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	<title>Dossier Journal: Read &#187; Fiction</title>
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	<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read</link>
	<description>Poetry-Fiction-Theory-Critique</description>
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		<title>État de Siege</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/etat-de-siege-esp/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/etat-de-siege-esp/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 21:21:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sara Femenella</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brian W. Rogers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ESP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[État de Siege Productions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fred Moten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ganja and Hess]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Harmony Holiday]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dossierjournal.com/read/?p=3120</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Harmony Holiday is a writer, dancer, and sound artist. Her debut collection of poems Negro League Baseball was published by Fence Books last year. Brian W. Rogers is an artist, writer, and musician whose work most recently appeared in the London group show &#8220;A Sunken Trembling Recalled Dimly.&#8221; Together they have teamed up to form État de Siege (ÉSP) [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/ESP.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3122" title="ESP" src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/ESP.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="467" /></a></p>
<p>Harmony Holiday is a writer, dancer, and sound artist. Her debut collection of poems <em>Negro League Baseball</em> was published by Fence Books last year. Brian W. Rogers is an artist, writer, and musician whose work most recently appeared in the London group show &#8220;A Sunken Trembling Recalled Dimly.&#8221; Together they have teamed up to form <em>État de Siege</em> (ÉSP) a production house whose work encompasses text, music, the moving image, dance, design, architecture, and curatorial platforms. In this project, they have focused their attention on the 70&#8242;s cult horror film <em>Ganja and Hess</em>, about an archaelogist who gets stabbed in the heart and becomes a vampire. The video below includes poetry by Fred Moten, and is a preamble to their forthcoming re-imagined soundtrack for <em>Ganja and Hess</em>. Below that is an open letter to Bill Gunn, the director of the film, regarding certain propositions raised by his film, such as how one extreme of motion can lead to paralysis and what one must do to avoid this, such as enacting a bridge between classical myth and modal myth.</p>
<p><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/36330194?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" frameborder="0" width="700" height="525"></iframe></p>
<p>The West is an insane asylum, a conscious and premeditated receptacle of black magic&#8230; every disappearance is a record (between checking-out and checking-in)<br />
{Ornette Coleman- To Whom Who Keeps a Record}</p>
<p>1. Are there some things you would like to say, but have not been able to, because no one asked you the right questions?<br />
[Être - Nicolas Jaar]</p>
<p>2. What are the politics of being ready to die, and what do they have to do with the scandal of enjoyment?  Of any action as one way ticket to the end of health? &#8216;The love-recovery cycle that Barthes maps in his works is an ever refining self-fertilizing cycle wherein nothing must be wasted as it is needed in the next phase of the cycle,&#8217; impregnating the place where memory flinches and (esp.) begins and at once slows down and accelerates the metabolism of that commons, into the decadent non-territory of the idea of an “other” as an ego-ideal whom the self  can achieve through devotion. In those moments of precise forgetting, did you find the traumas and excitements that express the need for a modal myth most acutely?<br />
[Moodymann - I can't kick this feeling when it hits]</p>
<p>3. The statues in profile featured in the title sequence remind us of an experiment that Derrida proposes. Do you know it? ‘This is an experiment of acting as if you were dead. […] But what does it mean to be dead, when you are not totally dead?  It means that you perceive the object as it is or as it is supposed to be when you are not there. To see the vessel as such means to see the vessel as it would be without me. If I were dead it would remain the same as it is, the colour, the same consistency, and so on. So, to relate to an object, means to relate to it as if you were dead. That’s the condition of truth, the condition of perception, the condition of objectivity, at least in their most conventional sense’ (Will you give up your death for me?) And so, if life is endless, why not try to relate in this way, what is the risk. What is the cost that we are not willing to pay? On the other hand what is the pleasure of mortality or so-called loss that we refuse to admit in order to keep it sacred and free from principal, free from the colony of false nobility?<br />
[Rufus Harley - Queens]</p>
<p>4. If ultimately oblivion is abundant, one has reason to ask, &#8216;on what grounds does one critique and propose an alternative to the brunt of exclusion and the sense of social shipwreck one suffers from?&#8217; Is it a form of suffering or a relief? Does our exclusivity relieve us? Are we absolved by a feigned turning against them—toward what? (‘I will not be punished, I will not be tortured, I will not be guilty,’ Hess decrees)— And from this can it follow that philosophy is a prison, that it destroys the uncustomary things about us? That the frontier is a prison? That the route past nothingness is to accept nothing in particular? That the vehicle driving us toward abundance is extreme stillness just as the route to paralysis is frenzied motion?<br />
[Julia Holter - Introduction]</p>
<p>5.  What tole does the yearning for ritual in a culture where trends often supress traditions, take/give in your film? Ideas of oblivion and tedium often unite in the sublime (transcendence of limits of the human condition) their inevitable destination, where they are turned into a solemn abundance that often shows up as ritual and the place where ritual and addiction meet and do not diverge (at once forgotten and remembered needs). Do you believe that ritual should engage variation deliberately in order to separate itself from addiction, bearing in mind that anything repetitive becomes a need no matter how sacred or pernicious? How do we improvise on a ritual and re-tell it to itself again and again ad infinitum, what role does the sacrifice play in that coiled and elastic dynamic, where does it enter its disappearance and reject it, live on? You can&#8217;t enter into this dynamic except in exhalted states, elevated states. How do we conjure those states while at the same time resisting their capture? What is the economy of survival in Ganja and Hess? How is an addict’s labor different from a worshiper’s?<br />
[Monks of Bhutan - Silnyen played solo]</p>
