Tuesday, March 31, 2009

No Relief + flatmancrooked's Anthology of Great New Writing Done During an Economic Depression

Read Deena Drewis' blog entry on the death of Nicholas Hughes, son of poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes on flatmancrooked.com



And while you're there be sure to get one of the 50 copies hyper limited 2nd Anthology: Flatmancrooked’s Anthology of Great New Writing Done During an Economic Depression along with a hyper-limited edition Bernie Madoff t-shirt. Help support the cause! Flatmancrooked is a non-profit house, and this year we decided to split all of the profits with the authors and designers contributing their work to the books. Right now you can pay what you want (pay between $28-$50 - not bad at all.) Everyone involved worked really hard to put this out. I was also fortunate enough to read a few of the stories and I think you'll all enjoy the works. Plus, the accompanying Madoff shirt is pretty funny and badass!

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Time Traveling

After speaking with Sarah a few minutes earlier I made my way down the steps. The YMCA Jr. Lakers had finished their game and they were running around the front lawn with snacks and juice boxes in hand. Leisurely lounging on the lawn Janet occupies herself with Diana Gabaldon's Voyager. She had been waiting for her son, Dawson, to finish his game. What a great way to enjoy the sunny Saturday morning. Sun + Lawn + Book. Now that the game just let out she allows her son to enjoy the post-game snack with his buddies while she waits for her sister to arrive to pick Dawson up for an outing. Her sister had called, asking for directions. "It's right on Sunset and Shrader...right by the Cat & the..." I chime in with "Fiddle" in hopes that my 2 cents would help guide Janet's sister to her destination.

Voyager is the third book in Gabaldon's series. If I remembered correctly we spotted 8 or 9 pictured on an inside flap. Janet's read most of them. Quite frankly she's addicted. "I try to sneak in a few pages here and there every chance I get! I even read a few sentences of this book while I'm at a stop light, that's how much I can't get enough of these books! And plus, the law only mentions that texting and talking on your cell phone are illegal. It doesn't say anything about reading your book at the light..." Touche, my friend.

At this point I'm intrigued as to how this book has Janet teetering on breaking the law. The book, Janet tells me, is about time traveling to the 18th Century and it's a "romance adventure". Something about traveling to another time draws her in. One gets to follow characters that you grow fond of while getting a glimpse of a certain time in history.



Her son comes over, curious as to what is going on. Janet explains that I am interviewing her about her book. Dawson points towards the book on the lawn. "I bet if I read that book I could finish it in a week!" It turns out that young Dawson is quite a voracious reader himself. Unlike his mother, who admits to taking her time with books and savouring the passages, Dawson is a speed reader. He is constantly churning through different books. "He's been an avid reader since he was a little boy, even reading at a 3rd grade level while in kindergarten! An example of this was with the Magic Tree House series by Mary Pope Osborne. Janet's son plowed through the books and she even had him miss a class so that they could both meet the author at a book signing. They stood in line for a while but it didn't matter because Dawson was super excited to get to meet Osborne in person.

Not only are the books in the Magic Tree House series entertaining but they are also very educational. Janet teaches reading to adults and children and regardless of their age Janet never fails to have her pupils read a Magic Tree House book. The books follow Jack and Annie. They find a magic tree house in the woods where they find a massive library. The librarian? King Arthur's Merlin himself. The children grab books, read through them, point at a page and say something along the lines of, "I wish I could go there" then poof! They time travel to another period. (Yes, Janet realizes that time traveling seems to be a theme in her beloved books). The children in the book travel to the times of dinosaurs, knights, mummies, and pirates. And while they are there they are instructed by Merlin to go on missions, complete tasks, solve some mysteries, and the like. "My students enjoy the books. While they are following Jack and Annie's adventures they are also getting a history and science lesson. The books are highly engaging and this is important when you're teaching someone how to read. You want them to enjoy themselves during the learning process, to have fun. These books definitely expand one's frame of reference." Additionally, Janet loves that there are a boy AND a girl protagonist. "I was reading/studying about sexism in children's literature and this book breaks away from that."


Some of Janet's favourite books are To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee and books by Ernest J. Gaines.

