I recently recieved in the mail the latest issue of the Paris Review. Enclosed with the issue was information about the Review’s 50th anniversary celebration to be held in October. It’s a sad irony that George Plimpton, one of the founders and its editor died just last week. I saw him, for the first and last time, hosting literature readings with Paul Auster and others in Central Park over the summer, another of the journal’s anniversary celebrations.
Mr. Plimpton’s New York Time’s obituary was one of the most interesting I’ve seen since reading Mark Twain’s some years ago. He seemed to have a passion for doing anything and everything, from propagating serious literature to farcical attempts at professional boxing and football – taking advantage of all that his privileged station in life offered.
Included in the picture above: George Plimpton, William Styron, Truman Capote, Ralph Ellison, Mario Puzo…
For the next two days I will be at the Foreign Policy Association’s World Leadership Forum, which is one of the most interesting events this time of year, at least for those of us interested in foreign affairs, yet not professionally involved.One of the great things about this event and the FPA is that it is non-partisan, and the speakers and panels typically represent a wide range of views. This year the Presidents of Romania and Senegal will both be speaking. Last year there was an impassioned speach by Jeff Sachs of the Earth Institute at Columbia University that was unforgettable.
So, if you have an interest in foreign affairs, then the FPA is worth checking out.
As Bush goes back to the UN, defiant in manner, yet hat in hand, this little tidbit from Tom Delay back in March comes to mind. It speaks for itself…
From National Journal’s Congress Daily PM, Wednesday, March 12, 2003
“Meanwhile, Majority Leader DeLay today brushed aside arguments that the Bush administration should hold off plans to attack Iraq until it has secured approval from the United Nations, saying the international body has become irrelevant and outlived its useful life.They can talk until they’re blue in the face over at the U.N., DeLay told an America’s Community Bankers meeting today. I think the days of the United Nations have come to an end … because they can’t do anything.DeLay also said it was Congress’ duty in a time of war to significantly cut taxes. Nothing is more important in the face of a war than cutting taxes, he said.”
In writing this blog, I am forced to confront my own opinions in a serious manner. Ever since I gave any thought to politics, my views have been informed by a strong sense of pragmatism and an equally strong desire not to succumb to any ideology that would, I feared, substitute for independent thinking. In fact, I have, over time, flirted with different views along the spectrum in sort of an agnostically open-minded manner. But, when one takes to writing down their views, we are forced to take sides.
Despite my disdain for labels, I suppose you could call me a “liberaltarian.” Now, I don’t mean that in the “vege-tarian” sense – it doesn’t mean that I only eat liberals. But it does mean that if you stacked up my hopes and desires for our society, they are liberal, but if you stacked up my solutions to real problems, they would be rather moderate. At the risk of oversimplification, I find liberal and libertarian ideas attractive, but I don’t think that either the liberals or libertarians (who are something like classical liberals anyway) in the U.S. provide practical answers to complex problems. I reject conservatism and the Republicans, particularly the religious-right Republicans, even though I used to feel that they, the Republican Party, at least were aligned with my ideal world of limited government and fiscal responsibility. That, in practice, was clearly wrong, even to the point of hypocrisy.
It seems that political parties in this country stand for little more than a place to hang ones hat, so I don’tmind not really fitting into any of them. I do share the concerns of those we call democrats, and having to choose one of the two major parties, I fit in mostly with the donkeys. To that end, I voted for the winner of the last Presidential election, Al Gore (oh so revealing!).
Now that I’m standing here naked, I can say that, despite sharing the concerns of those we call Democrats, I distrust the government’s efficacy, that is, the ability to actually get anything positive done (they sure are good at wrecking things though), and I question the right of the government to redistribute income (Whoa Nelly, drop the phone!). That admittedly puts me in some uncomfortable territory and I don’t honestly know how to reconcile all of my views. However, the basis for them, again, at the risk of oversimplifying, is this: I believe that deep down, this country’s defining characteristic is its unwavering demand for individual rights and its acceptance of the responsibility that accompanies those rights. I say deep down, because I think the see has sawed more toward the side of rights while responsibilities have been left aside. So here’s a paradox for the pile, I think that the only way to even things out is with strong leadership. Leadership’s primary responsibility should be to foster the idea of taking responsibility for our actions, our selves, our families and our communities – all of which embody my concept of individualism – that we teach each other to (proverbially) fish, that we lend a hand to those around us and we act as good citizens. I would like to think that if we did that, to some extent, inequities would be wrought out of the system. “Gee, why the dreamy rhetoric”, you say. “Weren’t you just talking about practical solutions?” Yes, but I’m trying to reconcile solutions with ideals here and I’m trying to clarify what I said about government redistribution. Practically speaking, I think that really high taxes are counterproductive, and I think that those on the top of the scale always get around paying anyway. So, I think we should have a relatively flat tax rate with extremely limited deductions, which would be used to pay for only truly public goods (in the economic sense) and we should have a host of end-user or value-added taxes. The idea is that you pay for what you get and get what you pay for. This idea is most equitable if, we as individuals, corporate and personal, were willing to take more responsibility for the world around us – that is, take the stark inequities in the world and do something about it ourselves.
