Lorrie Moore

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Approximately every 18 months it occurs to me that Lorrie Moore is the greatest living American writer. And a couple of nites ago was one such occasion: I started browsing through 'Anagrams' (her first novel) and got so engrossed I ended up staying up til 3am until I had read the whole thing again. Man, she's great. Why don't more people agree with me? One of my most treasured possession in the world is a copy of 'Birds of America' signed "to Stevie in London".

Anyway: Lorrie Moore... 'Self-Help', 'Anagrams', 'Like Life', 'Who Will Run the Frog Hospital', 'Birds of America'... give it up people!

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Friday, 4 April 2003 06:30 (twenty-one years ago) link

I refuse to allow this to sink, so was searching the archives for previous mentions of LM and came across this thread, which I think may be my favourite of the ones I've started. Not out of -hem hem- vanity, but because there were loads of great thoughtful, touching, insightful answers: Maryann, Robin, Josh, Tracer, Tom... pretty much all of them, in fact.

It made me get a bit wistful for auld ILE.

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Friday, 4 April 2003 07:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

Haha I meant, of course, this thread:

By Heart

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Friday, 4 April 2003 07:46 (twenty-one years ago) link

i thought she was canadian? but i must be wrong. she's a great s. story writer and i love 'who will run frog hospital' (if that's what it's called). an nz author called emily perkins sounded like her for a while - till she married and became fuckin dull.

it freaks me out when people link old threads, for some reason. & i reckon it would creep moore out; she'd have something to say about it.

i was (mistakenly) saying to a mate last night that given the united states' recent behaviour we should attempt to kill the love of US pop/art/etc culture in NZ and we were listing great canadian authors (a kind of methadone for US culture) - and we included moore. why'd i think she was canadian? who cares.

Clare (not entirely unhappy), Friday, 4 April 2003 11:29 (twenty-one years ago) link

my girlfriend gave me a copy of 'anagrams' for my birthday last year. I enjoyed it very much. I mean to read more.

RJG (RJG), Friday, 4 April 2003 11:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

she teaches at the university of wisconsin in madison. she is american.

RJG (RJG), Friday, 4 April 2003 11:33 (twenty-one years ago) link

The stories in Like Life are pretty brilliant. I haven't read anything else.

Mary (Mary), Friday, 4 April 2003 15:57 (twenty-one years ago) link

One of my most treasured possession in the world is a copy of 'Birds of America' signed "to Stevie in London".

Isn't it about time you gave it back to him? Edna knows where he is. Somewhere between Putney Bridge and the Finland Station.

Michael Jones (MichaelJ), Friday, 4 April 2003 16:23 (twenty-one years ago) link

I've been reading "Like Life" for a while now.. I had read a few other Lorrie Moore books before and I'd enjoyed them, but this is the first book that I've really loved. I especially love the story, which of course, the title escapes me now, about the college professor who continues to get terrible feedback from her students because she sings music from 'The King and I" in class.

Mandee, Friday, 4 April 2003 17:03 (twenty-one years ago) link

The Pinefox biggied Lorrie Moore up to me once, so I have fingered and thumbed her books, but never read one all the way through.

It recently occurred to me that the books I know (and perhaps like) best are the ones I did for 'O' and 'A' Level. So let's hear it for months on end of rote learning. The best of these books is, I think, 'La Porte Etroite' by André Gide. I don't know it off by heart though. This is an answer to the other thread.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller), Saturday, 5 April 2003 08:34 (twenty-one years ago) link

only have read Birds in America and boy it's great, definitely need to read more. (is this "oh yeah I forgot" stuff endemic to Lorrie Moore generally? seems like it from the responses thus far)

M Matos (M Matos), Saturday, 5 April 2003 10:33 (twenty-one years ago) link

one month passes...
I wanted to reply to this thread before butI was on ILx strike so I couldn't.

I like Lorrie Moore very much - what I've read of hers, I mean, which isn't everything. There's a sort of acuteness in her writing which really appeals, and it's done in a way which has niceness (in a good way, a kind of polite atmosphere) stabbed through with fear ot disgust or whatever as necessary. I think I'm trying to say there's often something very humane about the way she creates her characters out of little details.