Janet confesses that she is a frustrated writer but she has a few ideas on books she'd like to write. One of which is about being Creole in New Orleans. Janet is Creole herself and she would love to write a novel about the racial prejudice within the Creole community. The book would also be part historical fiction and part memoir. She would love for it to take place in the 18th Century and follow the generations growing up in the 20th Century.

What era have you read about that you'd like to visit?

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Passing the time before class

After a gym-less week I finally found my way back to my workout routine. Thank goodness for waking up at 7:30 on a Saturday morning right?! On my way out of the Hollywood YMCA, sweaty from a 40+ minutes of cardio I spot Sarah reading in the front courtyard. She had thought that her class was at 11am when in fact it was really at 11:30am so she had some time to kill. Sarah was actually a bit thankful for the mistake. She normally doesn't get to read for pleasure very often so the extra free time along with being able to read outside during this beautiful day were a plus for her morning.

Sarah is reading Wendy Wasserstein's Elements of Style, a book about New York society a la the CW show "Gossip Girl". However, Wasserstein's book revolves around "older" women rather than teenage gals and guys romping around the city. Sarah had read Wasserstein's previous book, The Heidi Chronicles, another book about women of privilege. "Yes, I know it's trash", Sarah says, "but it's entertaining!" Hey, I'm not going to judge. I'm all about reading whatever you want as long as you're reading something you enjoy, right?


Since we were at the gym I had to ask if she read books while she worked out. Personally I can't focus on books while I am burning calories and she agrees. Sarah tends to read magazines while on the machines but if she has a light read like this book that requires very little concentration then she'll bring it along. And how about audiobooks? She has yet to try them out during her workouts. We listen to music so why not books, right? Coincidentally Sarah is heading over to the library after the gym. She is driving up to northern California next weekend and wants to listen to an audiobook on her way up. It's funny because I am such a huge advocate for physical books but since I've been so busy I finally caved in and purchased my first audiobook. Comes in handy when I want to multi-task.

Some favourite books of hers? A book of short stories called Runaway by Alice Munro. She also enjoys reading books by Jane Green.

Growing up she loved "The Giving Tree" by the beloved Shel Silverstein. We started to bond over our love for this book along with our youthful obsession with the Christopher Pike series! She has every book, all currently stashed at her mother's house. I told her how my mother found all of our books growing up - how she gave away most of them, even our The Babysitters Club collection! I know...I know.

Sarah and I also started to laugh about how we loved Dr. Seuss and how our parents used to read the books to us. Her faves? She loved the "obscure" ones like "Hooper Humperdink..." and another one with "catchoo" (?) in the title. Sadly I couldn't find it.

Sarah is a screenwriter and has thought a bit about books she could write someday. She shares with me that her stepbrother and his wife are both deaf and have six children who are not hearing impaired. She would love to write a fictional work based around this premise and explore the subject matter more. She finds the family's dynamic to be quite interesting and would love to write about it.

What do you like to read when you're working out?
What is your favourite Dr. Seuss and/or Shel Silverstein book?

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Harassing Husbands in Waiting Rooms

Oh Sunday. The Ides of March. My mother's birthday. I originally treated the mama-san to a full on massage but after much unexplainable protesting I switched it to a full on facial at the last minute. After finishing my own torture session of sorts I had a bit of time before the mama was done with her treatment. So I plopped into a chair in the waiting room, "Saving Private Ryan" on the flatscreen on mute, and a quiet husband sitting to my left.

Gil was passing the time with John Grisham's "The Associate" while his wife was bearing the weight on a (tiny) Asian lady walking on her back. The soft spoken husband is a BIG John Grisham fan. He's read all the Grisham books at least once and everytime a new book hits shelves he is bound to buy it. So why the affinity for John Grisham novels? "I enjoy the legal thrillers." Plain and simple.


Gil enjoys the fact that Grisham novels are a nice distraction from reading about computer operations for his job. When he has the time he is able to finish his books right away.