<p>6. Is eternity an impervious horizon and do the acoustics of blood allow us to at once traverse and return to the forever that the blue myth of life eternal lures us across? Is the film a myth of/for black America, of/for America in general, the sole (soul/sold) myth retrieved as the ‘terror and terrible lure of vacuum?’ Voices from beyond the event horizon, trying to out-mode our oppressors, to translate our motion across that border? Creating an impossible space between origin and dream/out-dreamt origin, unoriginal dream, the lucid dream everyone wants to learn how to possess but is afraid to enter, a certain amount of traveling, deferred. Choreographer Alvin Ailey believes that movement is molecular revolution, ‘blood memory,’ future anterior, and that any black body in motion has experienced centuries of war and pain ‘no casual pleasure brought about those features.’ Hess says of Ganja, ‘Some great horde of peoples have had to suffer’ to bring about her beauty. In grappling with erotics of suffering (the does-my-distress-arouse-you rhetoric) what did you discover about our agency therein? What is peace in this context? What is justice?<br />
[Julian Priester - Coincidence]</p>
<p>7. One of the things that we are trying to inquire toward is the role of aural hallucination in Ganja and Hess. The way in which sound abducts away from the optic towards a kind of blind transversality, plothole in the lightsickness of the past three hundred years. This is to say that it (the one way border the recording is a portal across) is one of the conditions for the choreography of syncope, of possession, of being possessed and dispossessed at the same time. 1976: Julian Jaynes puts forth the Bicameralist theory of mind. If his formulations are just, it can be said that we have inherited a memory of experiencing ourselves as ghosts. We are haunted by exteriority only inasmuch as we fear (because we know) that we are a focalized twist of that exteriority, to hear is to be unbound toward it, that we are laced by it, that the real trauma is that we experience ourselves only as ourselves, rather than being no one. It’s not that minds changed, it’s that we evicted the ghosts. Hallucinatory fugitivity and it’s rush toward eternity; endlessness; devotional erasure; ambivalent rapture; the audial smudge; a voice followed to the other side of the event horizon&#8211;<br />
[Theo Parrish- Love is War for Miles]</p>
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		<title>Sophie Rosenblum</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/sophie-rosenblum-2/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/sophie-rosenblum-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 2012 13:24:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Thomas Yagoda</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bob Gates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dossier Journal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sophie Rosenblum]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dossierjournal.com/read/?p=3102</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Awful Math The commotion surrounding the awful math grew to a hollering, and soon Jenny pitched in an extra twenty dollars saying, “I’ll just give more, that’s all.” But that wasn’t all, and once we were in the car, she was off on a steady pace about which one of my moron friends was going [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Dossier-Journal-Bob-Gates-Spruce-Pond3.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-3101" title="Dossier Journal Bob Gates Spruce Pond" src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Dossier-Journal-Bob-Gates-Spruce-Pond3.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="411" /></a></p>
<p>Awful Math</p>
<p>The commotion  surrounding the awful math grew to a hollering, and soon Jenny pitched  in an extra twenty dollars saying, “I’ll just give more, that’s all.”  But that wasn’t all, and once we were in the car, she was off on a  steady pace about which one of my moron friends was going to be wheeled  out on a gurney from the force struck beneath his brow. I said, “Calm  down,” but she turned back stern and spit, “How many twenties would it  take for you to make your spidery arms into fists and cuff those  assholes?” and I said, “Four,” thinking of a hundred, and she said,  “That’s it? Eighty bucks?” and I said, “Oh wait,” then I said, “Five,”  and she said, “You’re just as dumb as the rest of them,” and folded her  arms tight like stuck drawer. By then we’d driven out so far that we  were once again surrounded by cedars, tall and unflappable, and I tried  to think about money and how it was made.</p>
<p>________________________________________________________________________________</p>
<p>Sophie Rosenblum’s work has appeared or is forthcoming in <em>American Short Fiction</em>, <em>New Letters</em>, <em>The Iowa Review</em>,   and elsewhere. She is currently finishing her first novel, which was  recently a finalist for the James Jones First  Novel Fellowship. You can  find links to more of her writing at <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.sophierosenblum.com">www.sophierosenblum.com</a></span>.</p>
<p>Photograph: <em>Spruce Pond</em>, by <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.bobgatesphoto.com/">Bob Gates</a></span>.</p>
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		<title>Three Amigos</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/three-amigos/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/three-amigos/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Jan 2012 13:00:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Katherine Krause</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Catherine Lacey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chiara Barzini]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joseph Salvatore]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dossierjournal.com/read/?p=3033</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tonight, catch three amazing writers all reading together in one place- Dossier contributor Joseph Salvatore (whose book To Assume A Pleasing Shape was nominated for the 2011 Story Prize) and fellow Dossier contributor Chiara Barzini (whose debut Sister Stop Breathing is getting all types of love) and Catherine Lacey (who doesn&#8217;t contribute to Dossier yet [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Sister-Stop-Breathing-front-600.jpeg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Sister-Stop-Breathing-front-600.jpeg" alt="" title="Sister-Stop-Breathing-front-600" width="700" height="517" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3034" /></a></p>
<p>Tonight, catch three amazing writers all reading together in one place- Dossier contributor<a href="http://josephsalvatore.com/"> <u>Joseph Salvatore</u></a> (whose book <em>To Assume A Pleasing Shape </em>was nominated for the 2011 Story Prize) and fellow Dossier contributor <a href="http://www.chiarabarzini.com/"><u>Chiara Barzini</u></a> (whose debut <em>Sister Stop Breathing</em> is getting all types of love) and <a href="http://www.catherinelacey.com/"><u>Catherine Lacey</u> </a>(who doesn&#8217;t contribute to Dossier yet but I guess maybe she should) will all be putting on the ritz at <a href="http://pacificstandardbrooklyn.com/"><u>Pacific Standard,</u> one of the California coolest- but in New York- places to have a reading. </a> </p>
