beasts’ bellies and other lessons in anatomy
I asked Joy Castro, author of The Truth Book, what it was like being a woman professor at all all men’s college. This is what she said:
I’m wowed by the piece on Wabash College in the new issue of Details by editor-at-large Jeff Gordinier. As one of three remaining all-male liberal arts colleges in the U.S., Wabash, as Gordinier discovered in a mere week, can be kinda weird. I’ve taught here in rural Indiana for the past eight years, and teaching creative writing, women’s literature, and feminist theory to 18- to 22-year-old guys can be completely, paradoxically addictive. Belly of the beast, I guess.
The Details piece (in addition to plugging my memoir–thanks, Jeff!) features Russ Harbaugh, our football team’s current quarterback, a budding filmmaker, a fine writer, and one of my current favorite students.
Russ was one of nine guys in a senior seminar I taught last year on memoir; we read Kathryn Harrison’s The Kiss, Lauren Slater’s Lying, and body theory by Elaine Scarry and Susan Bordo as well as Jarhead, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, and Mark Doty’s Firebird, among others. Defying any possible gender expectations, Russ chose to write his critical papers about Louise Erdrich’s The Blue Jay’s Dance: A Birth Year, a memoir of pregnancy, birth, and motherhood–a book about which he waxed lyrical.
After a number of risk-taking creative-writing exercises in class, students also tried their hands at memoir pieces–many of which were knockouts, and many of which included thoughtful, informed explorations of the meanings of masculinity and the male body in our culture. Others wrestled with sexuality, ethnicity, provincialism, and otherness.
Last year when I gave a talk in the chapel about sexism and civil discourse, over 400 people attended–voluntarily–and shocked me when they gave it a standing ovation. So, as deeply odd as Wabash can be (just take a gander at the zucchini-eating episode in Details), it can also be a really fruitful and exciting place to teach.
It’s been a mildly nervewracking place to work, though, while publishing The Truth Book: Escaping a Childhood of Abuse among Jehovah’s Witnesses, a memoir that deals with gender, sexuality, and the body at some length. Kinda personal, kinda button-pushing. I wasn’t sure what to expect–crank calls? silent, stonewalling students in my classes? a boycott of my courses?–but the support of students, as well as staff and faculty, has been tremendous so far. With the exception of one strange review slated to run in the campus neocon journal, the response has been wholly positive. Male colleagues with no particular reason to like the book have written glowing reviews on Amazon, and the campus bookstore reports that their trade-book sales have doubled this year by virtue of The Truth Book sales alone. Students drop by the office: “Dr. Castro,” they say gravely, taking a seat. “I read your book.” Long, serious, heavy eye-contact pause, while I wonder what could possibly come next. Then the grin. “I loved it!” They whip out their copies for me to sign and tell me how they stayed up all night reading it.
Posted by tayari jones in General @ Wednesday, October 19, 2005 1:29 pm | | Comments (0)











It’s not clear why Random House threw 




It’s difficult to pinpoint the exact moment one achieves literary success, but when Stephen King picks up the phone to interrupt your Good Morning America appearance to personally thank you for writing your latest book, you know you are in the ballpark.
It might seem odd to describe a novel that involves barfing in cars, stalking boys and a drunk dad playing beer pong in his underpants as heartwarming, but Beach Week author Susan Coll is a master at finding wisdom in the unexpected.





Remaking society can take decades. But global rebellion is short work for sharpshooter Katniss Everdeen, who single-handedly foments a revolution in Suzanne Collins’ blockbuster young-adult Hunger Games trilogy. America likes its champions reluctant, and Collins specializes in that surly breed: her heroine trounces dystopic despots while chewing her cheek in self-doubt.






I live in Jersey City, about as far from a Betty Draper’s magnolia petal-overlaid redoubt as you can get. But every morning, I am mildly taken aback when I find myself marching among a troop that is entirely female, women of my age and station, ranging from the harried to the glamorous, all pushing one or two offspring toward the park in an assortment of urban-optimized carriages. Really? I think.
Jonathan Safran Foer has a son. He’s not the Son, I don’t think, although I might be forgiven for doing so. Because even though it is generally agreed that we are living in a child-centered moment, Eating Animals, the Everything Is Illuminated author’s somewhat reheated contribution to the recent spate of ruminations on flesh eating (verdict: don’t), is a singular entry in the annals of parenting literature—bypassing a now-commonplace obsession with one’s offspring to head straight to sanctification.












Welcome to ‘Fine Lines’, the Friday feature in which we give a sentimental, sometimes-critical, far more wrinkled look at the children’s and YA books we loved in our youth.












A story that rides on its own melting also runs the risk of dissolving entirely. In William Henry Lewis’s second collection of short fiction — his first, ”In the Arms of Our Elders,” was published by Carolina Wren Press a decade ago — the slow, lyric stories of love, loss and longing have a sensuous appeal, but they often threaten to disappear into the ether before they get off the ground.




