Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Featured Author: Angela Carter

This year has seen the publication of a new book about British author Angela Carter, who was, according to the book's publisher, "[w]idely acknowledged as one of the most important English writers of the last century...[her] work stands out for its bawdiness and linguistic zest, its hospitality to the fantastical and the absurd, and its extraordinary inventiveness and range. Her life was as vigorously modern and unconventional as anything in her fiction." The new book is called The Invention of Angela Carter by Edmund Gordon, and it is heavily based on memories of her contemporaries and her own personal journals.

Not familiar with Angela Carter? She did die in 1992 of cancer aged only 51 - a voice silenced too soon - and is not hugely well known outside of England. Raised in South London, in her late teens she rebelled from a sheltered, overprotected childhood to embrace a lifestyle that included being politically active - she considered herself a socialist and a feminist - and building "a reputation as someone who would say anything and take any risk." Carter worked briefly as a reporter, as a co-editor of a literary magazine, and taught at several universities, but mainly worked ferociously on her own "surprising and transgressive" books, including a book-length essay called The Sadeian Woman. She won a literary prize that allowed her to travel to Japan, where she led a bohemian lifestyle and took up with the first in a succession of younger men. She ended up back in England in the 1970s and had a child at the age of forty-three. Her literary protégés included Salman Rushdie, who called Carter a "benevolent white witch." Margaret Atwood called Carter a "fairy godmother." These kind of otherworldly descriptions have stuck to her posthumous reputation, though she was not overfond of that style of classification in life.

Her fiction, though she began writing with a more socially realistic bent, is "punctuated by extravagant flights of imagination," concerned with "“the social fictions that regulate our lives,” and is often associated with adjectives such as "savage,"  "thorny," and "fantastic."  Perhaps unsurprisingly, Carter was a fan of Wuthering Heights, and her "male romantic leads tend to be feral, violent, and encrusted with dirt." Author Joan Acocella says:

The English novelist Angela Carter is best known for her 1979 book “The Bloody Chamber,” which is a kind of updating of the classic European fairy tales. This does not mean that Carter’s Little Red Riding Hood chews gum or rides a motorcycle but that the strange things in those tales—the werewolves and snow maidens, the cobwebbed caves and liquefying mirrors—are made to live again by means of a prose informed by psychoanalysis and cinema and Symbolist poetry.

It's suggested that Carter's influences ranged from Baudelaire and Rimbaud to science fiction. Sex and autonomy were two of the most notable subjects that she returns to again and again in her writings. Her work was a way of questioning the world around her, and she was very clear that she did not have the answers.

The Bloody Chamber: And Other Stories

Nights at the Circus  

About the author: Angela Carter by Lorna Sage [eBook]

Part of the "Writers and Their Work" series, this book is described on Google Books thusly: "Although Angela Carter's work is considered part of the contemporary canon, its true strangeness is still only partially understood. Lorna Sage argues that one key to a better understanding of Carter's writings is the extraordinary intelligence with which she reads the cultural signs of our times. From camp subversiveness in the 1960s to fairy stories, gender-politics, and the theoretical 'pleasure of the text', which she made so real in her writing, Carter legitimized the life of fantasy, and celebrated the fertility of the female imagination more actively than any other writer of her generation. Lorna Sage's study explores the roots of Carter's originality, covering all her novels as well as some short stories and non-fiction."

For readalikes of Angela Carter, consider Jeanette Winterson, A.S. Byatt, Sarah Waters, Margaret Atwood, Katherine Dunn, Emma Donoghue, Francesca Lia Block, and Salman Rushdie.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Happy Belated Birthday, Pema Chodron

Paper lotus flowers. Photo. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/300_260268/1/300_260268/cite. Accessed 29 Aug 2017.

Pema Chödrön, who was born on July 14, 1936, is an American Tibetan Buddhist. She was born Deirdre Blomfield-Brown and is a graduate of Miss Porter's School in Connecticut and the University of California at Berkeley. Pema worked as an elementary school teacher in California and New Mexico and is a mother and grandmother.

When Pema traveled to the French Alps, she met Lama Chime Rinpoche and began her Tibetan Buddhism studies. She began her novitiate as a nun in 1974 and when the Sixteenth Karmapa to England where she was studying, Pema was official ordained.