I'm reading "Heligoland" at the moment and it occurs to me that Shena Mackay - I love Shena Mackay too, perhaps more - is like Lorrie Moore's English auntie.

Tim (Tim), Thursday, 22 May 2003 11:39 (twenty-one years ago) link

five months pass...
I think you may be right Stevie. There is a possibility that you're right.

David. (Cozen), Tuesday, 28 October 2003 11:35 (twenty-one years ago) link

i really, really, really don't get this at all.

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 28 October 2003 11:44 (twenty-one years ago) link

I wrote about the very novel Stevie mentions at the beginning of this thread, Anagrams, on Freaky Trigger a couple of months back. Summary: It's great.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Tuesday, 28 October 2003 13:37 (twenty-one years ago) link

There's a possibility. There are possibilities. This long, narrow land is full of possibilities.

I get it. I wish not everyone did. Oh - they don't.

Yes, it is.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 28 October 2003 15:44 (twenty-one years ago) link

Why do revived threads get today's date throughout? I like the old system, when we could monitor our own mental disintegration month by month.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller), Tuesday, 28 October 2003 15:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

pj miller - change your settings so they don't show dates, then change back again. that will sort it.

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 28 October 2003 16:15 (twenty-one years ago) link

Thank you, Toby. Hey presto.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller), Tuesday, 28 October 2003 17:54 (twenty-one years ago) link

one year passes...
"Better to think of writing, of what one does as an activity, rather than an identity - to write, I write; we write; to keep the calling a verb rather than a noun; to keep working at the thing, at all hours, in all places, so that your life does not become a pose, a pornography of wishing."

etc, Thursday, 13 October 2005 19:56 (nineteen years ago) link

Moore = from what I can tell, the single biggest influence on (white) female authors in workshops -- as Barthelme for boys, Moore for the girls. Their respective styles each travel roughly as well as the other: sometimes, sometimes, not.

Here is my favorite joke that I've made, umm, ever.

PERSON: "You know, the title of Birds of America, she didn't even have that until it was done -- what happened was this person read the stories, and he couldn't tell if this one theme was intentional, and he asked her, 'Hey, did you know that there's a bird in every one of these stories?"

ME: "Was this person English?"

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 13 October 2005 20:06 (nineteen years ago) link

I think Moore made a big leap from her early stories up through Like Life, which seemed to be too brown-nosy to the New Yorker's house style (see Ann Beattie, Julie Hecht, Tama Janowitz) to her Birds of America stories, which feel so dense and crammed. It's great to read a story that you know wasn't written in one sitting, so dense with images and jokes and thoughts.

Eazy (Eazy), Thursday, 13 October 2005 20:11 (nineteen years ago) link

Does anyone at all seriously write stories in one sitting? Apart from a mythical ULA chapbook I find this very hard to imagine.

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 13 October 2005 20:13 (nineteen years ago) link

"I didn't leave my desk for a MONTH..."

cozen (Cozen), Thursday, 13 October 2005 20:27 (nineteen years ago) link

But so get it? GET IT? Birds of America?

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 13 October 2005 20:36 (nineteen years ago) link

Birds of America and Anagrams were two of the best novels I read last year. I have hardly read any novels this year. I should order another one.

Cathy (Cathy), Thursday, 13 October 2005 20:41 (nineteen years ago) link

haha!

(& oh man, why'd you have to say that re: LM & workshops! it's obvious when you spell it out, but . . . oh, man!)
(& is it really barthelme, STILL? I thought everyone would want to be, I dunno, DFW or something. is there a website for the literary stockmarket yet? is wannabarthelme as bad as subcarver? ("Results 1 - 1 of 1 for "walt whittling". (0.83 seconds)"))

etc, Thursday, 13 October 2005 20:43 (nineteen years ago) link

The second time I met Cathy - in the Botanics in Glasgow, just after B&S had played? or maybe in the Winchester just after? - I saw she was reading some Lorrie and felt v happy that the cool kids were reading her.

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Thursday, 13 October 2005 21:04 (nineteen years ago) link

Nabs: I imagine the boys are reading George Saunders these days?