Aside from Grisham Gil enjoys reading biographies and non-fiction, although he couldn't recall the last biography he read. He does remember that one of his last reads was a How-To book on how to present to a crowd. Gil has to present in front of his co-workers in the near future and admits that even though he has worked with these people for many years the idea of public speaking in front of his peers makes him a bit uneasy. Hence the book. Thankfully he only has to deal with the speaking portion. He is leaving the powerpoint presentation to his colleague because he is far from being a powerpoint master. (He says this to the gal who deals with powerpoint daily).

When he's not reading a book whilst out and about Gil likes to whip out a copy of Business Week magazine. But he always has something to read especially when waiting for his wife. She frequents the spa and the sweet husband that he is, he makes a point to drive her to and fro her massage appointments. "I don't want her behind the wheel after she's knocked out from her massage!" What a peach, an absolute peach.

He's never considered writing his own book and prefers to read other people's works. "I leave the book writing to those who are skilled at what they do." Fair enough.

We spent the rest of the time watching "Saving Private Ryan" in mute, gasping at the gory scenes and mouthing lines along with the actors.


What was the last How-To book you read? What How-To book would you want to read?

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Ayn Rand on the downlow

Partaking in my Sunday ritual at Larchmont before I head off to my other Sunday ritual -- lunch with mom. Iced latte in one hand and an apple crisp in the other, I spot Neal from my sidewalk bench. He had the cover of his book well hidden under the table but I could make out "The Fountainhead" through the slats. I am later told that he tends to hide the cover of this book as much as possible because he doesn't want to start controversy. While sitting at other coffee shops, particularly the Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf on Hillhurst in Los Feliz, he constantly hears people debate about the book's subject matter. So in order to avoid heated conversations he hides the cover from watchful eyes. Alas, my eagle-eye honed in on it!


He bought this book from Border's in November after his brother recommended it. His brother happens to be studying philosophy in school and thought Neal would enjoy Rand's works. Before "The Fountainhead" Neal read "Atlas Shrugged". He absolutely loved "Atlas Shrugged" though he says it took him longer to get through it. "It took me a year to finish it because I needed the time to digest everything." With "The Fountainhead" he's had it since November and is nearly finished! "I think it's because I am now used to Rand's writing style so you can consider me a seasoned pro..." Along with finding this current read quicker to get through Neal can say that he enjoys this book more than the former. "I can really relate to what she's saying in this one."

Neal sets as much time to read as he can but finds himself doing this on weekends or on his travels by plane. "I try to read as much as I can whenever I can. Hell, it sure beats smoking pot all day at work, right?" We both laugh but then he shares that he, in fact, works at a medical marijuana store. Being the silly goose that I am i found this as a segue to referencing the Showtime series "Weeds". I have started watching the DVDs through Netflix since I don't have cable and we both bonded over a few episodes!

Anyway, Neal was never really big into reading and whenever he does read it is usually non-fiction works or self-help books. What's Neal going to read after finishing "The Fountainhead"? He's not sure. "I'm actually waiting for my brother to recommend another book to me because I honestly have no idea what to read next. I am so out of the literary loop. I don't know what's good and what's not." But he thinks he may try to read more books by Ayn Rand since he seems drawn to her works.

I personally have yet to read any Ayn Rand yet. I know, I've totally been putting it off all these years! If he had to pick an Ayn Rand book for me to start off with Neal recommends "The Fountainhead", hands down. I'll keep that in mind.


Which Ayn Rand book do you prefer: "The Fountainhead" or "Atlas Shrugged"? How long did it take you to read them?

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

@reading pt. 6

Computersaurus: Just finished reading "Deadhouse Gates". Holy shit that book was something else. I might have to start book 3 before bed.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Curbside Reading

Post Sunday lunch ritual with my mother and tired from my Daylight Savings time traveling. Decided to have a little pick-me-up at Peet's on Larchmont. The place was littered with readers left and ride. While inside sipping my iced latte I couldn't help but notice Gabrielle. She had scooted one of the iron chairs away from the tables and parked it by the curb next to a parking meter. Gabrielle enjoys reading in public, especially at Larchmont, because it's a pleasant little neighbourhood. She can pick up a book and escape for a few hours in the sunlight. She is reading Chicago by Alaa Al Aswany and Farouk Abdel Wahab. It's a fictional work about Egyptian immigrants in a post 9/11 Chicago.

