Saturday, October 19, 2019

Celebrating Elmore Leonard's "Rules for Writing"

“When somebody’s wearing a mask, he’s gonna tell you the truth. When he’s not wearing a mask, it’s highly unlikely.” - Bob Dylan via BC



Why You Never See Your Friends Anymore


Our unpredictable and overburdened schedules are taking a dire toll on American society.



Franz Kafka’s “The Burrow,” because of the confident and convincing narrative voice of its obsessed narrator, who begins: “I have completed the construction of my burrow and it seems to be successful.”  Kafka fully inhabits his characters and presents them with a realism that makes them, though they are impossible, believable.
Make sure you read her short essay “Thirty Recommendations for Good Writing Habits” 
This is one of the very best books to read if you wish to think about writing more deeply.  You can pre-order it Essay One Lydia Davis 


Hemingway on Wolfe


Manuscripts, and spirits, are often saved by line editors. Ernest Hemingway began an October 1949 letter to Charles Scribner already in a mood: “The hell with writing today.” Then he opines about editor Maxwell Perkins and the novelist Thomas Wolfe: “If Max hadn’t cut ten tons of shit out of Wolfe everybody would have known how bad it is after the first book. Instead only pros like me or people who drink wine, not labels, know.” Years earlier, Hemingway had warned Perkins about his personality: “please remember that when I am loud mouthed, bitter, rude, son of a bitching and mistrustful I am really very reasonable and have great confidence and absolute trust in you.”




How Did A Promise For A Less Eurocentric Nobel Prize In Literature Turn Into Two European Winners?



And that’s not even taking into account the genocide apologist stance of the man who won. This two-year award “decision fails to demonstrate the widened perspective that Olsson promised. Taking him at his word, it invites questions about how diligent their search can have been, how knowledgeable the jury, and indeed how global a literary prize the Nobel can claim to be.” – The Guardian (UK)


Hyphens are a source of writerly vexation. I would have written 'loud-mouthed.' Papa was probably into his cups.





Celebrating Elmore Leonard's "Rules for Writing" | CrimeReads.
Leonard’s 10 rules have become so iconic, it’s sometimes easy to forget that he carried on for many good years discussing other nuances of literature and craft. Together, his critical analyses made up a kind of treasure map for writers of the future.
The rules, as Leonard established them, are—

  1. Never open a book with the weather.
  2. Avoid prologues.
  3. Never use a verb other than “said” to carry dialogue.
  4. Never use an adverb to modify the verb “said.”
  5. Keep your exclamation points under control!
  6. Never use the words “suddenly” or “all hell broke loose.”
  7. Use regional dialect, patois, sparingly.
  8. Avoid detailed descriptions of characters.
  9. Same for places and things.
  10. Leave out the parts readers tend to skip.


Overcoming Bias : Let Foreigners Speak
Let the listener beware. Don’t believe everything you hear, and if you don’t like what others say, then by all means criticize it. But don’t outlaw it. Or require people to say the opposite. We just shouldn’t consider it treason or espionage to encourage foreigners to influence domestic elections by talking. 



6 Tips for Artists Dealing with Creative Burnout - Artsy



Nicole Im interviews philosophical novelist Joanna Kavenna.

Viorica Patea on 'Ana Blandiana and Hölderlin's Eternal Question'.

Erin Blakemore on 'Jane Austen and the Value of Flaws'


Duncan Richter on 'War and Peace and Wittgenstein'. From 2015, Henry W. Pickford's book Thinking with Tolstoy and Wittgenstein: Expression, Emotion, and Art.

Danièle Moyal-Sharrock on 'Wittgenstein and Leavis: Literature and the Enactment of the Ethical'.

'Showing and Saying: An Aesthetic Difference' by Vicente Sanfélix Vidarte.

E. F. Mooney on 'Melville’s Moby Dick: Between Philosophy and Literature'.

From 2013, a conversation between E. F. Mooney and Dean Dettloff on 'Philosophical Style, Lyricism, Intimacy'.



The latest issue of Philosophy of Literature has a symposium on "Literature and Moral Vision" (paywall).