Moving on, I also question our role in the world or, more directly, the way we as a country and our elected leaders behave as global citizens. As a perusal of this blog will show, I adamantly oppose the Bush administration (and an adamantine wall it is, opposing these power mongers!) and the severe right turn that they are taking this country. I have believed from the start that their reasons for invading Iraq were spurious and I oppose our unilateralism militarily and with the U.N., the International Criminal Court and the Kyoto Treaty. (I feel better now, having said that because those views lean more democratic than libertarian, again though, for more practical reasons than anything). I think that we should bring our troops home, and use our might only for humanitarian and defense purposes (defense in my book does not mean invading a country because its leader tried to kill your daddy).
Finally for now, I do believe in free markets and free trade, but unfortunately, in the real world, those things don’t exist, mostly because of selfishness on the part of individuals and states. So again, ideal is tempered by reality and I don’t for a second pretend to know how to make them work. In that same department, my dislike for labor unions comes from the same problem. Conceptually, I think that individuals should band together to counter the power of large corporations. Practically though, the labor unions I have observed used arcane rules only to perpetuate their existence and not to actually get any work done. I know that’s not fair to all of the unions out there, but my personal experience was appalling and it has stuck in my brain since.
Summarily, you can probably tell by this mess I’ve made for myself, I don’t believe that having philosophical underpinnings for your views will get you too far in a complicated world, they are only there for grounding. And I see the solution to most problems as, not, black or white, but some shade of gray. I am not only comfortable with that concept, but I thrive on it. In my view, most ideologies are a square peg, and the world is a polygonal hole.
But, it is quite difficult to put out one’s views lucidly on a piece of paper, particularly without rambling on for thousands upon thousands of words or taking much more time than I can devote to it, so I reserve the right to modify what I think and write here. And perhaps, since this indulgent little blog serves primarily my own pleasure of thinking out loud to no one in particular, if time permits, it will be a fun exercise to continue with “Where I’m Coming From” in order to muse over these problems. That’s probably more than our current POTUS can claim to have ever done.
New York Times’ Op-ed Columnist Nicholas Kristoff wrote this week about his experience hiking in the contentious Alaskan Arctic Wildlife Reserve, a relatively untouched piece of land in a sparse area that most Americans will never see. His observations lead him to believe that both sides of the debate on the region exaggerate their claims of the impact of drilling for oil. That’s a safe assumption, but then Kristoff concludes that he would support drilling in the barren coastal plains of the reserve. The locals, he says, are in favor of drilling. Apparently, these Alaskan “Beverly Hillbillies” want the windfall millions of dollars that they would receive from the use of the land. Kristoff believes though, that drilling is only okay if it if were part of a larger environmental plan that would increase fuel efficiency standards, etc, etc. That plan, he admits, is not forthcoming from the Bush Administration anytime soon, but I think that’s beside the point. Either you think that drilling in the region is right or wrong.
I do think though, that Kristoff is on the right track, only I would take it a step further. I think, like Gary Coleman, the child-star-cum-gubernatorial candidate of California, that we should drill in every natural park and every public place possible in the country. Whatchu talkin’ bout Willis? What I really mean is that we can no longer afford to rely on all of our energy needs from the Middle East. No amount of imperialism is going to change the fact that we can’t control what happens in the region and as long as we are reliant upon the kindness of sultans, we, as a country, are not masters of our own destiny.
