Sunday, June 24, 2018

Kold Pi and the Meandering Paths of Rivers

Almanac: William Haggard on well-made plays 

INK BOTTLE“He liked a play to have a beginning and a middle and an end; he liked to spot the crises, to recognize a craftsman at his business of constructing craftily; he like a firm ending, to leave the theatre with that tiny scar on consciousness which meant he had been moved.”
William Haggard, Closed Circuit

We are all just moments in time, a blink in a trillion-year history, even if our existence sometimes feels endless...

Rivers run through our civilisations like strings through beads,” Olivia Laing wrote in her stunning meditation on life, loss, and the meaning of rivers“There is a mystery about rivers that draws us to them, for they rise from hidden places and travel by routes that are not always tomorrow where they might be today.” But this chaotic, civilization-strewing mystery may be underpinned by one of the most elemental mathematical truths of nature

Pi and the Meandering Paths of Rivers





Why Has American Theatre Declined In The Past 30 Years?


In America, nothing sucks the oxygen out of the room with more deadly force than financial success. Musicals are booming, so that is where all the attention and money is streaming, a sweet spot that magically unites commerce, branding, and universities. This is not to say there have not been terrific songfests over the past 25 years. Just that it explains why our most talented stage practitioners are not writing plays, but working hard at scoring with the latest lucrative singing/dancing sensation. … Read More





Martin Amis: Writers Have To Expect Something Different From Readers


“I think most writers are wedded to social realism, these days — social realism is the only genre left. And there’s been a contraction, as I was saying, of what you can expect from the reader. It’s not a conscious decision to cease to be as complex as you might once have been; it’s just going with the flow of things. It was Trilling, wasn’t it, who said we like complex books? The truth is, we may once have liked them, but we don’t anymore.”

Martin Amis on Poetry and Posterity

AS smart and funny as his novels are, Martin Amis is a devastatingly good essayist as well. I spoke to him recently about his latest collection, The Rub of Time, which assembles several decades ... read more