Dick Cheney’s daughter Mary is shopping a book proposal about her days on the campaign trail, TRAVELS WITH MY FATHER, through her mother’s literary representative, attorney Robert Barnett.
And in what some could see as a related story, NY Magazine says that Patti Davis’s next book will be “a novel about straight women who have a lesbian affair.” [Sign up for Publishers Lunch here]
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Monday, January 31, 2005 12:27 pm | |
Comments (1)
The starting point for the film — and the reason it will not be an Oval Office favorite during this administration — was the invitation that Laura Bush extended to a few poets last year to come to the White House for a poetry symposium that would pay tribute to Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson and Langston Hughes.
The first lady — a former librarian, long active in various literacy efforts — may have envisioned a Kennedyesque celebration of literature and culture in the United States. But when poet Sam Hamill received his invitation, he says he was “overcome with a kind of nausea.”
Hamill says in the movie that the president’s wife was “stupid, naive, virtually illiterate” if she thought she could honor such “profoundly political” poets as Whitman, Hughes and Dickinson without triggering a political protest over the war.
The new documentary Poets Against the War examines the role of poetry in wartime. For our money, sending Laura Bush repeated copies of this would have done the trick.
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 12:17 pm | |
Comments (1)
GalleyCat no longer looks like a living room that has been marked by a spray-happy Tom. Please go visit!*
* Nathalie, please insist they move your archives. If one of the largest online media centers in the US cannot do it, the BOOG can.
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 11:58 am | |
Comments (1)
Step four: Email husband, attempting to convince him to pose as assistant, call New Yorker, ask for editor’s name so you can send query directly to him/her.
Step four (a): Patiently explain to husband that yes, you know he is not actually your assistant, but that it won’t hurt him to pretend.
Step four (b): Promise husband that yes, some day, should it become necessary, you will pretend to be his assistant, too, or anything else he wants, provided there are no handcuffs involved.
Step five: Husband comes through! You have names! Actual names of Talk of the Town editor and her assistant! Send query off to them directly.
Step six: Nothing and more nothing.
Jennifer Weiner presents How to Query the New Yorker (if you are a Female Writer of Popular Fiction who Does Not Look like Nell Freudenberger) [via Sarah]
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 11:48 am | |
Comments (2)
At 21, I was on the outside looking in, on my first trip to Israel with a friend who was, like me, a Reform Jew. One day, we wandered into a religious neighborhood in Jerusalem, and suddenly there were black hats and side curls everywhere. My friend pointed out a group of men wearing odd fur hats. ”Those,” he explained, ”are the really mean ones.” I never questioned our snap judgment of these people until, a few years later, I returned to study at an all-girls seminary and was surprised to discover that my teachers, whom I adored, were men and women from this same community.
Jeez. Let’s hope Shalit never runs into any of those fuck-happy Catholics. [Thanks, JK!]
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 11:40 am | |
Comments (1)
Those of you who’ve read any of my reviews know we don’t always, um, say this kind of thing. But, GO BUY HOMELAND. Go!
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Saturday, January 29, 2005 4:55 pm | |
Comments (4)
Fundamentally children resent being placed at the heart of their parents’ expression, and yet I still do it,” said Ayelet Waldman, whose blog, Bad Mother (bad-mother.blogspot.com), describes life at home with her four young children and her husband, Michael Chabon, the novelist. Ms. Waldman, a novelist herself, has blogged about her baby Abie’s recessive chin and gimpy hip and the thrill of the children’s going back to school after winter break.
It’s fine that it only took the NYT a kazillion years to jump on the trend of Mommy blogs (after a certain point, there are really only so many pieces one can justify on Nick Denton’s empire), but we need to step off, because, as a literary blogger, we are equally remiss in somehow sleeping on the the fact that MICHAEL CHABON’S WIFE HAS BEEN CHRONICLING THE PROGRESS OF HIS OFFSPRING ONLINE.* **
* At Blogspot, no less.
** We just noticed Ayelet harrumphed at Fussy’s inclusion in the piece (hiss!) and salaamed (as is only just) to Dooce. But we wonder — is this going to spawn an entirely new world in which mothers who once competed over their child’s flash-card prowess now lock strollers over Technorati ratings?
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 4:00 pm | |
Comments (4)
What does it say about your girlfriendly skills when your bent over, wracked-with-coughing mate is forced to bring up this on his laptop to make sure that you do not torture him once again with the violet crimson liquid Robitussen that you hold so dear?
Posted by altehaggen in Uncategorized @ 3:50 pm | Tags: Moi |
Comments (0)
Oh, God. [via Moby]
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Friday, January 28, 2005 2:09 pm | |
Comments (0)