Like Humbert Humbert and nearly as far gone
In Mat Johnson’s satirical Pym, a “blackademic” refuses to sit on the Diversity Committee, fails to make tenure, and winds up in Antarctica searching for the origins of a Poe character.
In Mat Johnson’s satirical Pym, a “blackademic” refuses to sit on the Diversity Committee, fails to make tenure, and winds up in Antarctica searching for the origins of a Poe character.
“MFK Fisher wrote like an angel, but there was an earthy passion and utter indulgence in her books… that entwined memories of how she lived and what she ate.” See also Recession cooking with MFK Fisher and Kate C. on Consider the Oyster.
I’m delighted to see Maslin’s praise in the Times for Carol Edgarian’s excellent Three Stages of Amazement (“turbulent, fiercely compelling”). I met and read Edgarian after she published me at Narrative, and I’m so glad I did. I talk with her at McNally Jackson on March 17, at 7 p.m.
I had a Texan drawl as a child and on occasion, when I drink and get riled up, it resurfaces. No one seems sure how serious I’m being when the accent comes out, and honestly I’m not either, but my old poker crew came to accept (expect?) it when we were talking trash. This Friday Night Lights binge has exacerbated . . .