Top News Article | Reuters.com: "A judge has ordered best-selling writer and journalist Oriana Fallaci to stand trial in her native Italy on charges she defamed Islam in a recent book.Technorati Tags: islam, defamation, italy, italian, OrianaFallaci
...
Fallaci lives in New York and has regularly provoked the wrath of Muslims with her outspoken criticism of Islam following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on U.S. cities."
May 26, 2005
Oriana Fallaci Faces Defamation Charges in Italy
Want freedom of speech? You got it. But don't publish your book in Italy:
May 23, 2005
Ken Foster's Website Has Gone to the Dog Blogs
I can't really decide if this post belongs in the Literary Praxis or in the You Are a Dog blog, so I'll likely cross post. But Ken Foster
(author of The Kind I'm Likely to Get and editor of The KGB Bar Reader and Dog Culture) has temporarily turned his website into a blog, and it features (of course) a lot of dog stuff. His memoir, The Dogs Who Found Me, will be published this year, and I'm looking forward to putting it on my wish list.
Blessings on Ken, and good luck finding a decent server. And thanks to Beatrice for noticing this: ken-foster.com.
Technorati Tags: KenFoster, dog, blog, dogblog, dogwriter, writer, author, KGB, editor
Blessings on Ken, and good luck finding a decent server. And thanks to Beatrice for noticing this: ken-foster.com.
Technorati Tags: KenFoster, dog, blog, dogblog, dogwriter, writer, author, KGB, editor
May 17, 2005
LitBlog Co-Op
The Lit-Blog Co-Op has chosen Case Histories by Kate Atkinson as its first "Read This!" pick/recommendation. There's not much more I have to say about it because I haven't read it. I've looked at it a half a dozen times in the bookstore, but I haven't yet pulled the trigger. Maybe the recommendation will get me to do so.Then again, maybe not. Visit the LitBlog Co-Op blog (linked above) for more information...
Technorati Tags: litblogcoop, litblog, coop, casehistories, book, blog, co-op, lit, literary, readthis, recommendation
May 13, 2005
A La Diablo and Back / Libby Wagner
My lovely friend Libby Wagner has a lovely travel piece over at blueroadrunner.com: A La Diablo and Back by Libby Wagner.We ride along until we stop at some fork with a sign I can't begin to translate-half the letters are transposed and it doesn't make much sense. I think it says "Be careful of livestock crossing" or something like that, and later George will tell us that good racer etiquette includes searching out a rancher and paying him if you've killed one of his cows during the race.I was going to try not to use the word "lovely" again in this post, but then I decided that it would be necessary if I was going to mention her lovely book, Like This, Like That.
Technorati Tags: ladiablo, diablo, libbywagner, libby, wagner, travel, race, poet
May 12, 2005
SnarkSpot Peeps
Swiper Sleeps with Gods in Alabama
I've only read the first few pages of Gods in Alabama, but if the first two pages are any indication of a worthy novel (and sometimes they are), I'm looking forward to this one (of course the book was a gift to my wife, so I should wait for her to read it... and now it looks as if I'm going to have to wait for the cat to finish it too).
You might also want to go listen in at Joshilyn Jackson's blog, because she's just a damn good writer and worth reading every day she writes something.
Technorati Tags: joshilynjackson, godsinalabama, alabama, gods, cat, swiper, read, reading, book, litblog, literary, literature, fiction, novel
You might also want to go listen in at Joshilyn Jackson's blog, because she's just a damn good writer and worth reading every day she writes something.
Technorati Tags: joshilynjackson, godsinalabama, alabama, gods, cat, swiper, read, reading, book, litblog, literary, literature, fiction, novel
May 11, 2005
Such a Lonely Word
I'm intrigued by This Post at THE LITBLOG CO-OP: Such a Lonely Word.
Because art doesn't reflect the world. You can't hold up a piece of art and say, "this is the way the world is." What you can do is hold up a piece of art and say, "this is the way a world is." It's the world shown in that piece of art. That poem. That novel. That painting.
Even art that looks very much like a report of events is not reflecting the "real" world (whatever that is). It's making it's own world. I don't read The Things They Carried because it's going to look like the Vietnam war. I read it because it creates a remarkable world. Everything in that book is real. It's a real world. It has walls and guns and people and dying animals. But it isn't this world. It isn't the world I see in a mirror.
Hell, I don't trust a mirror anyway. What I see in the mirror is just reflected light. No emotions. No magic. No motive. No life. Just light. Turn off the light, it disappears.
Turn off the light and art still exists. It exists inside you. And that's important. And that's the difference.
Technorati Tags: poetry, poem, art, judge, litblog, litblogcoop, coop, literary, blog, TimOBrien, novel, writing, art, mirror
"Art is about shaping things, it's about craft and deliberation, skill and surprise. It's not a therapy session. I'm so tired of poets who say, 'Here is my heart on a platter -- eat it, for it is a poem, and should be savored, because it is honest!' Such people should be tossed out windows and mocked viciously!"I remember once when a friend of mine said that art should reflect reality. Like a mirror. I think she used the word mirror. And I said something back with enough force that she was pretty sure I was angry with her. I didn't slam my fist down, but I did want to make sure she knew where I stood on the issue.
Because art doesn't reflect the world. You can't hold up a piece of art and say, "this is the way the world is." What you can do is hold up a piece of art and say, "this is the way a world is." It's the world shown in that piece of art. That poem. That novel. That painting.
Even art that looks very much like a report of events is not reflecting the "real" world (whatever that is). It's making it's own world. I don't read The Things They Carried because it's going to look like the Vietnam war. I read it because it creates a remarkable world. Everything in that book is real. It's a real world. It has walls and guns and people and dying animals. But it isn't this world. It isn't the world I see in a mirror.
Hell, I don't trust a mirror anyway. What I see in the mirror is just reflected light. No emotions. No magic. No motive. No life. Just light. Turn off the light, it disappears.
Turn off the light and art still exists. It exists inside you. And that's important. And that's the difference.
Technorati Tags: poetry, poem, art, judge, litblog, litblogcoop, coop, literary, blog, TimOBrien, novel, writing, art, mirror
May 09, 2005
News / NYT / Would You, Could You in a Box?
Writing e-friend Grant Bailie is writing in a box for at the Flux Factory. I know for sure this gig wouldn't be for me, but if you're in the neighborhood, maybe you'll want to drop by.
The New York Times did a story on 'em: Would You, Could You in a Box? (Write, That Is.) - New York Times.
There's also a slide show.
Personally, I think he's crazy. But he has my best.
Technorati Tags: nyt, newyorktimes, newyork, fluxfactory, flux, factory, writers, box, novel, writer, readings
The New York Times did a story on 'em: Would You, Could You in a Box? (Write, That Is.) - New York Times.
There's also a slide show.
Personally, I think he's crazy. But he has my best.
Technorati Tags: nyt, newyorktimes, newyork, fluxfactory, flux, factory, writers, box, novel, writer, readings
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