Egging him on
Isn't it time you visited the "Blog" of "Unnecessary" Quotation Marks? It's been a while, hasn't it?
Labels: David Suisman, The "Blog" of "Unnecessary" Quotation Marks
Isn't it time you visited the "Blog" of "Unnecessary" Quotation Marks? It's been a while, hasn't it?
Labels: David Suisman, The "Blog" of "Unnecessary" Quotation Marks
In the Times, Believer contributor Robert Ito has the dope on Room 237, a documentary about the mind-boggling array of theories concerning Stanley Kubrick's The Shining:
“Room 237,” the first full-length documentary by the director Rodney Ascher, examines several of the most intriguing of these theories. It’s really about the Holocaust, one interviewee says, and Mr. Kubrick’s inability to address the horrors of the Final Solution on film. No, it’s about a different genocide, that of American Indians, another says, pointing to all the tribal-theme items adorning the Overlook Hotel’s walls. A third claims it’s really Kubrick’s veiled confession that he helped NASA fake the Apollo Moon landings.
Labels: Robert Ito, Stanley Kubrick, The Shining
Powell’s portrayal of servants is quite funny, actually. At the time when these books were being written, P.G. Wodehouse was already making virtuosic use of the comic possibilities of the English serving class, most famously in the form of the hyper-competent Jeeves. Powell cut against the Wodehouse grain by making his servant characters only middling in competence and by having them intrude in the life of the household at the most inconvenient times, highlighting the strangeness of two entirely different categories of person living in a house together. The aforementioned butler works for an upper-class Communist, who doesn’t want a butler or really believe in having butlers, but can’t manage his enormous house without one, and there’s a sadly droll tone to their interactions.
Labels: Anthony Powell, Invisible Library, Levi Stahl
Labels: Night RPM, The Recognitions, Thomas Pynchon, World's laziest blogger
Over at the Center for Fiction's Director's Blog (whew!), I put in my two cents for some novels I'm looking forward to reading in 2012—books by Ben Marcus, Antoine Wilson, Heidi Julavits, and Sergio de la Pava.
Via a comment on Grognardia: Two Amazon reviews by the late Dr. John E. Holmes, who wrote the rules for the first basic set of Dungeons & Dragons.
For every muscle there is a photo of a clinical evaluation showing position of the limb etc and the instructions ("The patient tries to flex against resistance"). For each muscle there is listed the spinal segments and periferal nerve. Included are standard sensory maps and plexus diagrams. Fits into your instrument bag or white coat pocket. Worth getting if you see only 5 neuro-muscular problems a year!
Labels: Dungeons and Dragons
Today on the iPod, "How I Wrote Elastic Man" popped up...
Labels: coincidence, The Fall, Wyndham Lewis
...has a Tumblr!
Labels: Greil Marcus, Magnetic Fields, Rick Moody, The Believer
In September, Ron Artest — the Lakers’ burly, quirky, unfailingly unpredictable forward — legally changed his name to Metta World Peace. The first name is a Buddhist term meaning “loving kindness.” The last name is self-explanatory.The name also leads to unfortunate assertions, such as a recent story claiming that “World Peace certainly wasn’t winning over many fans” in the preseason.So World Peace it is — on the back of his jersey, on his locker stall and every time he is introduced by Lawrence Tanter, the Lakers’ longtime public-address announcer. Tanter said he had practice, having been around when Philadelphia’s Lloyd B. Free legally changed his name to World B. Free, in 1981.—NYT
Publicly bookmarking these for later reading—two pieces on The Tree of Life, my favorite movie of last year*:
Labels: A.O. Scott, David Haglund, Lee Chang-dong, Terrence Malick, The Tree of Life
Labels: Harry Mathews, Heidi Julavits, Jeannie Vanasco, Meghan Daum, The Believer, Tom Phillips, Vendela