misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 03 2008 | books, printing, literature, publishing, writing
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - 21 days ago | books, literature, review, fiction, novel
James Woods reviews Rivka Galchen's first novel.
Quoted: That was the stage of loss I was in then I suppose, like the first days after someone dies, when you bend down to pick up every piece of lint, and you wonder what the dead person, when you meet her next, might have to say about her death (or about lint), and you worry, a little bit, about how that is going to be a very awkward conversation, the conversation with the recently dead.
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - 23 days ago | life, books, Education and Schools, writing and writers
Quoted: Writers who have been lucky enough to land these gigs are inclined to talk — when we aren’t grumbling — about their good fortune in sensible language, citing all that is sane, healthy, balanced and economically viable about their jobs. But another question is discussed less. What exactly does all this teaching do to our writing? And what, if anything, does it mean for a country to have a tenured literature?
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - 28 days ago | books, literature, writing and writers, biography
Short stories & essays by Wallace; videos, interviews, reviews...
Quoted: used his prodigious gifts as a writer — his manic, exuberant prose; his ferocious powers of observation, his ability to fuse avant garde techniques with old-fashioned moral seriousness — to create a series of strobe-lit portraits of a millennial America overdosing on the drugs of entertainment and self-gratification, and to capture, in the words of the musician Robert Plant, the myriad “deep and meaningless” facets of contemporary life.
ShareViewed: 6 Times
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 14 2008 | Writing and Writers, England, religion, fiction, non-fiction, biography, books, literature, Indian subcontinent, immigration, multiculturalism
Quoted: “The antidote to Puritanism isn’t licentiousness, but the recognition of what goes on inside human beings,” Kureishi wrote in the title essay of “The Word and the Bomb.” He added: “Fundamentalism is dictatorship of the mind, but a live culture is an exploration, and represents our endless curiosity about our own strangeness and impossible sexuality: wisdom is more important than doctrine; doubt more important than certainty. Fundamentalism implies the failure of our most significant attribute, our imagination.”
quoted: “effective multiculturalism”: not a superficial exchange of festivals and foods driven by liberal guilt, but something else entirely — an encounter with human desires in all their complexity. Or, as he wrote, “a robust and committed exchange of ideas — a conflict, which is worth enduring, rather than a war.”
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - May 18 2008 | library, books, literature, web 2.0
Quoted: Enter what you're reading or your whole library—it's an easy, library-quality catalog. LibraryThing also connects you with people who read the same things.
From hknapp's faves.
ShareViewed: 56 Times
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - May 14 2008 | Books, Literature, Vietnam, fiction
Quoted: The seven stories display an amazing confidence and range for so young an author, moving from a religious festival in Tehran to the days before an atomic bomb is dropped on Hiroshima to the cardboard shantytowns of Colombia where 14-year-old boys yearn to get “an office job,” slang for work as a hired assassin.
ShareViewed: 6 Times
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - May 09 2008 | books, art, photographyShareViewed: 3 Times
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 04 2008 | India, fiction, Books, Literature, review
Quoted:too used to freedom to accept the rituals and conventions of home, and yet too steeped in tradition to embrace American mores fully. These Indian-born parents want the American Dream for their children — name-brand schools, a prestigious job, a roomy house in the suburbs — but they are cautious about the pitfalls of life in this alien land, and isolated by their difficulties with language and customs. Their children too are often emotional outsiders: having grown up translating the mysteries of the United States for their relatives, they are fluent navigators of both Bengali and American culture but completely at home in neither;..
ShareViewed: 12 Times
misaacs | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 28 2007 | books, review, fiction, non-fiction, literatureShareViewed: 3 Times




Send isaacs a friend request or a personal message instead.