Yeah, but, Mr. Parr, we don’t want to mess with our beautiful land any more than we already are! No, that’s true. However, I believe that if we took more responsibility for the resources that we use, we would be more apt to utilize them wisely. That’s why I also propose a $2 per gallon tax that would be used strictly for improving emissions standards, and developing alternative sources of fuel and public transportation, and otherwise funding reductions of emissions. I know that this is hugely regressive* and would cause widespread price hikes, but it isn’t any more realistic than my first proposal and I’m trying to make a simple point.
We in this country seem to believe that we have a God-given and constitutional right to use fuel and other resources with out any thought to the responsibilities that come along with that right. Even our so-called “values-based” leadership tells us that SUV’s are our right and its just okay. (For the record, I don’t have anything against SUV’s categorically – people do have legitimate needs for them, but they are probably mostly used as a fashion statement and that’s probably not a good reason for using an awful lot of gas. However, I do believe that Hummer’s are ridiculous and their owners are so conspicuously stupid and pretentious that it is beyond my comprehension.) Therefore, short of any leadership on this topic, I believe we need to be more accountable for our actions through paying enough direct taxes to fund the projects I mentioned above and begin earnestly looking at ways to develop our energy sources at home, even if that means drilling in Alaska or on the coast. Perhaps then we would think about the damage we are doing and spend less time and money trying to dominate a region where we could and should limit our involvement.
I just want to make it clear that the above proposals are strictly rhetorical. I wanted to start an oil drilling operation from our living room, but my wife wouldn’t let me. – Bud Parr 9-17-03
…and it’s our duty to send him home.
It’s hard to believe that we’re only about 14 months away from the opportunity to vote out President Bush, although I somehow doubt that will happen. Last week, the Democrats held a debate – inauspiciously scheduled for the same day that football season began – that more or less starts the process of narrowing the field to a candidate that could possibly make a credible challenger in ‘04.
Here’s the problem. Dean blazed into the campaign as the single candidate that, if nothing else, seems to represent the sensibility of a disaffected and vocal portion of the US population. My guess is that most of the people attending Dean rallies are the same conscientious folks that futilely marched for peace back in February (of which I was one). That’s great, let’s get excited! But that’s not enough to change the course of the election, or more importantly, move us away from the dangerous course that Mr. Bush’s puppet masters are directing us.
In the last election, some people were excited enough to vote for the Green Party’s candidate, Ralph Nader. These, I suppose, were voters that lacked confidence in Gore’s leadership abilities. That’s understandable. But, unfortunately, voting with your heart may have disastrous results. Arguably, had those that voted for Nader merely voted for the Democratic Party candidate, Bush would never have won (or stolen, depending on your point of view) that election. The Green Party is making impressive inroads in local races, but it is absolutely absurd to think that you can just march into the presidential election as a third party in a two-party system and accomplish anything other than a protest vote. Did Nader succeed in furthering a green agenda? Clearly not. (Just a quick google search will provide a bit of insight into this)
Dean’s candidacy is energizing the media and some voters and probably putting other POTUS wannabes on their toes. That’s good. But ultimately, we need a candidate that will not just say Bush is bad, and the war in Iraq is bad, but a candidate that will present credible strategies to meaningfully deal with the problems in the Middle East (not just Iraq), to get our budget mess back in order, to put the EPA back on track, and to do something about all those jobless people out there. Most importantly though, we need a candidate that can win, and that means appealing to an awful lot of people in this country. I hate to be a bore, but winning means a candidate that is probably a little more centrist and yes, a bit more boring than Dean.
Who that is, I don’t know yet, but I doubt that it’s Gephardt or Lieberman (this is represents little more than my impressions or biases at this point), but perhaps Kerry, or Clark, if he runs, might have the military background that will comfort a frightened country and understand what we are now up against with the hole that we’ve dug in Iraq, and perhaps be a good, honest leader – something that we’ve lacked for a long, long, time.
p.s. According to the latest count in the NYTs, there are 287 dead soldiers from the Iraq war now. Interesting, isn’t it, how those that call themselves patriots, those that exclaim, “we support our troops!” are the first to send those men and women to their death?
p.p.s. I stole the quote I used for the title of this post – but 192 Books, a bookstore in NYC, sells a t-shirt with it inscribed on the front for $20 at http://www.192books.com/news.htm
I recently wrote an article called Whither the Washington Consensus? that was published on the page that I host at the Foreign Policy Association. My opinion as expressed in the article is that essentially, reports of the demise of the Washington Consensus are greatly exaggerated.
