Friday, July 28, 2006
Summering at Lake Tahoe in the Gilded Age
Isaias Hellman moved into this shingle style house in 1903. He was the first millionaire to construct a mansion on the lake. The tourist trade had only taken off in the 1880s and most wealthy people summered at one of the lake’s fancy hotels. Hellman and his family spent a few summers at Hotel Tallac on the southern part of
Hellman fell in love with
For the last few years a group of volunteers has put on a Living History Day at Sugar Pine Point. I am going up there to give some talks about Hellman and to revel in the sight of people dressed up in ‘30s period costume. It should be fun.
Saturday, July 22, 2006
Alison Bechdel
I’ve only read a couple graphic novels in my life. Maybe I’m choosing well, but I’ve found them to be much like any good novel, intriguing, engrossing, and imbued with emotions.
Bechdel explains her book to the Village Voice and to the Powell's blog.
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Different Kinds of Lost Boys
Monday, July 17, 2006
The Making of a Biography
I was interested to read Michael Kazin’s review of The Most Famous Man in
The Rabiner and Fortunato book is the single best book I found on how to think about a book of serious non-fiction – the questions a book must pose and the narrative a book must follow. Most of the tomes on writing book proposals focus on “How-To” books, which wasn’t very helpful to me when I was thinking about writing a biography. I must have read Thinking Like Your Editor a half-dozen times while getting my own proposal together.
Rabiner is Applegate’s agent, and uses Applegate’s book proposal and a sample chapter as a central focus of the book. And from the early reviews the book has lived up to its hype. (By the way, the title original suggested for the book was Breach of Faith. I like that better than .)
JON CARROLL of the San Francisco Chronicle has a good column on book reading, collecting and reviewing.
The LitBlog Coop has recommended a new summer read: Michael Martone’s “Michael Martone.” (I kid you not.)
Tin House, one of the hippest literary journals around, hosts an annual fiction conference each summer in Oregon. Here's a report on the goings on. (Via Elegant Varietion)
Thursday, July 13, 2006
William T. Vollmann canonized
Now the Bancroft has decided that recent National Book Award winner William T. Vollmann deserves preservation in the pantheon. The library recently put out a call for donations of nearly all of Vollmann’s work. (I don’t think they extend this courtesy to most contemporary authors, so it’s an honor.) In particular, the library wants:
Whores for Gloria 1991
One of 20 copies handcrafted by William T. Vollmann and Ken Miller using the sheets from the Pantheon first edition.
From his Seven Dream series:
Argall, Viking 2000
The Rifles, Viking 1994
Fathers and Crows, Viking 1992
The Ice Shirt, Viking 1990
An
The Atlas, Viking 1996
Butterfly Stories, Grove 1993
Expelled from
Rising Up and Rising Down San Francisco: McSweeneys, 2003 7 volumes
Thirteen Stories and Thirteen Epitaphs, Pantheon 1993
You Bright and Risen Angels, Atheneum, 1987 (Bancroft has British edition, which precedes the American)
Angelina Jolie to Play Role of Journalist
Only in California
Take 27 talented authors. Ask them to write essays about
Tuesday, July 11, 2006
Progressive Reading Series
While there was a lot of George W. Bush-bashing at Monday night’s Progressive Reading Series in
Monday, July 10, 2006
Lots of Explanations
Nan A. Talese, the legendary editor who "edited" James Frey's A Million Little Pieces, explains herself. (via Pinky's Paperhaus)
Literary Doings in the Bay Area
Kids flocked to the San Francisco Symphony this weekend to hear the world premiere of a new symphony composed by the nefarious Lemony Snicket and Nathaniel Stookey. While the orchestra played, Snicket (aka Daniel Handler) narrated the 30-minute piece, called The Composer is Dead. It told the story of a dead composer and the search for his killer, with digressions into the lives of various famous musicians.
“How poignant and unbelievable," writer Maxine Hong Kingston told the Chronicle, noting that she first came to the store 48 years ago as a freshman at UC Berkeley.
"I walked in and found my haven and my home. It felt eternal. It felt like it would be here forever."
Dibs has a great -- if pointedly anti-leftist -- take on the celebration.Friday, July 07, 2006
Editor Who Took Chronicle Buy-Out is Out of Work Again
Jerry Roberts, a former top editor for the San Francisco Chronicle, quit the Santa Barbara News-Press this week, along with four other editors and reporters. They left because Wendy McCaw, who is very rich because of her marriage – and divorce – from cellular king Craig McCaw, keeps meddling with the editorial content of the paper. Apparently, Roberts was forcibly removed from the newsroom.
Thursday, July 06, 2006
What has she been doing for 10 days?
Making the transition from holiday to work is rough. I’ve been back from
I’m looking forward to going to a new incarnation of the Progressive Reading Series on Monday, July 10 at the Makeout Room on
Joshua Braff, a comic author if I ever saw one, will read from The Unspeakable Thoughts of Jacob Green at the