Gabrielle had never heard about this book but happened to notice the cover in the library (or book store, I can't recall). She read the first few paragraphs and it seemed compelling enough to give it a go. Gabrielle shares that she tends to read the first paragraphs and this helps her decide whether or not the book is for her.



She is a big fan of fiction - great fiction. As an English Lit major she's read so many classics but One Hundred Years of Solitude was (and is) one of her all time favourite books. She's enjoyed the classic both as a teenager and as an adult. Other faves? Any book by Isabel Allende. She's read them all! When she was even younger she enjoyed books like The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett and Roald Dahl's James and the Giant Peach.

If she were to write a book of her own it would be about displacement. "We're all immigrants in this country and I feel that everyone experiences displacement and trying to find their sense of home."


If you could move to any city and write about it, where would you run off to and why?

Thursday, March 5, 2009

World Book Day!

@HitotokiLA It's World Book Day! What are you reading? Let the world know we've still got our noses in books!

Also, I dare you to visit http://hitotoki.org/
it. will. suck. you. in.

responses on twitter/brightkite:
@belpers
"hmmm... re-reading book 5 of The Life & Teachings of the Masters of the Far East and reading The Answer Is Simple: Love Your Life, Live Your Spirit with my wife."

@vasilly
The Elegance of the Hedgehog by M. Barbery.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Let's Get Graphic

One of my good friends from college, Cesar, is currently getting his MA in something fawncy like "Writing for Stage and Broadcast Media" in none other than London! Oh, I remember the first time we really solidified our friendship - I rode him across the beach during a nighttime dorm floor bonfire! It was then when we knew we were meant to be in each other's lives. Now he is away in the Queen's Country and I miss his face terribly! Distance makes the heart grow fonder? Oh Cezie, come back to me! And write me into another one of your plays/stories...

Cesar's been on a graphic novel kick lately and has not stopped yappin' about it. Seeing as I've yet to delve into the genre we got to talking about his current obsessions over gchat and it led to a little interview. Gosh bless the future where I can suck in Cesar's thoughts from across the pond!




1. What book are you currently reading? Who is it by? What is it about?

I’m reading a graphic novel, Scott Pilgrim and the Infinite Sadness, which is the third in a proposed seven-part series by a Canadian artist named Bryan Lee O’Malley. The series as a whole is about this slacker/rock-star-in-his-own-head named Scott Pilgrim, who lives in this awesomely Gen-Y universe in Toronto (all the characters are in rock bands that are named after characters in old school Nintendo video games, etc.). He falls in love with an American named Ramona Flowers, who works as a delivery girl for Amazon.ca (see? That’s the Canadian version of Amazon), but in order to date her, he has to defeat her seven evil ex-boyfriends. The third novel, specifically, deals with Scott and his ex-girlfriend, Envy, who is now a major rock-star on the Canadian indie front and exploring their tragic and poignant love affair as college students.



2. How did you happen to come across this book? Was it a recommendation? Did you read a review? Random bookshop find?

This is silly: I’m not even sure why I was on Michael Cera’s Wikipedia page (I’m pretty sure that it has to do with the fact that he’s been cast in the film version of Youth in Revolt, which, whatever), but on there, a film version of “comic book Scott Pilgrim” was listed as a project he’s starting to film now (his casting is… whatever). I clicked onto the Wiki page for Scott Pilgrim and thought the premise and ensemble of characters sounded intriguing, so I went to the graphic novel’s home page, where the first chapter of the first novel were available to read. I read it and thought it was the funniest and coolest thing I’d read in a while. So, when my brother and I went to a comic shop in the Camden Market in London, I stumbled across them and bought the first one. I read it flat in two days (though I’ve reread it since) and bought the rest of the ones available (the fifth volume is scheduled to be released this month).