<p>It goes down at 7pm at Pacific Standard, located at 82 Fourth Avenue in Brooklyn, New York.</p>
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		<title>Hard Core Books</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/hard-core-books/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/hard-core-books/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jan 2012 18:12:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Katherine Krause</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philosophy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Anthony Dever]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bookshelf Porn]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joy of Books Video]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Type Bookstore]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dossierjournal.com/read/?p=3010</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[My new favorite blog is Bookshelf Porn, created by Anthony Dever. It makes me feel better that I had over 40+ boxes of books when I recently moved and makes me think that daydreaming about what my next bookshelves will look like (I haven&#8217;t unpacked yet) or hoping someone will buy me a Sapien bookcase [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/hell-onthethroat.tumblr1.jpeg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/hell-onthethroat.tumblr1.jpeg" alt="" title="hell-onthethroat.tumblr" width="700" height="400" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3015" /></a></p>
<p>My new favorite blog is <a href="http://bookshelfporn.com/"><u>Bookshelf Porn</u></a>, created by <a href="http://www.anthonydever.com/"><u>Anthony Dever</u></a>. It makes me feel better that I had over 40+ boxes of books when I recently moved and makes me think that daydreaming about what my next bookshelves will look like (I haven&#8217;t unpacked yet) or hoping someone will buy me a <a href="http://www.dwr.com/product/sapien-bookcase-short.do"><u>Sapien bookcase</u> </a>for my birthday is normal behavior. I can&#8217;t lie, I have been reading on a Kindle as of late and this website makes me want to smash it with a hammer. (Once I finish what I am reading, of course.) I particularly loved the video from the Toronto bookstore <a href="http://typebooks.ca/"><u>Type</u></a> at bottom. Way better than a toy store coming alive. That was always creepy. Postscript: If you live in this house below with the tree in the window, I would very much like to be your friend.</p>
<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/artists-studio.jpeg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/artists-studio-1017x1024.jpg" alt="" title="artists-studio" width="700" height="400" class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-3016" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/tumblr_luw9w4O5891r2xkwpo1_500.jpeg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/tumblr_luw9w4O5891r2xkwpo1_500.jpeg" alt="" title="tumblr_luw9w4O5891r2xkwpo1_500" width="700" height="500" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3011" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/18location.jpeg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/18location.jpeg" alt="" title="18location" width="700" height="699" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3019" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/tumblr_ls39heB1OB1r3vn1ro1_500.jpeg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/tumblr_ls39heB1OB1r3vn1ro1_500.jpeg" alt="" title="tumblr_ls39heB1OB1r3vn1ro1_500" width="700" height="616" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3021" /></a></p>
<p><object width="700" height="515"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/SKVcQnyEIT8?version=3&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/SKVcQnyEIT8?version=3&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="700" height="515" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object><br />
<em><br />
All Images re-posted from Bookshelf Porn</em></p>
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		<title>Jonathan Lethem In Conversation</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/interviews/jonathan-lethem-in-conversation/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/interviews/jonathan-lethem-in-conversation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2011 17:37:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rachel Elizabeth Jones</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jonathan Lethem]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Ecstasy of Influence]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dossierjournal.com/read/?p=2992</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Jonathan Lethem is the best-selling author of Gun with Occasional Music, Motherless Brooklyn, and Fortress of Solitude. He has recently re-located from his home in Brooklyn to Southern California to teach fiction at Pomona College. Rachel Elizabeth Jones joins him on campus to discuss his two latest novels, his trajectories to California, what “hipster” actually [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/jonathan-lethem1.jpg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/jonathan-lethem1.jpg" alt="" title="jonathan-lethem" width="700" height="532" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2996" /></a></p>
<p>Jonathan Lethem is the best-selling author of <em>Gun with Occasional Music, Motherless Brooklyn</em>, and <em>Fortress of Solitude</em>. He has recently re-located from his home in Brooklyn to Southern California to teach fiction at Pomona College. Rachel Elizabeth Jones joins him on campus to discuss his two latest novels, his trajectories to California, what “hipster” actually means, and how he finds his new life as a professor. His new collection of essays <em>The Ecstasy of Influence</em> is released being released this month.</p>
<p><em>Rachel Elizabeth Jones: </em>Could you talk a little bit about your trajectory to California?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan Lethem:</em> There’s a cartoon version of my trajectory, that’s been disseminated lately: uprooted-from-Brooklyn-comes-to-Pomona College. In truth I’ve been itinerant. I’ve moved from New York over and over again. It’s a place I love, and I obviously have a charged relationship to it, but it’s been a ritual to leave it behind, or to try. This is my second California life. I lived in the Bay Area for ten years in my twenties. I’m old. That was another life completely, but an important part of my life. It was where I invented myself as writer. I wrote my first three novels and became a published writer in that time. At one point I never thought I needed to go back to New York, or that I was likely to. So this present narrative seems quite ironic.</p>
<p><em>Rachel:</em> You started college in Vermont. How’d you find that?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan: </em>Yes, I went up to college in Vermont, at Bennington. It’s something I tried to explain in a number of different places, how influential and significant my brief college career could be, despite how quickly it might seem that I’d bounced away. I only finished three semesters. I was ambivalent about being a college student. I’m not sure I would’ve stuck anywhere.</p>