As a postcript, there is an interesting opinion piece on the Financial Times site today written by the head of emerging markets at Morgan Stanley calling the Washington Consensus dead, but declaring it replaced by a “get growing mantra.” I would submit, and I don’t necessarily think his article is at odds with mine, that despite a new mantra, the Washington Consensus is only dead in name only.
The Washington Consensus Fades into History Financial Times, August 3rd, 2003
This may no longer be a free link.
In a real – the dog ate my paper moment – a Pentagon spokesman denied having used Napalm in the Iraq war. Napalm is “thick, burning combination of polystyrene, gasoline and benzene, (which) was used against people and villages in Vietnam.” At the time that he was asked by reporters, he said that US stockpiles of Napalm were destroyed and they don’t keep it in their arsenal. What he didn’t say was that they now have a new and improved firebomb, which differs from Napalm in that it uses a kerosene-based jet fuel, that they did use in Iraq.
But Pentagon spokesmen were contradicted by officers in the field. According to the San Diego Union-Tribune Col. Randolph Alles said “We napalmed both those (bridge) approaches,” , commander of Marine Air Group 11, told the . “Unfortunately, there were people there because you could see them in the (cockpit) video. “They were Iraqi soldiers there. It’s no great way to die,” Alles added.
This is an unconscionable lie. That a US Military officer would split hairs on such a question is an insult to our intelligence and a greater insult to everyone in uniform. I wonder why he would lie like that?
Articles quoted:
Marine’s dropped devices similar to Napalm on Iraqi Troops, The Mercury News, Tues. Aug 5th, 2003
US admits it used Napalm on Iraqi Troops, The Independent, UK. Aug. 10th, 2003
The Denver Post Online reports that the Boulder Public Library is standing up to what they believe is a violation of public rights in the Patriot Act (the anti-terrorism law passed after 9/11), which requires businesses, including libraries, to disclose records for federal investigations. The library gets around the law by destroying all records – of what each patron checks out – every day.
The article states that “if a federal agent asks a Boulder librarian for a list of all the books checked out by John Q. Public in the last month, the answer will be ‘Records? What records?’” and quotes the library manager as saying “People have a right to read what they want to read without other people looking over their shoulder.”
While it appears that this is a subtle change in policy since records are usually destroyed within weeks or months, the symbolism, I believe, is potent and commendable.
Article: Library Thwarts Patriot Act Snooping, DenverPost.Com July 29th, 2003. (Article may expire in 14 days of posting, but can be found in their archive search).
Our nearly hermetic Vice President Dick Cheney gave a hastily arranged speech to his friends at the American Enterprise Institute yesterday. Ostensibly his purpose was to talk about the Bush Administration’s commitment to “act decisively” on terrorism. Much of the speech however, was devoted to justifying the administration’s justifications for going to war with Iraq. The New York Times quotes a Cheney aid as saying that “This was partly in response to the recent unpleasantness,” and “We had to get out of the hole we were in.”
So in digging out of this hole (that may be turning into a quagmire) Mr. Cheney says “at a safe remove from danger, some are trying to cast doubt upon the decision to liberate Iraq.” First of all, by the rhetoric coming from the White House, I’m never quite sure if the Administration wanted to free Iraqis from their evil dictator, or make Americans safer from the evil terrorist, or maybe just sell some Charmin, Mr. Whipple.
But the irony is that, at the same time Mr. Cheney is preaching how Americans are safe from attacks from Iraq, three Americans were killed in attacks from Iraq! And these were just three casualties out of a total 236 dead Americans that are piling up (not to mention Iraqi deaths, of which I have not seen a count).
Now I don’t want to beat a dead Qusay, er horse, but how many American casualties would there be if we had not invaded Iraq? None! And judging by the evidence produced so far, the $58 billion annual cost and 236 dead Americans lost invading Iraq could have been devoted to rooting out the, sadly, proven terrorist, Osama bin Laden.
So, Iím left wondering, are we any safer since we deposed Saddam Hussein?
Stories quoted:
Cheney Asserts No Responsible Leader Could Have Ignored Danger From Iraq. New York Times Friday, July 25, 2003. A10
3 More U.S. Soldiers Killed in Iraq as Resistance Continues. New York Times, July 24, 2003
The link to the project is available here:
http://www.thegoldennotebook.org
– Kirsten
on “The Institute for the Future of the Book announces a Public Conversation on....”