3. How do you normally choose the books you read?

I’m pretty simple like that (as in so many other ways). I tend to be a “lemme-read-the-back-cover” kinda guy. Sometimes, titles need to catch me. If it has a creative title, then I’ll give it a chance. But usually, the copywriter who writes on the inside flap or back cover has to sell the story to me. Sometimes, it’s recommendations – some of my favorites have been books that other people have read before me, and since I think I’m an open book (pun totally intended) when it comes to what kind of a story or characters turn me on, people have a pretty good knack of guessing what I’ll like.



4. What was the last book you read? Who is it by? What is it about?

The last book I read was another graphic novel (I’ve been devouring them since last July, when my brother and I went to San Diego Comic-Con), but a masterpiece – Alan Moore’s Watchmen, obviously the source of the upcoming movie. Well, Alan Moore, who’s a British writer, wrote the story, but Dave Gibbons illustrated it, and it’s brilliant. I’m not going to go too much into it since the movie’s coming out and all, and I’m sure the trailers tell you, but in a very, very brief nutshell, it’s about an alternate 1985 where the Cold War is still raging and international tensions are at an all-time high. In the US, “costumed adventurers” (people who dress up and fight crime but don’t have any powers; Batman would fall into this category) have been outlawed, but when the retired ones are getting killed (or at least someone attempts to kill them), they begrudgingly join together to solve the crime. But it’s so much better, so much more textured, and so much more brilliant than my piece-of-shit description of it. Honestly, it’s fucking amazing.



5. Can you name your favourite book? And why is this your favourite?

There are a few that I’m struggling between, but I think my de facto favorite book is The Stand by Stephen King. I’ve read it so many times, and I’ve loved it for longer than I’ve loved any other book (the first time I read it, I was ten years old, so it’s been in my life for fifteen years now). It’s great because it encompasses all these genres in it: it’s about post-apocalyptic America, so there’s that, but it’s also a character study on, like, twenty major characters; it’s a road novel – you see (or read about) so many disparate locations in the States that don’t get a lot of novel pages devoted to them. There’s spirituality without being preachy, there’s humor, there’s soap-opera twists, there’s mysteries. It just encompasses a lot; plus, it’s King’s most descriptive novel without him masturbating the words, which he can definitely do.



6. What genre of books do you prefer? Or do you have a favourite author whose works you gravitate towards?

It really depends on my mood. I remember, one summer I was in this really emo mood, so I went to the bookstore every day, scouring the shelves for books about breakups or sad bitch boys. Recently, before I came to London, I was in this film noir kick, so I started reading anything by Raymond Chandler or Dashiell Hammett, as well as James Ellroy’s “L.A. Quartet.” I’m pretty fickle about stuff like genres, I’m not really loyal to anything, which can be both a good thing and a bad thing. Though I do always check out what Stephen King is coming out with, as a rule.



7. What was your favourite book growing up? What was it about this book that you loved so much as a child?

This will sound totally morbid, but I loved Dracula as a kid. When the movie came out when I was a kid (1992’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula), there was Dracula fever everywhere, and it was a story I kinda knew, but not specifically. So I picked up my movie-tie-in copy (by Stoker, of course, but with the poster on the cover) and started reading and, boy, it was awesome in more ways than I can describe. That book sums up a good portion of my childhood, sadly.



8. What book growing up was THE book that made you fond of reading/literature?

Probably Gone With the Wind. It was the first real book that I read and, while I didn’t get a lot of the nuances that I gained on several subsequent readings, it really disciplined me to read and made me love it.



9. Was there a particular writer that inspired you to write?

Writers continue to inspire me to write and teach me new things and techniques. But the first writer who I recognized as a writer, as his own genre beyond the individual books, was probably Roald Dahl. There was magic in his books, a kind of wonder that I’d feel when reading that I’m not sure I’ve experienced again. And the way he told stories made me realize that that’s what I wanted to do with my life.



10. What books do you often recommend to friends? Why?

Whatever great book I’ve just read is what I tend to recommend to people. It’s rare that I recommend one of my favorites if I haven’t just recently re-read it, and I’m not sure why that is. I think it might be because my mind doesn’t work long-term in that sense. Reading is so immediate for me, so whatever I’m reading is at the forefront of my mind.



11. Do you carry a book around with you everywhere?

If I’m reading something currently, then I always have that in my bag. Otherwise, I am bookless.