<p><em>Rachel</em>: Was it expected that you go to college?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em> Well it is for anyone, right? Yet I didn’t expect it of myself, not completely. In high school I was obsessed with the Beat Generation script, that of self-invention and running away from things, and wanting to become a writer by going off into a garret, or immersing in raw experiences, like hitchhiking – that would serve as my college. At one point, quite absurdly because my temperament is not that of a student of Zen Buddhism, I thought, “No, not college, I’ll go off and enlist in a Zen monastery.” None of these things prevented my applying to some colleges and then going off to one, but they did seed the ground for the disappearance of my college career shortly after. I felt there were these other live prospects. Whether they were just in my head or not, I’d told myself that not all writers began with school, and since that’s what I wanted to do, I’d fool with these other possibilities. It looks very decisive in retrospect, it might appear that it worked out, in retrospect – neither was true at the time. I didn’t publish a novel until ten years after left college. I was a book store clerk. </p>
<p>From the distance of the East Coast, California is confusing, and you think everything is in one place. You receive a garbled impression, and mine was especially garbled. Yet the Bay Area, when I arrived, had for me the advantage of familiarity. The frozen-in-time 1960s quality of Berkeley reminded me of my parents’ milieu, and I fell into it very easily. I was sort of a vagabond student, and Berkeley is a place that is very congenial for vagabond students. </p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>Did you find that when you were in Berkeley that you would talk about New York? </p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em>  Sure. I played the role of the New Yorker in California immediately, in a way that I wouldn’t have in New York. My street cred wasn’t really so impressive. I was a weird mixed bag of bohemian and Mid-westerner. None of my affiliations in New York seemed very clear or firm, but once I left, my affiliation as a New Yorker became something I could wear on my sleeve. It gave me a card to play. It was my way of continuing to think about New York. Before I really investigated that material, before I lived there again or wrote about it, I had some getting over New York to do. But I didn’t mind taking credit for being from a famously tough place.</p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>I recently read <em>You Don’t Love Me Yet.</em> What experiences did you use to inform that work?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em>The setting of that book is sleight-of-hand. I transposed my time in San Francisco in my late twenties and early thirties, when I was approximately the age of those characters. I spent a lot of time in the Haight Ashbury and the Mission, at a time when those places were funky and interesting. I was even sort of in a band, despite the fact that I’m not qualified by any talent to be in a band.</p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>What was the name of the band?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em> We never settled on a clear name. It bore an unworkable name for a while. “Emma the Crayon.” Which probably proves how devoted to self-erasure this band was. I drew some of energy for that book from my San Francisco days, living in neighborhoods that were being gentrified by tattooed kids. And simply the way you live at that age – anywhere and nowhere. I wrote about Brooklyn in a way that demanded a lot of cultural and sociological and political and historical specificity. Yet I got away with doing a Silverlake book – assuming you think I got away with it &#8212; because I wrote about characters who weren’t thinking about their cultural placement, or the meaning of urban life. I wrote about Los Angeles from the point of view of characters who might have actually been living in a bohemian quadrant of Minneapolis, for all they knew. It was a deliberate attempt to do something more playful and irresponsible, specifically in the relationship of my fiction to place. I’d just come off a a decade writing these grounded and accountable pieces about Brooklyn. I wanted to flip a switch and be full of shit. To write about a place that I didn’t know well and make it up and get away with it.</p>
<p><em>Rachel:</em> So speaking of Silver Lake, and speaking of being in your twenties in the Bay, talk to me about what “hipster” means. At this point it seems like an insult. </p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em>  I’ve watched this cultural formation in the past decade – hipster-shame – and it strikes me as a red herring, a way of channelling disgruntlement that ought to be reserved for greater evils into morose self-loathing on the part of people who are actually all more or less complicit. On the other hand, a defense of hipsterism isn’t something I’d want to sink a lot of stock into, because it doesn’t actually matter at all. Either way, it’s exactly one of the least important things you could be worried about, whether or not it’s shameful to be a hipster. I suppose I’m drawn perversely to entrench myself behind the term, the way Quakers or the Queer community adopted a term of abuse and made it their own. Why this horror of hipsterism? It’s basically people not wanting to be themselves, not wanting to listen to the music they listen to, or be apprehended dressing the way they dress or feeling the way they feel. A hipster is mostly just an unfinished person – I think that’s where the shame really comes in. People are eager not to be counted among the unfinished. They want to be something real, something complete. But you know what? It’s okay to be unfinished.</p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>What is the relationship between the idea of the hipster and cultural critique? You use a lot of cultural critique and you seem to poke fun at it while still holding a deep respect for it. For example, how Perkus Tooth in <em>Chronic City</em> gets lost in movies, or how Bedwin in <em>You Don’t Love Me Yet</em> gets lost in this one movie and chooses one tiny part to focus on &#8211; that sort of obsession.