Also: didn't LM study in a class DB taught? And didn't DB choose an LM story for some best American Short Stories collection. I always think of Moore as some ideal compromise between the postmodernes and the "realistes", the Ann Tylers... ironic formalism meets "raw feeling". Especially in BoA - in the 'Canonical babbling' baby story (journalism or fabulism?) and the story about the gay couple touring the south (originally titled "Lucky Ducks"!) - which I think is her masterpiece.

She is touring right now - for the New Yorker... Isn't it time she had a new book out?

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Thursday, 13 October 2005 21:25 (nineteen years ago) link

I asked her to dance years ago at a zydeco show at the Crystal Corner in Madison.

Eazy (Eazy), Thursday, 13 October 2005 21:27 (nineteen years ago) link

And??? Did she say yes?!

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Thursday, 13 October 2005 21:30 (nineteen years ago) link

haha, I had a moment there where I imagined the new trendy person for young men was George Sanders.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Thursday, 13 October 2005 21:39 (nineteen years ago) link

"Barthelme for boys, Moore for the girls"

moore for this boy. my three biggest inspirations -living- are moore, munro, and spark.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 13 October 2005 22:06 (nineteen years ago) link

so why do you people like lorrie moore?

stewart downes (sdownes), Thursday, 13 October 2005 23:44 (nineteen years ago) link

what's not to like?

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 13 October 2005 23:45 (nineteen years ago) link

etc, is that first quote from Lorrie Moore? If so, my estimation of her just jumped a whole lot.

the pr00de abides (pr00de), Friday, 14 October 2005 01:36 (nineteen years ago) link

(I mean, I liked her before and all, too.)

the pr00de abides (pr00de), Friday, 14 October 2005 01:37 (nineteen years ago) link

well, I can't say I am horribly familiar with ms. moore, but I can never tell what distinguished her from a hundred other new yorker-esque writers. I saw her read a few months ago and I was bored stiff. Maybe that kinda thing just isn't my cuppa tea?

stewart downes (sdownes), Friday, 14 October 2005 02:05 (nineteen years ago) link

Yeah, if you aren't into humor and good writing than she probably wouldn't be your thing. She astounds me pretty regularly.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 14 October 2005 02:48 (nineteen years ago) link

or her KIND of humor and good writing anyway. i'll be the first one to admit that she can be cutesy in the pun department, and i can see people being turned off by that kind of larkiness.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 14 October 2005 02:50 (nineteen years ago) link

But if you want something dark, shit, read People Like That Are the Only People Here.

the pr00de abides (pr00de), Friday, 14 October 2005 02:55 (nineteen years ago) link

Just about as far from "cute" as you can get.

the pr00de abides (pr00de), Friday, 14 October 2005 02:57 (nineteen years ago) link

Actually, in my list of people who have inspired me greatly, and who are still living and writing, I forgot Joy Williams. Joy Williams was the first person I thought of when I first read Lorrie Moore. If you love Lorrie Moore you MUST read Joy Williams's short story collections. She was my idol in the 80's.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 14 October 2005 03:00 (nineteen years ago) link

No, Lorrie Moore can dig deep, wasn't trying to say that she couldn't. Just that if you read one of her stories that was light on its feet and had never read anything else, you might wonder what the fuss was about. i know people say the same thing about alice munro sometimes. writes about families, women in crisis mode, blah, blah, read it all before. but to me, those sentences, the structures of those stories, jeezus she knocks me flat! i get the vapors reading stuff written that elegantly. AND she is an amazing storyteller. AND she does it for ever and ever. Trad fiction don't get much sweeter.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 14 October 2005 03:07 (nineteen years ago) link

Oh yeah, I totally agree. I was responding to the other guy. I mean, if you think she's a one trick pony, read that story, at least, you know?

the pr00de abides (pr00de), Friday, 14 October 2005 03:10 (nineteen years ago) link

pr00de - yeah, it's lorrie moore (from a piece entitled "better and sicker", found in a penguin anthology called the agony and the ego: the art and strategy of fiction writing explored - the rest of the authors are pretty borecore, though) - here's the start of it:

