At least now I know why God took it away

Dear Oldhag,

Home Land! Home . . . Land! For Pete’s sake, you wrote the review!

Toodles,
[Redacted]

Posted by altehaggen in WTF @ Friday, April 29, 2005 8:24 pm | | Comments (0)

Have you seen my Homeland?

I spent all morning looking for my Homeland. I don’t mean my Homeland Homeland. (That’s New Jersey, friends.) I mean my Homeland, the ARC I received when I reviewed the book.

I have a very personal relationship with my books. It’s not fetishistic, it’s personal. A book I cannot find is like the grandmother’s earring lost on the floor of a restaurant, the leftover piece of fried chicken that has MYSTERIOUSLY DISAPPEARED from the back of the fridge. (TELL ME WHO ATE MY GODDAMNED FRIED CHICKEN, HOSS.) When I moved out after college, I finally had to put a moratorium on my mother handing any person who professed some acquaintance with the alphabet a stack of MY BOOKS to enjoy. This was not strictly fair, as I had stolen most of those books from her a decade ago.) In my old age, I have taken on a policy of lending no books to anyone, because, though everyone feels deeply confident that they will return your book, in fact, they never do. It is our national delusion, and a far greater crisis than Social Security, obviously. (By the way, Barrie? Laura? You know who you are.)
(more…)

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 4:21 pm | | Comments (1)

“….But we keep trying, because, after all, we need the eggs.”

At long last, the inimitable Jimmy Beck has given in and begun quoting lines from Annie Hall online, too.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Thursday, April 28, 2005 12:10 pm | | Comments (3)

The Power and the Jorie

We’ve been borne down by a load of work so staggering that our psyche has become lodged in what appears to be a potato cellar, but that cannot stop us from citing three lines from THE FUNNIEST THING TO HAVE HAPPENED TO POETRY since Jewel’s last book:

1) Graham is a burnished idol of the poetry world, having at 54 already pulled off the trifecta of American verse: (1) a major prize (the Pulitzer); (2) a longtime faculty position at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, the Death Star of the modern M.F.A. system.

2) She has friendly words for avant-gardists like Susan Howe; friendly words for formalists like Anthony Hecht; and friendly words for her tribe of former students (”I love all of them,” she says, and it must be true, because they show up with remarkable frequency as winners of the many contests she judges). Moreover, as Shelley might say, if Graham fell upon the thorns of life, she’d blurb.

3) Consider the beginning of ”Praying (Attempt of April 19 ‘04)”: ”If I could shout but I must not shout. / The girl standing in my doorway yesterday weeping. / In her right hand an updated report on global warming.” Well, at least it’s an updated report; you’d hate to see her ”weeping” (instead of plain old ”crying”) over last Tuesday’s version.

Pray, continue. From what we hear, every four to six weeks, God willing.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Tuesday, April 26, 2005 4:42 pm | | Comments (0)

Our future company in Hell

WORST LESBIAN PORN EVER. [Courtesy of Carrie]

Posted by altehaggen in WTF @ Thursday, April 21, 2005 2:24 pm | | Comments (2)

And no “blogs, or weblogs” whatsoever!

Radio Foetry!

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 1:53 pm | | Comments (5)

We are definitely going to hell

It’s not the first time a young boy has been brought to his knees by a priest.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 11:41 am | | Comments (1)

I, too, dislike it

We were hoping it was just a server prob, but it looks like the student-publishin’-contest-bustin’ Foetry is dead. Despite some editors’ irritation, we thought it served a great purpose, so WE’RE irritated. Come back! There is more nepotism to be unearthed, and endless Jorie to annoy!

UPDATE: Way to check your links first, Skurnick. IT’S ALIVE! We have always said, there is nothing like a self-satisfied picture of Jorie Graham to render the moldering live and kicking.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 11:06 am | | Comments (4)

And who says this man is not a true resident of Baltimore?

Still, a melancholic note creeps into Hutchisson’s voice when he discusses Poe’s final, unintentional visit to Charm City. In 1849, still grieving Virginia’s death but newly engaged to the widow Elmira Royster Shelton, Poe was on his way from Richmond to New York to gather his belongings and bring his beloved Muddy to Virginia. How Poe ended up in Baltimore is uncertain, and how he spent his brief time here is unknown, but he was finally found insensible and delirious in an alley, wearing another man’s clothes. He was conveyed to Washington College Hospital, where, muttering and incoherent, he breathed his last. The cause of his death was ultimately unknown, and his body never made it back to Richmond, remaining here in Westminster Burying Grounds. [via Schauby]

Posted by altehaggen in Uncategorized @ 10:55 am | Tags: | Comments (0)

Chad Gadya*

Walking under the tall black pines of the two-acre parcel he’d carved out for himself in what would soon become suburban America, the Berditchever got it into his head that what his young, newly-settled family needed was a milking goat, one little goat he could purchase for two twenties.

Fuck The Atlantic. Unbeknownst to us, but NOW KNOWN TO US, the English version of The Forward, the lone — we think — Yiddish newspaper still in existence, has begun publishing fiction. Check out novelist Pearl Abraham’s “Every Jew Needs a Goat” — ain’t that the truth — here.

* Goyim, explanation, explanation.

Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ 10:40 am | | Comments (0)

Next page