Elders not stepping aside
Margaret Drabble may have laid down her pen, but many novelists are continuing to write into their 80s and 90s.
Margaret Drabble may have laid down her pen, but many novelists are continuing to write into their 80s and 90s.
My latest contribution to NPR’s Books We Like is an appreciation of Will Elliott’s The Pilo Family Circus: Fans have waited more than 20 years for another book from the great Katherine Dunn, whose amazing Geek Love centers on a family of circus freaks and sets the standard for the literary Big Top novel. She’s still working and won’t be . . .
Empire of the Sun author J.G. Ballard has died. The Telegraph obituary is the best I’ve seen.
Marlon James set his magnificent second novel, The Book of Night Women, on a Jamaican sugar plantation at the height of 18th century Caribbean slavery. The story centers on Lilith, one of several female slaves who plot to overthrow their masters and take over, and is told in a dialect that in other hands would be difficult but here somehow . . .
At Tin House, A.N. Devers makes the case for Hirai Taro, a Japanese writer who took a phonetic version of Edgar Allan Poe for his own pen name.