</p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em> I look at a lot of things through the lens of cultural hunger, cultural voracity, cultural obsession. My characters often identify dangerously, even overwhelmingly, with their affiliations. If you paraphrase the usual critique of the hipster it might be that their cultural affiliations are all too lightly held, that they’re received notions. That they’ve decorated themselves with cultural style, but it’s not a life or death battle for them. I doubt that’s usually true; that’s one of the ways I would defend hipsterism. People’s tastes matter keenly to them, even if they’ve been made to feel embarrassed about them and brandish them with a degree of irony. Anyway, for better or worse, I’m helplessly on the team of the super-taster – he for whom salt is too salty, sugar too sweet, and cultural treasure too precious, for whom it is as crucial as oxygen. I’ve always been very easily colonized by the books and music and movies I love. It’s not only extremely intense for me; it becomes my way of thinking about nearly anything. I use the artworks I love as a lens, or perhaps a crutch, or a tool… or an exoskeleton? There are all sorts of metaphors, each with slightly different implications, but anyway, they’re my apparatus for grappling with the problem of being a person. A novelist tends to write ruefully, or to couch in reservations, the things that are actually most defining of themselves. So, I write about this kind of character passionately, with sympathy, but also I tend to put them in social or political or interpersonal contexts that make them look absurd or problematic. I try to see characters like myself from the inside and the outside.</p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>With that said, say you go to a fancy LA party or a fancy New York party and you have all these characters walking around with their cultural critique or their specific project, or whatever it is, how do you personally respond to that? How do you tell if someone’s full of shit or not? </p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em> Full of shit about what? Sometimes being full of shit is an amazing way to get started. I was full of shit about everything at the outset, especially about being a novelist. I wasn’t one and I had no idea how to do it. I had to be full of shit for a while. I’m often most drawn to the people who are at the greatest risk of seeming full of shit, because they’re usually not risk-averse. They’re attempting something. Also – this is one of the subjects of <em>Chronic City</em> – life is a performance with scripts, and it matters that you recognize this. Your task is to be in play, to step onto the stage, to make something occur. That means risking being full of shit, or being called full of shit, a lot. So I wouldn’t say that’s what I’m screening for, when I walk into that room that you’ve proposed. What I am looking for is that thing you know when you meet it that’s hard to name otherwise. To be awakened. It’s what I look for on a bookshelf, it’s what I look for when I’m flipping the radio dial, and it’s what I want out of people. </p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>Have you always had that mindset, or did you get there later? </p>
<p><em>Jonathan: </em>I was given a head-start. I’ve never before articulated this exact thing, that I tend to be forgiving of the full-of-shit among us. But in fact, in my parents’ world…they were bohemians and they were artists, they were activists, they were radicals, they were fools. My house, their social set, the other grown-ups &#8211; I grew up in a space that was full of preposterous people. Accepting them as a version of the world, one I could tolerate and take pleasure in, and to choose from among their flavors of magnificent bullshit as if at an ice cream parlor, and even to choose some to attempt figure out and believe in – all of that came with the territory, for me. To the small extent that You Don’t Love Me Yet is a serious book, as opposed to a waffle heaped with strawberries, it asks exactly that: How do you define interpersonal meaning when you yourself are still full of shit? That’s the question.  </p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>Could you talk a little bit about your use of animals? </p>
<p><em>Jonathan</em>: That’s germane to me right now. I’m preparing a course on animals in fiction, next semester. Watership Down, Call of the Wild, all of it. Now that I’m in an academic department I’ve gained awareness that there’s a lot of really good writing and theory going on at the moment on precisely this subject. Of course as a working artist I’ve just stumbled into the material by my own migrations as a reader. Animal stories were at the heart of my first interest in writing per se, through Lewis Carroll. The talking animals in the Alice books were imprinted on my sense of how characters are portrayed in writing in the first place. My first novel was full of talking animals. People associate that book with Raymond Chandler or Phillip K. Dick, not wrongly, but just behind those lies <em>Alice in Wonderland.</em> My detective strolls through a world of these baffling and annoying creatures, whose ability to speak is a given. The animal element activates a lot of the persuasiveness in the fiction that I love the most. Henry James means a lot to me, but it’s absolutely confounding when you realize he never shows people eating. They just don’t eat, or if they do, the meal is glossed over without you ever learning what it was. I wanted to go the other direction and have my characters defined by their hunger, defined by their sleepiness or horniness, by the animal life of their bodies. <em>You Don’t Love Me Yet </em>is partly an exercise in having the characters always needing a meal or drugs or sleep or…Their bodies are present. The zoo is there as a mirror for this. You find that in Dickens his characters are everywhere described in animal terms. It’s at the heart of fiction, but it hides. Except when it doesn’t. For there are so many great animals in fiction. I’m actually having a very difficult time narrowing the reading list for this course. Once you look for them, they’re everywhere.</p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>On that note, how do you find being a professor?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan: </em>It’s a new experience. I’d been a teacher a lot, I’d even been called “professor”, but I wasn’t exactly. I’d parachute in from the world of writing and be a guest star or “distinguished visitor.” Sure, I grew comfortable in the classroom, and learned I had something to offer in that setting. But here at Pomona I’m actually a professor – I’m part of the department, I’m part of the careers of the students, I’m an advisor. I really have a job. And I haven’t had a job since I was a bookstore clerk. [Laughter]</p>
<p><em>Rachel:</em> Was that your first job?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan: </em>The only job I ever held, until this one. Honestly, this is a revelation for me. The collegiality of a department like this is an incredible thing. It’s always being said that writing is a lonely occupation, and it’s true – I remove myself from the world to write novels. It cuts against family life and against the illusion of fraternity among writers, and it cuts here against the idea of academic collegiality because I’m still the novelist. It’s a very hermetic identity. It’s a very strange choice to go away and invent people who don’t exist and spend time with them instead of the real people, right? I go and I commune with the fake people. Yet I don’t do that because I think it’s morally superior to being part of the world [laughter]. In fact it leaves me desperately hungry for the world. So as a professor, I have a really interesting version of a world: this environment, what’s expected of me, and what I find myself excited to deliver. It’s a terrific kind of engagement precisely for being such a good antidote to living in my head. </p>
