Last post

I'm saying goodbye and thank you for reading and commenting. If you don't already have these links, here are some super places to spend your lunchtimes (there are too many to include here so I will miss some excellent ones, for which I apologise; and I know that there are exciting new sites being set up all the time so feel free to add them):
The New York Times Book Review
The New Yorker's Book Bench
Book Covers
Harper's Wyatt Mason's Sentences
The Complete Review's Literary Saloon
New York magazine Books
Media Bistro's Galleycat
Guardian Book News
Tiggy Johnson's blog: Words in Progress
Time Out New York Books
The New York Times Paper Cuts blog
ABC Radio National's Book Show
Angela Meyer's blog: Literary Minded
Genevieve Tucker's blog: Reeling and writhing
Mark Sarvas's blog: The Elegant Variation

19-September-08

The thing I remember most about 'The Weasel, Twelve Monkeys, and the Shrub', DFW's essay on John McCain (Rolling Stone, 2000), is the way in which Wallace forced me to get inside McCain's head, especially by making me think about what it was like when his plane was shot down and he was so badly injured in Vietnam. 'Try for a moment to feel this.' And I did. DFW was a writer of incredible compassion and empathy and I can learn a lot from him. He will be missed. Personal recollections of him here.

18-September-08

Guardian Books blog: Foster Wallace is a huge loss, by Robert Potts

17-September-08

Baltimore Sun: The Life of Kings – The genius of David Foster Wallace and the ugliness of depression, with some good links to his articles

The Believer interview: Dave Eggers corresponds with DFW

'The really important kind of freedom involves attention and awareness and discipline, and being able truly to care about other people and to sacrifice for them over and over in myriad petty, unsexy ways every day.'
- Read the whole of DFW's commencement speech at Kenyon University, 2005

16-September-08

DFW: James Ley writes an obituary in the Australian

15-September-08

David Foster Wallace on Charlie Rose, which I may have linked to before

14-September-08

Black news. David Foster Wallace RIP

12-September-08

1. Guardian blog: Knut Hamsun - the Nazi novelist you should read
2. Edward Champion is demanding curry accountability for John Sutherland

11-September-08

1. Authonomy looks interesting, thanks to JNW
2. I love Robert Heinlein's Fan Mail Solution, thanks to The Book Bench

10-September-08

1. I had a bet with a friend that the Steve Toltz would be shortlisted for the Booker – if only I'd put money on it
2. I would love to have been in the creative meeting that came up with my current favourite ad

9-September-08

1. Fred Ramey's Unbridled Books blog
2. NY Times: Juliana Hatfield's memoir, When I Grow Up, is out: Juliana Hatfield Feels Her Way Beyond the Spotlight
3. Helen De Witt's The Last Samurai was such a brilliant read that I am automatically looking forward to her next one, which is co-authored, and written in Mellel – here's Jenny Turner's look at Your Name Here (as yet unpublished) in the LRB

5-September-08

David Rakoff made me one of his special Duct Tape Wallets, multi-coloured. Made only from duct tape, it is an actual, useable, wallet – but I haven't had the heart to start ruining it yet, it's a work of art. Seeing David perform was an absolute highlight of the festival for me.

3-September-08

1. Robert Drewe talked about the joys of growing up with comic books. SMH: Batman and Philosophy: The Dark Knight of the Soul
2. LRB: Michael Wood on The Dark Knight At the Movies: 'Heath Ledger, who died of a drug overdose at the beginning of this year, was until now best known as the stolid hero of a remake of The Four Feathers (2002) and as the rather more complex figure at the centre of Brokeback Mountain (2005). Nothing we have seen of his career prepares us for what he can do as the Joker. By turns authoritative and wheedling, often speaking casually, with long pauses, as if talking to himself, always acting, aware of circumstance and timing, and very rarely manic (unlike the always manic Nicholson, for example), he creates a character who is attractive and horrifying in exactly the right proportions: attractive because horrifying, perhaps.'
3. The Triple R FM Radiothon is over for the year but you can still subscribe and be in the running for the huge Readings voucher, and more...
4. The New Yorker: 'The Dinner Party' by Joshua Ferris: ' "I can predict everything that will happen from the moment they arrive to the little kiss on the cheek goodbye and I just can't goddamn do it."
"You could stick your tongue down her throat instead of the kiss goodbye," she offered casually as she continued to dice. She was game, his wife. She spoke to him in bad taste freely and he considered it one of her best qualities.'
5. The new Coen Brothers film: Burn After Reading – I never get sick of Frances McDormand

2- September-08

1. Anya Ulinich was lovely and funny
4. The new Meanjin is sensational (and a new website is on its way, but checkout the cover here)
5. Dear Henry: a little bit of mentoring on how the world works by Catherine Deveny: raises some excellent points about free versus paid work
6. The new Overland: packed full of goodies
7. Anita Heiss reminded me of the existence of Trixie Beldens
8. Which, in turn, reminded me of Sweet Valley Highs, with a world about as far from my high school in England as you could get.