"Recently I received a letter from an acquaintance in which he said, 'By the way, I've been following and enjoying your work. It's getting better: deeper and sicker.'
Because the letter was handwritten, I convinced myself, for a portion of the day, that perhaps the last word was richer. But then I picked up the letter and looked at the word again: there was the s, there was the k. There was no denying it. Even though denial has been my tendency of late. I had recently convinced myself that a note I'd received from an ex-beau (in what was a response to my announcement that I'd gotten married) had read 'Best Wishes for Oz'. I considered this an expression of bitterness on my ex-beau's part, a snide lapse, a doomed man's view of marriage, and it gave me great satisfaction. Best Wishes for Oz. Eat your heart out, I thought. You had your chance. Cry me a river. Later a friend, looking at the note, pointed out that, Look: this isn't an O. This is a nine - see the tail? And this isn't a Z. This is a 2. This says 92. 'Best Wishes for 92.' It hadn't been cryptic bitterness at all - only an indifferent little New Year's greeting. How unsatisfying!"

etc, Friday, 14 October 2005 04:19 (nineteen years ago) link

(Jerry - she turned me down!)

She's published one or two new stories so far, but that's it. It's such a mystery -- most of the BoA stories appeared around a decade or so ago -- I remember my own excitment when each new one appeared in the New Yorker, with excitement of a writer hitting her stride -- but not much since.

Eazy (Eazy), Friday, 14 October 2005 06:05 (nineteen years ago) link

i guess i should give birds of america another go.

toby (tsg20), Friday, 14 October 2005 07:38 (nineteen years ago) link

JtN says I´m cool!

Cathy (Cathy), Friday, 14 October 2005 14:43 (nineteen years ago) link

I rarely look at The Believer since I let my subscription lapse, but I just spotted they have a new interview with LM: http://www.believermag.com/issues/200510/?read=interview_moore

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Friday, 14 October 2005 15:41 (nineteen years ago) link

Urgh, I just remembered the coffin scene :(

Stevie T, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:37 (fourteen years ago) link

i have not been able to finish anagrams

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:37 (fourteen years ago) link

too bleak for me, i just don't want to read about that stuff, sorry

congratulations (n/a), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:38 (fourteen years ago) link

i know i can just skip to the next story, but it turned me off from the book for a while.

congratulations (n/a), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:38 (fourteen years ago) link

i love anagrams i know it's slighter than birds of america but i love it and it makes me sad for days

horseshoe, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:38 (fourteen years ago) link

no--i totally dig it, the story was wrenching xpost

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:38 (fourteen years ago) link

there was only one story in birds of america i didn't like, it was from a male POV, maybe the second or third one?

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:39 (fourteen years ago) link

there's one i skipped in the first collection. partly though it was a fear that maybe something of what it was going for was ... unearned somehow? striving for significance etc

i think a lot of the Bad Things that happen in anagrams suffer from this: though in a way that made me feel disengaged rather than ill, which is how the first collection made me feel. which is a shame, i think the first 80 pages or so of that are great.

xposts i guess? the thread seems a bit fractal at this point.

thomp, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 17:40 (fourteen years ago) link

i still haven't read the new one! i will. i was excited about it, but then it occurred to me that it would probably be another five years before she wrote another book so what's the hurry? plus, selling books for a living has left me no time to read or browse in bookshops.

the reaction to the book from some people reminds me of when my fave joy williams FINALLY came out with a new novel and it was strange and bewildering and too much and gothic and crazy and i didn't actually know what to make of it at first. and i will probably have to read it a few more times just to get everything that is in it. plus, joy has become a harcore conservationist or whatever, so it was kind of like reading a book written by both flannery o'connor and edward abbey. or something. (this happened to my fave scott bradfield too. think he became a huge animal rights guy and his stuff changed mightily. like a cross between patricia highsmith fairy tales and, um, angela carter fairy tales.

i highly recommend the quick & the dead by joy williams though. and all her other earlier short story collections and novels. she's a real hero of mine.

she's probably most famous these days for her essay The Case Against Babies. don't know how i feel about that though.

http://www.churchofeuthanasia.org/e-sermons/babies.html

scott seward, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 18:07 (fourteen years ago) link

i will check this joy williams out; thank you!