<p>Rachel: <em>I noticed that Richard Abneg, an important character in </em><em>Chronic City</em>, shows up in <em>You Don’t Love Me Yet</em> &#8211; to what extent is <em>Chronic City</em> a sort of New York transmutation or a sequel to <em>You Don’t Love Me Yet?</em></p>
<p><em>Jonathan: </em>There are a few little trails like this. I suspect a lot of people, for superficial but inarguable reasons, see those books as divided, utterly. One weighty if not ponderous, and set in New York, and the other Californian and frothy and small. Yet,<em> You Don’t Love Me Yet</em> taught me how to do <em>Chronic City</em> in the most direct way. The small book was the laboratory in which a lot of the terms of that bigger book were derived: how to enact my plot in terms of a group of friends who behave as friends really do, in these kind of repetitive, solipsistic, self-enclosed rituals. The reason that Seinfeld was not really a show about nothing is that it was about how appalling and fun it is to have friends with whom you develop a private vocabulary and a private world and running jokes that make you feel that you are the only real people and anyone outside that charmed circle just doesn’t get it. That’s the lineage that leads from <em>You Don’t Love Me Yet</em> to <em>Chronic City. </em></p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>Can you talk about Perkus Tooth, from<em> Chronic City?</em> Have you gotten a lot of feedback about him?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan: </em>People identify the book with him. When people don’t like the book, it’s because they feel that Perkus his failings have been indulged, or that he’s a jerk to begin with. When they love the book they think he’s a martyred saint. So he’s the Rorschach blot. The irony for me is that I feel that hiding in the foreground, almost too near to see, is Chase Insteadman. He’s the character I identify with secretly much. I guess it’s obvious to see where I’ve lent parts of my cultural obsessiveness to Perkus, or to observe that he’s a quasi-writer. But Chase is one of the most important characters I’ve ever gotten onto the page. It must be that because he declares himself as bland, as a chalk outline of a human being, people take that invitation to overlook him. They quit thinking about him, which I suppose is something the book had to invite them to do, in order to make itself happen. But for what it’s worth, the character I still think about, more than Perkus, is Chase.</p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>Have you been put off by people being so concerned with Perkus?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan: </em>No, Perkus is attractive and strange and fragile, so if he’s the popular hero, that’s lovely. I sometimes joke that, in <em>Motherless Brooklyn</em>, the main character Lionel Essrog is quite a lot more loveable than I really am. He’s a magical-geek character, in the way that Holden Caufield, or Ignatius J. Reilly is, or Charley, from <em>Flowers For Algernon</em> – an attractor for reader sympathies. Perkus Tooth functions in a similar way. He’s a magical geek character. You feel that he’s fragile, which pulls the reader towards him. </p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>So now that you’re in L.A., I read that you’ve sold the film rights to some of your work?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em> Over the years I’ve done this again and again: let someone try to develop one of the books into a film. My hopes for these projects get aroused; I’m like a fan, hearing about something I want to see, and hoping it’ll be good. The one that’s like that for me right now is <em>As She Climbed Across the Table</em>, which has been optioned by David Cronenberg. He’s one of my favorite living directors – I’m flattered that he’s even trying, I think it’s a good match, it seems very possible that he’d do something wonderful. That’s the one that I’m in love with right now, but it’s really outside of me. It’s a thing that happens to the books that has weirdly little to do with me as their author. </p>
<p><em>Rachel:</em> Did you learn that or it’s been like that?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em> I figured it out pretty fast. I had advantages in figuring it out because I was already a student of film – or a fan, not a student. The best adaptations of books, when books are involved as the sources of film, are the ones where they do very little “justice” to the book. They just take something they like and transform it. And so, I always thought, this is likely the best fate – just take it, make a movie. You’re filmmakers, you do your thing, and I’ll wait and see what happens. I’ll cash your check in the meantime and use it to write another book. That seems like the best relationship possible. I haven’t been seduced into thinking I could be the screenwriter or could control the outcome of these projects.</p>
<p><em>Rachel:</em> Have you done much exploring of L.A.?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan:</em> I know bits and pieces of L.A. Over the years I’ve come here on different kinds of trips. I lived in L.A. for a month or six weeks, now three or four different times. So I know it in bursts. I gather this is true of L.A. in general anyway, you can’t know it comprehensively. You know it in fragments. But I’ve plenty more to discover.</p>
<p><em>Rachel: </em>What do you like about it, or what do you notice about it?</p>
<p><em>Jonathan</em>: I really like very obvious and corny things about it – I like its diversity. It’s real. It has real diversity. And there are places that brag of diversity when what they mean is that everything is neatly balkanized. It’s not here. </p>
<p><em><br />
The Ecstasy of Influence</em> is out now from <a href="http://www.randomhouse.com/doubleday/catalog/author.pperl?authorid=17368"><u>Doubleday</u></a>, $27.95<br />
<em>Author Photo: Mara Faye Lethem</em></p>
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		<title>Watch: Peter Straub</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/interviews/the-dossier-readings-peter-straub/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/interviews/the-dossier-readings-peter-straub/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jun 2011 22:58:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Thomas Yagoda</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Donald Harington]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Peter Straub]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Dossier Readings]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Dossier Readings #2 with novelist Peter Straub. Bestselling author Peter Straub (Ghost Story, Koko, Lost Boy, Lost Girl, A Dark Matter) reads from the work of the late Donald Harington, an Arkansas-born novelist best known for his many novels that take place in a fictional Ozark hamlet known as Stay More, AR. This reading [...]]]></description>