Go Bud! Thanks for this wonderful expression of your vote. I think your assessment of McCain’s foreign policy is too kind - if you read through this article in The New Yorker (current issue) you’ll hear what his old buddy and fellow Republican has to say about it: http://tinyurl.com/6e7k6o
I’m off to PA tomorrow to canvass and then round up voters on 11/4. Our votes have never been so critical to the future of the world…
– Paco
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
The number one thing schools can do to improve student learning is to focus on parent involvement. School leaders must start publishing not only math and reading scores but also percentage of parents attending meetings and participating in the classroom. They should spend money on workshops for those parents who have for generations been excluded from participating in a meaningful way. Schools are run on middle class values. People from poverty have no way of understanding those values unless we clearly communicate them.
–
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
Both Republicans and Democrats know that a certain amount of taxation is necessary. The only difference is, they only think it’s fair when it pays for things they want.
People who are really into the Space Program want taxes to fund NASA. Almost everyone wants some taxes to fund the military. A lot of people want taxes to fund interstate highways, whether for vacation travel, to visit loved ones, or to move products from factories to distributors to stores. If you are the governor of a state that needs disaster relief, you want disaster relief, damn it, whether you are Democrat or Republican. Some people want tax money for schools because they believe, however corny it may sound, that children are our future. Some people want taxes to provide health care to more people because, in the long run, this makes a stronger America. That’s why we have polio and small pox vaccinations! Remember? If you are a millionaire living in a gated community, you have to go outside sometime. Do you want to catch polio because you said, “Let the peasants fend for themsleves?” If a kid is failing in school because of poor eyesight or an undetected illness, I would rather pay taxes to help the child become a productive member of society, rather than later when taxes are used to subsidize emergency care for the indigent, welfare, or even the criminal justice system and prison.
What are Republicans so afraid of?
– Bill Ectric
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
This, probably, is the most heartfelt personal account on American Elections in the wake of the financial crisis that I have read so far. I guess, like many others round the world, that you made the right choice.
I guess, there will be few with doubt that Bush not only failed as a President, but committed blunders, intentional or otherwise, which has changed the face of the world for the worse. If not for anything else, a non-republican victory is essential as no-one needs a President who will need to defend the decisions of Bush. McCain will, so let him out.
I am an Indian living in India and have been hoping Obama wins. As an Indian, that’s not an intelligent wish, for Obama and the Democrats in general have been against stuff like outsourcing which today provides jobs to a good number of Indians and brings in good foreign exchange home. However, I doubt if any consideration can make one chose McCain over Obama. It would defy intelligence.
– BookCrazy
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
Actually, Michael - there are things that are working. You lost me at “studies show...” My wife is a public school teacher here in New York City who has taught at “inner-city” schools as well as other schools in the city (that we don’t assign politically-correct euphemisms to). She’s taught five year-olds who have suffered gunshot wounds, who couldn’t afford proper medical care or lived in shelters or who were being raised by their grandparents because their parents weren’t around. As a teacher, don’t you think that those schools where teaching only happens amidst security concerns and a disruptive environment could use extra help? Those teachers are overwhelmed! They would certainly benefit from smaller class sizes and basic money for supplies and books or additional para-professionals that I assure you are not generally being seen. After-school programs are critical for these kids to get extra help, books etc when the parents are working. These are simple solutions but powerful - they are not free. Whether or not that creates better performance on standardized tests, I don’t know and truthfully, I don’t care. I do know that we need to bring up the poorer schools somehow and without funding you’re merely shuffling. We don’t need shuffling.
Teachers are a special breed of person who are certainly motivated by something more than money, but wouldn’t you like to see teaching as a viable career option to the brightest students who might be necessarily lured into other fields? There’s a fair amount of tenured mediocrity in our schools, but I think teachers ought to be treated and paid like the professionals they are. I know teachers that can’t even afford to live in the neighborhoods they teach in. My wife, after more than ten years and advanced degrees was paid pretty well, but still no where near what she could have made in other fields (she made less money teaching than some secretaries at Merrill Lynch where I used to work).