horseshoe, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 18:37 (fourteen years ago) link

quick and the dead is wonderful but super rambly

super sexy psycho fantasy world (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 18:39 (fourteen years ago) link

she's all
hey here's a quirky new character
for a bunch of pages
but I'm cool with that

super sexy psycho fantasy world (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 18:41 (fourteen years ago) link

haven't read any lorrie moore but she lives here and one of my good friends is in her fiction workshop, so i keep thinking i should start.

hey trader joe's! i've got the new steely dan. (Jordan), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 18:41 (fourteen years ago) link

I ate dinner w/ her but didn't really know who she was

super sexy psycho fantasy world (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 18:45 (fourteen years ago) link

this passage is kind of long, i now realize; i will edit:

"Reminds me of dating," I said, and Sarah spun her head, to size me up again...Heat flew to my face. Dating? What did I know of it?"...I had once actually gone out on a date--last year--and I had prepared for it by falling into a trance in a lingerie store and buying a forty-five-dollar black Taiwanese bra padded with oil and water pouches, articulated with wire, lifelike to the touch, a complete bosom entirely on its own, independent of any wearer, and which when fastened to my chest looked like a dark animal strapped there to nurse.

amazing! i read that on a plane and immediately started making choked laugh-cry noises. embarrassing.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 21:37 (fourteen years ago) link

well, the first half of 'who will run the frog hospital' was pretty good

thomp, Wednesday, 2 December 2009 10:50 (fourteen years ago) link

although i could sort of imagine it as a movie with a script by diablo cody without too much effort

thomp, Wednesday, 2 December 2009 10:50 (fourteen years ago) link

two months pass...

haven't read this yet but uh:

http://firmuhment.tumblr.com/post/397658485

congratulations (n/a), Friday, 19 February 2010 15:19 (fourteen years ago) link

ugh.

there's also a rejection letter from the U. Of Wyoming MFA program

Mr. Que, Friday, 19 February 2010 15:23 (fourteen years ago) link

needs to learn about image resizing maybe then hell get into an MFA program or two

max, Friday, 19 February 2010 15:24 (fourteen years ago) link

OK I didn't look at this very closely before posting, yeah it sucks, sorry.

congratulations (n/a), Friday, 19 February 2010 15:28 (fourteen years ago) link

eh, it's sorta interesting. some scanned lydia davis, aimee bender stories, some gertrude stein mixed with cut outs from magazines, i like the idea of a handwritten blog, but yeah, can't read the thing and the lorrie moore thing is wtf

Mr. Que, Friday, 19 February 2010 15:29 (fourteen years ago) link

this reminds me, i need to read Gate at The Stairs

Mr. Que, Friday, 19 February 2010 15:31 (fourteen years ago) link

i dont mind fanfic-as-serious-fiction but it needs to be at a size i can read

max, Friday, 19 February 2010 15:31 (fourteen years ago) link

max try holding down control and manipulating the scroll wheel on ur mouse ~

thomp, Friday, 19 February 2010 18:23 (fourteen years ago) link

now is there some way to make the story less terrible

abraham higginbotham is a dude (Lamp), Friday, 19 February 2010 18:25 (fourteen years ago) link

ctrl + W

Mr. Que, Friday, 19 February 2010 18:26 (fourteen years ago) link

now is there some way to make the story less terrible

a+

thomp, Friday, 19 February 2010 18:26 (fourteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...

for balance

noted schloar (dyao), Sunday, 7 March 2010 10:53 (fourteen years ago) link

seven months pass...

Is this where the main discussions of A Gate at the Stairs took place?

the pinefox, Saturday, 23 October 2010 10:11 (fourteen years ago) link

what did you think? my first reading -- there are enough beautiful, poetic sentences to make it worthwhile, but the narrative is really weak. she piles on the melodramatic coincidences like nobody's business. and for someone who's taught at the university of wisconsin for twenty plus years, her feel for madison and UW students is pretty shaky. it's the #1 party school in the country, and yet tassie never goes out, and doesn't seem to have many friends at all. it's hard to imagine too a wisconsin kid who'd go home for the holidays and never once hang out with her high school friends. regardless, lorrie can write a killer sentence, and i'd pick up anything she put out

kamerad, Saturday, 23 October 2010 12:50 (fourteen years ago) link

I agree with much of what you say, and have posted my verdict here:
Lorrie Moore

I don't so much follow your point about WI though. The novel is not set in Madison but in Troy. Perhaps there is no such place as Troy, and it is a parallel-universe version of Madison? I don't know. But even if that's what it is, then it surely has a licence to be different from the real Madison.

