March 27, 2008

The Melted Rubber Humans – Poetry Submissions

Filed under: Culture of the Book,poetry,writing — seth @ 10:46 am

     

I got the following in my e-mail.  Since next month is National Poetry Month, I decided to pass it along.  It came from Dee Rimbaud, author of some of the books above.  Let me know if anyone sends something in.

 

The Melted Rubber Humans are looking for mp3 files of spoken word/ poetry readings (either live or studio) to be incorporated in a series of albums of ambient/ experimental music. 

 

They are looking for poetry which deals with the following topics:

 

1. God/ the Goddess/ spirituality;

2. sex/ gender/ sexuality;

3. power/ politics/ corruption;

4. love/ want/ need;

5. fear/ despair/ greed.

 

They are looking for poetry with a rich, interesting and/or experimental approach to the use of language and especially those read with voices that reflect the feeling of the poem.

 

The plan is to select lines or verses from poems and to blend them into a sound-collage; a musical equivalent to the art of the Dadaists.  The finished albums will be posted at http://www.virb.com/melted_rubber_humans and will, like their previous three albums, be available for free download.

 

Poems can either be submitted by email or snail mail.

 

Email submissions are limited to one mp3 file with a 2Mb maximum file size and should be sent to shooglemail@googlemail.com with “FAO: Captain Melted” in the subject line.

 

There are no file size limitations for snail mail submissions.  These should be sent on CD to Dee Sunshine, 35 Falkland Street (0/1), Glasgow, G12 9QZ, United Kingdom.

 

There is no deadline as this will be an ongoing project.

 

Further information about The Melted Rubber Humans can be found at www.myspace.com/captainmelted.

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November 6, 2007

How To Sell A Book

Filed under: Books,Bookselling,Culture of the Book,Reading,writing — seth @ 8:08 pm

                 

Want to sell tons of copies of your next book?  Get Oprah to pull the book from her website.  I have a feeling that The Education of Little Tree, a book the English Department at my school teaches to eleventh graders every year, will sell more copies in November than it did in October.  I’ll have to watch the Amazon ranks for awhile.

Many of you may know the story behind the controversy.  The author of the book, Forrest Carter, was a former KKK member and speech writer for George Wallace.  Regardless of the source, it’s a great book and one of the favorites among my students every year.  This book can be enjoyed and taught in school intelligently and honestly.  I have never understood the idea of tossing art because the artist may have been socially out of favor.  Artists tend to be an unstable lot, and writers no less so.  Hemingway was an ass, but The Old Man and the Sea is on my senior’s reading list.  Much about Elie Wiesel’s politics and use of history bother me to no end, but Night gets taught to our sophomores.  I still enjoy the movies of Woody Allen and the music of Cat Stevens in spite of contrasting views of morality and religion.

We must not avoid art because of artist.  The viewers and readers of art bring their own contexts to the work.  The darker sides of the artist are an opportunity to discuss difficult and unpleasant situations in the open.

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October 28, 2007

Book Podcasts

          

I recently bought my first iPod, a four gig Nano, and I have been looking around for good podcasts that deal with books as their subject matter.  Now, I am not a complete novice to podcasting.  I played with the Hipcast system to do some moblogging during the last Rochester International Jazz Festival.   I have also been listening to podcasts from the New York Times and iTunes on my computer, but the iPod gives me a level of efficiency and mobility that I am just beginning to understand and enjoy.  Below is a list of some of my favorite book related podcasting sites.  It is a short list at the moment, but is getting longer, so I have also begun a running list in the sidebar of the podcasts that I am regularly downloading.  If you have any to share, please don’t be shy!

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September 17, 2007

A Review of How to Read a Novel by John Sutherland

Filed under: Culture of the Book,My Reading Year,Reading,Reviews,writing — seth @ 8:23 pm

      

At the beginning, I felt reading John Sutherland’s book might be an exercise in hypocrisy.  The book is billed as a guide for reading novels in an age when readers are under a deluge of print and bound by the weight of so much bound matter.  There was a moment as I began the first page when I questioned the wisdom of reading a book that was telling me to be more circumspect in choosing what I read.  Did I really need this pointed out to me as my wife and I climbed into bed under the impending avalanche that is the tower of queued books piled next to us?  And why do I use words like “queued” after reading British writers? 

The answer to the first question is a resounding, “No.  No I don’t.”  Fortunately, I understood that it was the wrong question or I may never have accepted the book from St. Martin’s.  And I soon found out that Sutherland knows the right questions and is able to deliver serious answers to them with a light-hearted flair.  As an American, one might be a bit intimidated by an English literary academic type and decide to avoid this book.  I will not be sharing with my seventeen and eighteen year old English students on Monday morning Sutherland’s nearly awe inspiring title of Emeritus Lord Northcliffe Professor of Modern English Literature, as any who were still awake when I got to the end of it would be too bored to be impressed anyway.  I will be sharing many of the E. L. N. P. M. E. L’s (maybe I’ll just text the title to them in this form) ideas however, as they are often the exact ideas that I try to put into their heads anyway.  Plus, Sutherland expresses those ideas in language that even American teens will be able to access.

I knew that I was in the choir when Sutherland preached his second sentence, “In part, it’s an autobiographical exercise.”  I agreed instantly with that sentence.  All I had to do was figure out what it meant.

You see, the writer was speaking of alternate titles for his book when he wrote the sentence above.  But I immediately felt that he was also speaking of the act of reading.  For most of us, who will never write an autobiography, what we read becomes “an autobiographical exercise.”  Of course, I still didn’t know what that meant.  Doggedly, I thought on…

Does it mean that we “write” the autobiography by reading certain books?  Perhaps it means that we read literature based on our previous experiences and thus reflect ourselves in what we’ve consumed.  We are what we consume, or we consume what we are. 

As I thought about consuming, I arrived at another sentence that stood out.  Again, Sutherland was discussing reading as an act of self-definition.  “One reads, as one dreams, defecates, and masturbates – alone,” said the Professor.  My first thought was a contrary, “What if I were to sleepwalk into a scatological circle jerk?”, followed quickly by a general, if not total, assent.  Sutherland has a wholly reasonable, balanced, and somewhat transparent approach to choosing and then reading novels.  He suggests that it should be a fun and interesting process, but should also be serious, lest it be a waste of time.  His discussion describes an active reading experience that deepens and enriches the reader’s life on many levels.

Sutherland has written a book that is often as engrossing as good fiction.  He uses several storylines to connect the basic plot points along the bibliophile’s journey.  I especially enjoyed the use of a story about the writers Ian McEwan and John Banville told in parts throughout the book.

If at times Sutherland is a bit obvious and overly dramatic (“If, when you’re buying a book, you feel a tender hand on your genitals, the other hand is probably feeling your wallet.”), he is on the whole entertaining and his enthusiasm for the novel as art form, cultural artifact, and social forum make this book worthy of your time.

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