I don’t believe that money is a panacea, but I’m tired of the handwringing in this country over how bad our schools are among people who only want to patch this or that problem up when I think we need give it the sort of weight we do war or our perennial financial bailouts. We’re throwing our best asset away. Of course, I’m also not under the illusion that any president would be able to do that, at least not overnight, but I do believe there’s a far greater chance of a renewed emphasis on education with Obama than with McCain and that line about not throwing money at the problem is just not enough because starving the problem of funds is not the answer either.
Now, take the case of the Fannie Lou Hamer Freedom High School here in New York City (I don’t know where you’re writing from). There are horribly failing schools in the South Bronx - these are large, faceless schools with thousands of students and insurmountable security problems. What one group did with the help of grant money from the Annenberg Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation was to create smaller, specialized schools within the area with a professional staff who engaged student’s families (as in going to a student’s house if they don’t show up for school) and each teacher is responsible for a core group of students. Each student can only graduate by presenting and defending a body of work accumulated during their time there. 98% of these kids go on to college, something previously unheard of in the South Bronx. So don’t tell me that money won’t help.
– Bud Parr
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
Bud - Just wanted to leave a comment about the line “Everyone knows that schools are better in districts where there’s more money.” This is certainly true, but this isn’t because the schools have money - it’s because the people do. A school with lots of money in an inner city neighborhood will not do much (or at all) better than a school with a moderate amount, because its students have to deal with all the problems of that neighborhood (drugs, crime, single-parent households, etc.). As a teacher myself, I wish that just giving money would help. But studies have shown that it doesn’t help. So we need to reevaluate just how to use the money with give to best help those students, and at least right now there don’t seem to be any great answers.
–
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
Kevin, I knew I could count on you for a rebuttal. Good luck out there.
– Bud Parr
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
I won’t get into Iraq and America’s reputation abroad as that is a complicated discussion and an emotional one as well.
But I did want to point out that your point about money and education is simply not true. There is no connection between per student spending and educational outcomes. The best schools in this country don’t spend more per pupil.
It is also worth pointing out that Obama’s work in education has been marked by failure. The infamous Annenberg project failed to improve Chicago schools despite millons of dollars spent. On top of that the Federal Government’s roll in education has been ineffective at best - and full of wasteful spending - so I fail to see why more Federal dollars is likely to help.
As to health care, I really think this is one area where McCain has been treated very poorly. Prior to this election cycle many people agreed that we needed to decouple health care from employment so that you were in charge of your care and it was portable, etc.
So when McCain makes just such a proposal, and one a number of unbiased observers agree will save most American’s money, Obama attacks him with deceptive ads. McCain may have done a poor job of selling the plan, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a good one.
Just my two cents.
– Kevin Holtsberry
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
Excellent, Bud. I couldn’t have put it better myself. (that line about what Putin saw when he looked back is hilarious!)
–
on “I Voted for Barack Obama Today and Here's Why”
“But why in the world would anyone think that writers should be ‘bending over backwards’ to appeal to people who have no interest in reading? What bizarre conception of literature would have it intended primarily for nonreaders? The mangled logic of this view, which perversely seems to be widely shared by many who do read, seems to me so far removed from any plausible assessment of the place of “literature” in our culture as to be pretty close to insane.”
“It was Wasilla hillbillies looting Neiman Marcus from coast to coast”
- Iain Martin quoting a McCain staffer at the Telegraph
“As you know, the glut of illiquid, insolvent, and troubled poems is clogging the literary arteries of the West. These debt-ridden poems threaten to infect other areas of the literary sector and ultimately to topple our culture industry.
Cultural leaders have come together to announce a massive poetry buyout: leveraged and unsecured poems, poetry derivatives, delinquent poems, and subprime poems will be removed from circulation in the biggest poetry bailout since the Victorian era. We believe the plan is a comprehensive approach to relieving the stresses on our literary institutions and markets.”
- Charles Bernstein at Harper’s
“…it’s a source of some pleasure to come upon one of one’s older books, and to see the work inside, both of its writer and its reader, who, on some pages, such as during a notorious eighty-page party scene told almost entirely in dialogue, plum lost his mind:”
- Wyatt Mason, at the Harper’s blog on marginalia and The Recognitions
“In my opinion, Philip Roth is the Oliver Stone of fiction. We are drawn to him because he creates strong characters and has a knack for plots and situations that catch our interest. But he is hopelessly heavy-handed, single-minded and irritatingly consistent. He’s been writing the same story since the 1960s, showing no growth or maturity and never developing an interest in the world outside East Coast USA.”