12. In the book "Ex Libris" by Ann Fadiman that I am currently reading (on and off) she mentions having an "Odd Shelf". It's a collection of books you own that are of a particular genre...but just really random collection of books whose subject matter is totally unrelated to the rest of your collection. her Odd Shelf holds 64 books about polar exploration: naval manuals, journals, narratives, collections of photographs, etc. Do you have an "odd shelf"? And if so, what subject matter would I find? If you do not currently have an "odd shelf" per se, what would your ideal "odd shelf" contain?

Well… I don’t currently have an odd shelf. But over the years, I guess I’ve had variations of odd shelves: when I was in high school, all the books I ever had to read for class were on a shelf together, and ultimately, by the end of the four years, most of them had nothing to do with each other besides the fact that I read them in school. Since I moved to London, I obviously couldn’t bring all the books I had, so the tiny bookshelf in my room is kind of an odd shelf, since the books I now have are kinda disparate, mostly an odd collection of plays (for class and leisure), a few graphic novels, travel books on London, and a few scripts from class.



13. Is there a fictional character you would love to spend a day with and what would you do?

I always think about which characters I’d be friends with in real life, so with that in mind, I’d love to have a summer picnic with both Huck Finn and Scarlett O’Hara. It’s those Southerners! Plus, I love the fact that they are both so attached to their environments – those two characters more than any others that I could think of are so part of their worlds, and I do have a fascination with the antebellum South. Plus, come on! Huck and Scarlett! The banter and arguments would be amazing!



14. If you could only have 3 books with your on that wretched hypothetical desert island which would they be? Why?

The Stand by Stephen King for the aforementioned reasons. The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, because it is so evocative of my hometown of San Francisco, capturing it better than any other SF-set work that I’ve ever read (apart from Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City), and that’s probably where’d I be longing to go if I were marooned on an island. Endless Love by Scott Spencer, because who doesn’t love a tragic stalker-love-story?


15. What works have you written? Articles? Essays? Plays?



16. If you could adapt any book into a movie which book would it be?

That’s the million dollar question, isn’t it? Not counting remaking things, because there have been some terrible adaptations of things, I’d love to make a movie out of Rats Saw God by Rob Thomas, who is also the creator of our beloved Veronica Mars. It’s one of the most realistic boy’s-journey-through-high-school stories I’ve ever experienced. And, then, there’s my lifelong goal of writing Marquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude as a massive miniseries.



17. When do you find time to read? How long does a reading session last?

When I need to just calm down and have my own space. That’s the time when I naturally tend to read. It’s such a solitary thing, but in a good way. Writing is solitary, too, but you (or, at least, I do) have to draw a lot from your environment, from things within your grasp that you might need to have a reprieve from, and in reading, you don’t have to worry about any of that shit. Usually, my reading sessions are short – 45 minutes usually being the longest.



18. Do you have a favourite spot to read at? Can you read in any situation (noisy, crowded, etc.)

n my bed. Honestly, it is the best feeling to be curled under your covers and just reading in silence, regardless of the time of day. However, high school trained me to be able to read in crowded, loud places, like the bus, when I’d be reading for English class on my way into school. Noises don’t bother me, but it’s always wonderful to have the comfortable silence.



19. Can you read in another language? And if not, which language would you like to read/write in?

I can read in Spanish. I read The House of the Spirits in both languages, and while the English adaptation is great, the Spanish text is hauntingly beautiful.


20. Do you have any random reading quirks? (You refuse to write in margins? You hate folder pages or bending the spines? You reflect upon a passage for hours/days?)

I like having my books on display, so I try to keep them as pristine as possible. My brother borrowed my copy of One Hundred Years of Solitude for class, and when he returned it, it was full of highlights and notes in the margins, and I just about lost it. I told him to keep it and that I’d get my own copy. I’m really silly and weird like that. Books are pretty! Don’t hurt them!

Sunday, March 1, 2009

@reading pt. 5

@KatelynAnne Continued reading _Watchmen_ in Starbucks. I am so excited for that movie to come out

How many of you are reading Watchmen right now in preparation for the upcoming movie opening?