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<p><em>T</em><em>he Dossier Readings #2 with novelist Peter Straub.</em> Bestselling author Peter Straub (<em>Ghost Story, Koko, Lost Boy, Lost Girl, A Dark Matter) </em>reads from the work of the late Donald Harington, an Arkansas-born novelist best known for his many novels that take place in a fictional Ozark hamlet known as Stay More, AR. This reading was recorded in lo-tech fashion in Manhattan in the fall of 2009, only a month before Harington passed away at the age of 73. Peter is a great admirer of Harington’s work, one of many who think Harington&#8217;s readership is not nearly what it should be. In an oft-used quote, the author Fred Chappell says of Harington, “[He’s] not an under-appreciated writer, he’s an undiscovered continent.” When <em>Dossier </em>asked Peter if he’d be interested in doing a recorded reading for a website project we call <em>The Dossier Readings</em>, in which writers are asked to read favorite passages from favorite works, he came to us with a pretty serious stack of books, ultimately settling on an excerpt from Harington’s 1972 novel, <em>Some Other Place. The Right Place </em>(Toby Press). Hope you enjoy.</p>
<p><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/25205890" width="700" height="555" frameborder="0"></iframe></p>
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		<title>Punching Tom Hanks</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/punching-tom-hanks/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/punching-tom-hanks/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jun 2011 00:19:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Stephanie Tran</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nonfiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kevin Seccia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Punching Tom Hanks]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I love self-help and instructional/how-to books. The ones I read usually involve something like getting in touch with my soul and/or how to make chicken soup, but I&#8217;m always open to other methods of self-improvement, like how to protect yourself and still have a sense of humor while doing so&#8230; Enter Punching Tom Hanks &#8211; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/THANKS.jpg"><img src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/THANKS.jpg" alt="" title="THANKS" width="700" height="812" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2802" /></a></p>
<p>I love self-help and instructional/how-to books. The ones I read usually involve something like getting in touch with my soul and/or how to make chicken soup, but I&#8217;m always open to other methods of self-improvement, like how to protect yourself and still have a sense of humor while doing so&#8230; Enter <a href="http://us.macmillan.com/punchingtomhanks"><u>Punching Tom Hanks</u></a> &#8211; a hilariously imaginative guide, by stand-up comedian Kevin Seccia, on how to <a href="http://www.howtobeatupanything.com/"><u>beat up just about everyone and anything</u></a>, like that super annoying guy carrying a baguette in front of you. Mark Walberg and a T-Rex (together). A time-traveling caveman (this would have come in handy during the Geico Caveman television show days). The future version of yourself. Or that bottle of whiskey that keeps taunting you to drink it (I love whiskey so I&#8217;ll just ignore this one). This book seriously has an answer for every situation, even how to beat up the author. I don&#8217;t think that&#8217;s really an option though, because once you read this, you&#8217;ll want to be Kevin&#8217;s best friend- not just because he&#8217;s so funny, but, ironically, he also happens to be one of the sweetest guys you&#8217;ll ever meet. Just don&#8217;t get on his bad side.</p>
<p>The book is out Tuesday June 7th, and there will be a launch party at Hotel Chantelle&#8217;s rooftop garden.<br />
92 Ludlow Street, NYC<br />
7pm-11pm</p>
<p>Music by Ingie Pop and The Rude Dudes</p>
<p>Complimentary cocktails from Herradura Tequila, 7pm-9pm</p>
<p>Rain or Shine (retractable roof!)</p>
<p>RSVP:  punchingtomhanks@gmail.com</p>
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		<title>American Weather</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/charles-mcleods-american-weather/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/charles-mcleods-american-weather/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 31 May 2011 14:15:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Thomas Yagoda</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[American Weather]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Charles McLeod]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Harvill Secker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[National Treasures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poets & Writers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pushcart Press]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Random House UK]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Dossier Contributor Charles McLeod’s first novel, American Weather, comes out this week. It is a vicious and poignantly satirical take on contemporary American corporate culture, following the inspired mind of a wealthy west coast ad man. In its current May/June issue, Poets &#38; Writers has a pretty fascinating story (which anyone interested in the difficulties [...]]]></description>
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<p>Dossier Contributor Charles McLeod’s first novel, <em>American Weather</em>, comes out this week. It is a vicious and poignantly satirical take on contemporary American corporate culture, following the inspired mind of a wealthy west coast ad man. In its current May/June issue, <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a href="http://www.pw.org/">Poets &amp; Writers</a></em></span> has a pretty fascinating story (which anyone interested in the difficulties and complexities of modern-day publishing should by all means read) on the book’s journey into the hands of a UK press, the Harvill Secker division of Random House UK. McLeod, a past Pushcart Prize winner, has been writing and publishing great short stories in great publications for quite a while now. He published one with us a little while back. That story, <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/files/charlesmcleod_nationaltreasures.pdf">National Treasures</a></em></span>, is the title story of his first collection, which is to follow the publication of <em>American Weather</em> by a year, coming out in June of 2012. Because <em>American Weather</em> ironically does not currently have American distribution (Random House UK is distributing it worldwide save North America), you likely won’t be seeing McLeod’s debut in your local bookstore. So be sure to get it on <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/American-Weather-Charles-McLeod/dp/1846553334">Amazon UK</a></span>. For a short while longer Americans can still preorder the novel for a reduced shipping rate. And for a little taste, check the excerpt below….</p>
<p><strong>AMERICAN WEATHER</strong></p>