What I always find frustrating is that the Indie Bestseller list is of bestselling books in independent bookstores, which seems to me not that far from the bestselling books of the moment in non-indie stores. What I’d like to see is an Indie Bestseller list that is of bestselling books from independent publishers. Does such a thing exist?
“…This is the way that readers/reviewers/booksellers avoid ‘foreign’ books by essentially diminishing their importance. It’s the same sort of logic that dismisses the quality of something — like Cubs fans — by questioning it’s authenticity — even if they really don’t understand baseball — is a slippery slope.”
“Willie’s story is more of a tall tale. Like Daniel Boone, Willie belongs both to American history and American myth. Huckster. Trickster. Philanthropist. Pothead. Road dog. Genius. His nicknames read like godly epithets of a peculiarly American sort–Shotgun Willie, the Red Headed Stranger, Booger Red. Like Boone, in his own lifetime Nelson has become a living symbol of pioneering American virtues–individualism, integrity, survival, self-made commercial success. And the people around him speak of him as if he were the Yoda of Austin.”
- Jason Chervokas reviewing Joe Nick Patoski’s Willie Nelson: An Epic Life
“I think industry mediocrity is more of a threat to the future of reading than television is.”
- Sarah McNally (owner of McNally Jackson books) quoted in the New York Observer
The point is that I need things to look and be a certain way in order to get into the full creative spirit. Wagner had to wear silk robes and work in a room with heavy drapes to keep a lot of the sunlight out, while Shostakovich could, and did, work in the middle of chaos like the German assault on Leningrad. I can crank out words and music in the middle of unpropitious circumstances if need be, but I prefer to have a work space and work environment that are creation-ready, and little totems nearby to help: Hot black coffee in an interesting mug, sharpened Dixon Ticonderoga pencils (HB2), cream-colored lined paper (I like Archives 18-stave orchestral book), my green-marble Waterman fountain pen nearby to ink things I’m going to keep.
“Land [founder of Polaroid] nurtured an idealistic vision of photography. He dreamed of a camera that would release the artist in everyone. ‘‘My basic faith,’ Land wrote, ‘is in the random competence of people in all walks of life, at any level of income, of any derivation. There is a common sense of beauty and of manual aptitudes.’”
- Phil Patton, on Polaroid’s announcement it would close its U.S. factories making instant film
“Let us open up our doors for writers the way that so many, not only in Brooklyn but across the country, have done for musicians (check out www.dodiyusa.org for an idea). The internet and its social networking sites have made the promotion of independent arts events not only extremely easy but extremely cheap (if not altogether free). If we as readers become the curators of our own literary events, we take the power out of the hands of publicists and publishers with bookselling agendas, and create a more organic experience. Furthermore, by hosting readings and performances outside of bars, we open doors to the under-21 crowd, which has a great literary energy but little access to events outside of the undergrad sphere.”
- Bryan Miltenberg at The Millions
“So, apropos of practically nothing (and not with a bang but a whimper) I tossed in a quotation from “The Waste Land.” That, I thought, will show him I’ve read a thing or two besides my press notices from Vaudeville.
Eliot smiled faintly — as though to say he was thoroughly familiar with his poems and didn’t need me to recite them. So I took a whack at “King Lear”…
That too failed to bowl over the poet. He seemed more interested in discussing “Animal Crackers” and “A Night at the Opera.” He quoted a joke – one of mine – that I had long since forgotten. Now it was my turn to smile faintly…
“I jumped at the chance to see him in concert, and managed to squeeze into the fifth row of the packed nightclub to gaze up at his thick hands laying that pulsing tremolo over those Bo Diddley chords on that beautiful box-shaped guitar. Bo Diddley was pretty old in 1987, but he wasn’t too old to snarl his lyrics, or to enjoy himself.”
“Miroslav Holub once said that when things were really bad in Eastern Europe, ‘it is a very poetic situation.’ It is a terrible thing to say, but Joseph [Brodsky] was blessed with ‘a very poetic situation.’ No American poet has had the opportunity to enjoy such terrible historical circumstances.”
- William Wadsworth interviewed by Valentina Polukhina at Words Without Borders
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