I can very much identify with the idea of someone who, in a world full of other people who are into 'partying' and 'hanging out', never gets to do these things. That sounds a lot like real life to me.

Like you, I would still want to read anything she wrote, despite the waywardness of this book.

the pinefox, Saturday, 23 October 2010 13:04 (fourteen years ago) link

but that's not madison. sure she can do whatever she wants with her setting. say though a novelist were writing about london and ignored everything that made london unique -- i bet you'd be a bit nonplussed about that. there are too many signifiers suggesting that "troy" is madison -- the scooters for one; and more telling, tassie's apartment by the huge football stadium: there's only one huge college football stadium in the whole state -- for any reader familiar with wisconsin and its capital not to conflate troy and madison. notice too that she's careful about getting green bay right. why not deliver a little madison flavor as well? also, lorrie made a deliberate choice to depict tassie not as some alienated arty loner but as more of a typical bright, confused, hard-working undergrad, a pretty mainstream kid. one of the primary qualities of madison, and of the entire state, arguably, is that there is a fun loving culture there that's incredibly inclusive. a lot of big 10 students throughout the midwest may feel alienated by their ostentatiously (monied) hard-partying peers, but madison doesn't really suffer from that. even the art majors and kids in punk rock bands get dressed up on halloween and tear up state street

kamerad, Saturday, 23 October 2010 13:50 (fourteen years ago) link

It is interesting in hearing about WI and Madison. I'd like to see it! I had a book published in Madison once.

I don't know what 'big 10 student' means. We don't have that term in England.

She does talk about Green Bay, as I recall. So she calls that place by its real name, and Madison by another name? If that's the case, maybe one thing it means is that she is not necessarily going to describe Madison as it really is? Why do you think she did not call it Madison?

re London: how many London writers actually describe a London I recognize? Probably not many. Geoff Dyer's *The Colour of Memory* was a bit closer than most. But then people have different views of London. If someone said that London was a fun, sociable place and a novel should reflect that, then I think I would be inclined to say that London is not always a fun, sociable place at all.

the pinefox, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:00 (fourteen years ago) link

identifying 'everything that made london unique': an interesting task maybe!

but I don't think that people would reach agreement on it!

the pinefox, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:01 (fourteen years ago) link

Incidentally the character does hang out with a lot of unnamed other people near the very end of the book, when she works at Starbucks.

I didn't find her relative solitude unreal at all, because she spends much less time alone than I do. Come to think of it, I think that what you are identifying as a negative - student life as solitary and uneventful - now strikes me as one of the most real things about the book.

But of course it's not really uneventful cos daft and disastrous things happen too! Within the story, the Brazilian bf geezer is surely one reason that she doesn't spend her time with other groups of people.

the pinefox, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:08 (fourteen years ago) link

the big 10 is a consortium not of ten but twelve more or less midwestern american schools -- the universities of wisconsin, illinois, indiana, iowa, michigan, minnesota, and, academically, chicago (which dropped out of all athletic competition decades ago); penn state, ohio state, and michigan state; purdue; and northwestern. the university of nebraska's joining next year to make 10 thirteen

i don't mean to define tassie's solitude as negative, but unrealistic. i am very painfully aware of how campuses can encourage students to seek solitude and even isolate them against their wills. again though something characteristic of madison, the school where lorrie teaches, is that such students are remarkably unusual. to create such a character, with no explanation, and for no apparent narrative gain, sacrifices a lot of what makes madison such an interesting experience for its students. i'm still surprised she'd portray a wisconsin campus as so generic, whether it's madison or not. in fact i put off reading the novel for a while somewhat intimidated by how her perspicuity might slash apart one of my alma maters

an example of an author who did get one of these big 10 campuses right is denis johnson. the stories in jesus' son set in iowa city (university of iowa) nail the midwestern desolation that creeps around the edge of that campus. there's nothing comparable atmospherically in a gate at the stairs, except maybe the snow? and it's much more artistically daring of johnson to try to render iowa city, since it's the home of the iowa writers workshop, the top writing program in the US, than it would have been of lorrie to try to give us a little of madison, not exactly, aside from her residence there, a node of american literary activity. why she didn't really try, i have no idea

kamerad, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:48 (fourteen years ago) link

I really liked the ridiculous gothic excesses of Gate At The Stairs, in fact I wanted it to be more excessive, the storyline with the parents wasn't as sinister as I'd hoped.

