I remember The Firm by John Grisham. I remember The Hustler by Walter Tevis. Mario Puzo's The Godfather was fascinating. I carried around Hawaii by James Michener for days until I finally finished it.
Times that you read a particularly gripping book can stand out in your memory. You can remember if you were having good times or bad times or maybe just in-between times, but the books got you through it all.
I doubt there is anything really more pleasurable than a book that you find so compelling that you almost can't put it down. It's the kind of book you keep close by so you can read a little more when you have a moment, or it's the kind of book that you lie awake reading all night.
Not all the books that make such compelling reading are necessarily great literature. Sometimes they aren't even favored much by critics. But there is something in the story that keeps you hooked until the end.
A few books come to mind for me. I remember The Firm by John Grisham. I remember The Hustler by Walter Tevis. Mario Puzo's The Godfather was fascinating. I carried around Hawaii by James Michener for days until I finally finished it.
Times that you read a particularly gripping book can stand out in your memory. You can remember if you were having good times or bad times or maybe just in-between times, but the books got you through it all.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
BOOKS AROUND ME
I remember a line from the movie Norma Rae. The movie was about organizing workers in a textile mill and I remember the union organizer saying one of his greatest fears was waking up without something to read. I would feel lost without something to read, or the possibility of something new on the horizon.
The first book club I remember joining was the Literary Guild in the late 1970's. It was a thrill getting that introductory shipment and it has been a thrill every time I've joined a book club since then. In those days I remember getting a short story collection by Irwin Shaw. I read Norman Mailer's The Executioner's Song around that same time.
Nowadays we have electronic book readers like Kindle and Nook and they have some noted advantages, particularly in their portability and the fact they don't take up much space. But I will always prefer traditional books. I like the way the book feels in my hands and the way the ink smells and the texture of the paper. I like to see it on my shelf always ready to keep me company as many times as I choose. So I see electronic readers as enhancements, not replacements.
I remember a line from the movie Norma Rae. The movie was about organizing workers in a textile mill and I remember the union organizer saying one of his greatest fears was waking up without something to read. I would feel lost without something to read, or the possibility of something new on the horizon.
The first book club I remember joining was the Literary Guild in the late 1970's. It was a thrill getting that introductory shipment and it has been a thrill every time I've joined a book club since then. In those days I remember getting a short story collection by Irwin Shaw. I read Norman Mailer's The Executioner's Song around that same time.
Nowadays we have electronic book readers like Kindle and Nook and they have some noted advantages, particularly in their portability and the fact they don't take up much space. But I will always prefer traditional books. I like the way the book feels in my hands and the way the ink smells and the texture of the paper. I like to see it on my shelf always ready to keep me company as many times as I choose. So I see electronic readers as enhancements, not replacements.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
THE IMPORTANCE OF LITERATURE
Some people might like to dismiss the arts, including literature, as frivolous. They like to think in terms of what is "practical," especially if it means making money. But I contend the arts are among the most important creations in all human cultures.
Literature has not only reflected cultures, but helped to shape and even move them. Think of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. The novel brought the reality and horror of slavery to life for people who may have been indifferent before and was at least partly responsible for the move to end slavery in the United States.
Western culture has been shaped, sometimes for good and sometimes for ill, by the great religious literature contained in the Koran and in the Bible. Eastern cultures have likewise been influenced by their great religious literature. The mythology of the ancient Greeks, Romans, and others continues to matter today.
Shakespeare has been one of the most influential people in human history.
I was thinking of Barbara Tuchmann's history The Guns of August. President John Kennedy had read the book and what he learned from the book influenced him during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Kennedy took a calm and measured approach to the crisis when many of his generals were ready to hurl us into a war that could have resulted in a nuclear conflagration. So Barbara Tuchmann, in an indirect way, may have saved us from nuclear annihilation.
Monday, January 21, 2013
MORE LITERARY TALISMANS
Literary talismans can be places rather than objects. I can use a Blackwing pencil to emulate John Steinbeck, but I can also visit places Steinbeck wrote about.
I have been to Monterey, California, one of the most beautiful places on the planet, and to famed Cannery Row. Cannery Row is much different than when Steinbeck wrote about it in his novel, but I still felt the place was special.
I got to visit the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas and the home where Steinbeck was born. The home is now a restaurant.
I also got to visit Key West, Florida, where Ernest Hemingway lived and did some of his best work. The Hemingway House has been converted into a museum and descendants of Hemingway's cats still live on the premises.
I hope I can visit John's Grill in San Francisco. Dashiell Hammett used the restaurant as a setting in his novel The Maltese Falcon.
Another restaurant I would love to visit is Max Bloom's. Famed mystery writer Raymond Chandler spent time writing there. A good cup of coffee and the ghost of Raymond Chandler sounds like a good way to spend an afternoon.
Literary talismans can be places rather than objects. I can use a Blackwing pencil to emulate John Steinbeck, but I can also visit places Steinbeck wrote about.
I have been to Monterey, California, one of the most beautiful places on the planet, and to famed Cannery Row. Cannery Row is much different than when Steinbeck wrote about it in his novel, but I still felt the place was special.
I got to visit the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas and the home where Steinbeck was born. The home is now a restaurant.
I also got to visit Key West, Florida, where Ernest Hemingway lived and did some of his best work. The Hemingway House has been converted into a museum and descendants of Hemingway's cats still live on the premises.
I hope I can visit John's Grill in San Francisco. Dashiell Hammett used the restaurant as a setting in his novel The Maltese Falcon.
Another restaurant I would love to visit is Max Bloom's. Famed mystery writer Raymond Chandler spent time writing there. A good cup of coffee and the ghost of Raymond Chandler sounds like a good way to spend an afternoon.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
LITERARY TALISMANS
I don't really believe in magic. At least I don't think I do.
But I must confess that details about famous writers interest me and a part of me wonders if I emulate them if a little of their talent or success will rub off.
I read, for instance, that John Steinbeck was an aficionado of Palomino Blackwing pencils. The Blackwing has been almost a cult item down through the years and other devotees of the pencil included Chuck Jones, who created Bugs Bunny, Stephen Sondheim, and Vladimir Nabokov.
I've wondered what it would be like to write on Hemingway's typewriter. Would those marvelous descriptive minimalist sentences come from the typewriter for me too?
How about if if bought a dog house and sat on top the way Snoopy did?
I don't really believe in magic. At least I don't think I do.
But I must confess that details about famous writers interest me and a part of me wonders if I emulate them if a little of their talent or success will rub off.
I read, for instance, that John Steinbeck was an aficionado of Palomino Blackwing pencils. The Blackwing has been almost a cult item down through the years and other devotees of the pencil included Chuck Jones, who created Bugs Bunny, Stephen Sondheim, and Vladimir Nabokov.
I've wondered what it would be like to write on Hemingway's typewriter. Would those marvelous descriptive minimalist sentences come from the typewriter for me too?
How about if if bought a dog house and sat on top the way Snoopy did?
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