<p>My name is Jim Haskin, and I am an ad on TV. The ceiling in my den is twenty feet tall. The overlong room has a nook for my desk; its windows face west, and Lake Merritt is lit, a nice string of lights strung around it. Above the fireplace mantle is a plasma flat screen, 65&#215;54 inches. Let us all gather for this nightly drug, this light without heat, this machine that transforms and too disallows transformation. Let us regale and absolve it, and in doing so regale and absolve ourselves, our dreams numbed, our sins forgotten. Let us believe its fictive representations. For if we believe, and are true of faith, we can do what Man’s sought since He hunted mammoths: reinvent nature. And crops can be sewn where there were once trees, and towns can spring up next to ports on our rivers and oceans, and ore from the earth can be reaped and shaped, and things can be made that connect these port towns and in turn allow for more towns between them, as the more things we build, the more we can believe that we matter—that were it not for us there wouldn’t be rain, light or lichen, that our explicit schema of ethics and ways is what lends the ants legs, and the walrus its fins, and the bushes their berries, and all of our waste goes magically away, and the meat that we eat is red cubes under plastic. Let us remember we’re better than beasts. Let us remember that God will sweep it up later, for were this not the case we wouldn’t have brains that knew of His Love and His Wrath and the ways to synthesize plastics, and shape glass in a manner to be flat and thin, and make circuit boards smaller and fit more pixels per inch, and dream up docudramas for the 8 PM Sunday slot on the American Broadcasting Channel. It is with God’s grace, my Lambs, that we are given culture, that next type of nature, and we must not forget all that culture provides, and for this Mankind, in the image of God, created television.</p>
<p>From <em>American Weather</em> by Charles McLeod. Copyright @ 2011 by Charles McLeod. Published by Harvill Secker, a division of Random House UK.</p>
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		<title>Eganism</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/eganism/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/eganism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Apr 2011 02:11:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Thomas Yagoda</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A Visit From The Goon Squad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jennifer Egan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pulitzer Prize]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[We’re very excited to learn that Jennifer Egan has won this year’s Pulitzer Prize for fiction for her terrifically kick-ass, beautifully woven and beautifully peopled book, A Visit From the Goon Squad. It has without a doubt been one of the more talked about books of fiction in recent years and for very good reason. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Jennifer-Egan.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2661" title="Jennifer Egan" src="http://dossierjournal.com/read/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Jennifer-Egan.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="731" /></a></p>
<p>We’re very excited to learn that Jennifer Egan has won this year’s Pulitzer Prize for fiction for her terrifically kick-ass, beautifully woven and beautifully peopled book, <em>A Visit From the Goon Squad</em>. It has without a doubt been one of the more talked about books of fiction in recent years and for very good reason. We have always had a huge amount of love for Jennifer’s stories and books; back in the second issue of <em>Dossier</em>, we had the great privilege of publishing <em>A to B</em>, one of <em>Goon Squad’s</em> wonderful chapters.</p>
<p>Congrats to the other fiction finalists, as well: Chang-rae Lee, <em>The Surrendered</em>; Jonathan Dee, <em>The Privileges</em>. We also congratulate Kay Ryan, recipient of the prize for poetry for her collection, <em>The</em> <em>Best of It: New and Selected Poems</em>; the other poetry finalists were: Maurice Manning for <em>The Common Man</em>, and Jean Valentine for <em>Break the Glass</em>. The prize for drama went to Bruce Norris for <em>Clybourne Par</em>k; John Guare&#8217;s <em>A Free Man of Color</em> and Lisa D&#8217;Amour&#8217;s <em>Detroit </em>were the other drama finalists.</p>
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		<title>Twisted Fate</title>
		<link>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/twisted-fate/</link>
		<comments>http://dossierjournal.com/read/fiction/twisted-fate/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Apr 2011 20:34:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sara Femenella</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hannah Pittard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Fates Will Find Their Way]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dossierjournal.com/read/?p=2639</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hannah Pittard’s The Fates Will Find their Way, published in January by Ecco, is about the slow, painfully circuitous journey from adolescence to adulthood. Told in the first person plural, (homage to Eugenides’ suburbia, no doubt), which manages somehow to be both hypnotic and tedious, a group of boys in an unnamed town recount growing [...]]]></description>
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<p>Hannah Pittard’s <em>The Fates Will Find their Way</em>, published in January by Ecco, is about the slow, painfully circuitous journey from adolescence to adulthood.  Told in the first person plural, (homage to Eugenides’ suburbia, no doubt), which manages somehow to be both hypnotic and tedious, a group of boys in an unnamed town recount growing up in the shadow of the mysterious disappearance of a high-school girl.  At the very beginning, the <em>we</em> is explained by what is called, the “phone tree etiquette,” a prescribed order of telephone calls from one mother to the next alerting each other that Nora Lindell never came home the night before, while the boys run from house to house, finally gathering in a basement, weaving tales about Nora that are part fact, part fantasy, part desire.  The book will spend a lot of time like this: with boys in basements speaking of things they know little about, telling stories that live in between what’s real and what isn’t.  Back and forth between a childish fascination and horror, and an adult empathy and responsibility, the narrative examines the inertia and the confusion of growing up, as if the boys are always on the brink of a discovery, never quite arriving there.</p>
<p>This disembodied voice, this plurality of voices, seems to oscillate between a multiplicity of speakers and one narrator who speaks for the group—an adolescent synecdoche.  The <em>we</em> is the witness, an observer not only to the lives of the Lindell family in the aftermath of Nora’s vanishing, but to their own lives as well.  As the boys age, marry, have homes and children of their own and their own personal griefs and joys, Pittard contemplates the distinction between the singular and collective experience.  A storyteller without a body is a storyteller lacking autonomy and so the boys move through their lives as bystanders, watching it happen to them, inevitable, certain.  In this way they are safe, as each grief and hardship is always born by another member of the group, is always another person’s adversity, another’s sorrow.  And yet, the witness is ultimately complicit to the event.  As the story winds through different pasts, different fantasies and different tragedies, a communal guilt begins to surface, as the act of seeing, of knowing, of telling, implicates one life in the next.</p>
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