Matt DC, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:58 (fourteen years ago) link

yeah, between the revelations about the boyfriend and the couple tassie works for, and then her brother, she really piled it on. maybe she could have turned tassie into some stem cell experiment frankenstein who lives on cheese and beer and packers games

kamerad, Saturday, 23 October 2010 15:04 (fourteen years ago) link

It does have some spectacular cringe moments though, she's fantastic at making you feel really embarassed for her characters.

Coffin scene and the boyfriend plot were poor though, and kind of unnecessary.

I've only read the latest one and Frog Hospital. Should get Anagrams at some point. Birds of America I've avoided because I have enough half-read short story collections as it is.

Matt DC, Saturday, 23 October 2010 15:08 (fourteen years ago) link

i couldn't finish birds of america. the smugness put me off. self-help is pretty good, though. the last story, "to fill," is lorrie being fantastic at making you feel embarrassed for her characters

kamerad, Saturday, 23 October 2010 16:02 (fourteen years ago) link

Only read The Collected Stories...god, what a book. Picked up A Gate at the Stairs for £2 the other day, will have to wait till I finish my degree before I start it really.

Darren Huckerby (Dwight Yorke), Saturday, 23 October 2010 16:24 (fourteen years ago) link

£2!

It's definitely worth £2.

the pinefox, Saturday, 23 October 2010 23:12 (fourteen years ago) link

three months pass...

But if you want something dark, shit, read People Like That Are the Only People Here.
― the pr00de abides (pr00de), Thursday, October 13, 2005 10:55 PM (5 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

just got to this in birds of america...fuck it's so good

johnny crunch, Friday, 4 February 2011 18:43 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah that storys p much a modern classic now

just sayin, Friday, 4 February 2011 18:48 (thirteen years ago) link

two months pass...

moore on memoirs:
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2011/may/12/what-if/?page=1

congratulations (n/a), Tuesday, 26 April 2011 19:56 (thirteen years ago) link

three months pass...

on friday night lights http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2011/aug/18/very-deep-america-friday-night-lights/?page=1

just sayin, Friday, 29 July 2011 21:58 (thirteen years ago) link

nine years pass...

Bill believes in free speech. He believes in expensive speech. He doesn't believe in showing "Fire" in a crowded movie theater, but he does believe in shouting "Fie!" and has done it twice himself--both times at Forrest Gump

Langdon Alger Stole the Highlights (cryptosicko), Saturday, 26 December 2020 23:56 (three years ago) link

two years pass...

Certainly 'safe' is what I am now - or am supposed to be. Safety is in me, holds me straight, like a spine. My blood travels no new routes, simply knows its way, lingers, grows drowsy and fond. Though there are times, even recently, in the small city where we live, when I've left my husband for a late walk, the moon out hanging upside down like some garish, show-offy bird, like some fantastical mistake - what life of offices and dull tasks could have a moon in it, flooding the sky and streets, without its seeming preposterous? - and in my walks, toward the silent corners, the cold mulchy smells, the treetops suddenly waving in a wind, I've felt an old wildness again. Revenant and drunken. It isn't sexual, not really. It has more to do with adventure and escape, like a boy's desire to run away, revving thwartedly like a wish, twisting in me like a bolt, some shadow fastened at the feet and gunning for the rest, though, finally, it has always stayed to one side, as if it were some other impossible life and knew it, like a good dog, good dog, good dog. It has always stayed.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Saturday, 16 December 2023 22:01 (ten months ago) link

knew right away that was from who will run the frog hospital

will be carrying paragraphs of that book with me forever

ivy., Saturday, 16 December 2023 22:06 (ten months ago) link


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