Pema's most profound and enlightening experiences as a student were with her teacher Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, until his death in 1987. In 1984, Pema moved to Cape Breton, Nova Scotia and became the director of Gampo Abbey and established a monastery for Western monks and nuns. Pema teaches in the United States and Canada and has recently completed an extended silent retreat.

Reading Pema Chödrön's books can help people from any faith perspective - or no faith at all, take responsibility for one's feelings, entrenched complexes, and cultivate a compassionate detachment from fear, self-absorption, and delusions. Her wisdom and clarity makes even the most challenging day possible to get through with some compassion and grace. I turn to Pema Chödrön for guidance and to see how a grown-up would handle any situation. Pema Chödrön isn't a perfect person, which she cheerfully owns up to by sharing her own experiences that anyone could relate to. What she holds out is the hope of trying again to get back onto the path when we are lead astray by our pride and expectations.


Fail, Fail Again, Fail Better by Pema Chödrön

How to Meditate: A Practical Guide to Making Friends With Your Mind  by Pema Chödrön

Living Beautifully With Uncertainty and Change by Pema Chödrön


No Time to Lose: A Timely Guide to the Way of the Bodhisattva by Pema Chödrön

Practicing Peace In Times of War by Pema Chödrön




When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice For Difficult Times by Pema Chödrön



Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Roxane Gay: An Insightful Feminist




Roxane Gay is a Haitian-American writer, bisexual feminist, arts and culture critic, and a professor of English at Purdue University. I haven't been this moved by a writer since I discovered Alice Walker in the 1980's. Roxane Gay first appeared on my radar with her book Bad Feminist: Essays. Since then, I have enjoyed Difficult Women, An Untamed State, and her latest book Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body.

Feminism, as defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary:
1.: the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes
2.:  organized activity on behalf of women's rights and interests

Feminism is more complex than this definition and continues to evolve with every generation through diversity, ideology, and sociological issues. Roxane Gay's life experiences infuse her writing with a fiercely brilliant prose and elegant clarity. Gay is someone I would want to spend time watching reality television with to benefit from her analysis of what these shows say about our surreal society in between catch phrases such as "I didn't come here to make friends".  

Bad Feminist: Essays covers Gay's experiences in academia, women's friendships, gender, sexuality, politics, and racism in America. Her essays about misogyny in popular culture, music, and 50 Shades of Grey had me alternately laughing and wincing inside. Bad Feminist covers racism, rape culture, and envisions an underground reproductive railroad that women may need to resort to in these times that seem to want to force us into a pre-Margaret Sanger time warp. Her humor isn't laugh out loud, but sharp and insightful, making it possible to absorb her points without dissolving into tears of rage and frustration otherwise. This book is the perfect blend of essays that showcase Gay's skills as a cultural critic and intellectual. You can also get a daily dose of her thoughts on her Twitter feed.

I had the pleasure of reading Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body before reading Difficult Women or An Untamed State. Once I moved on to her fiction after reading Hunger, I was even more impressed with how Roxane Gay has woven her life experiences through fictional characters. An Untamed State was Roxane Gay's first novel about an affluent, privileged Haitian-American woman who is kidnapped for ransom by a band of rapacious criminals. The novel covers the thirteen days of Mireille Duval Jameson's captivity and her father's refusal to pay her ransom. Held captive by a man who calls himself The Commander and his accomplices, Mirelle is raped and tortured in retaliation until she is finally released. Chapters of the book follow her husband's impotent anguish and her father's rationalizations for not saving his daughter. Mirelle's ensuing post-traumatic disorder and recovery speak to a victim's sense of betrayal, devastation, and feeling contaminated by the evil of her perpetrators.

Roxane Gay's fiction, essays, and memoirs area a gift to women who are struggling with compulsive overeating, self-loathing, and our undeniable human needs in a dysfunctional society that expects women to be passive, quiet, decorative, and non-threatening to every insecure, cat-calling misogynist or Internet troll we encounter in daily life. Gay, who survived a gang-rape at age twelve, turned to food in order to emotionally survive her ordeal. She has described this memoir as her most personal and difficult book to write and it is difficult to read, but impossible to put down. Hunger pinpoints the inextricable link between trauma, addiction, and compulsions designed to block out what can't be survived otherwise. While seeking invisibility through excess food and weight, Gay strove for a protection and invisibility from men, but created what she describes as a prison of being physically immobilized and treated as less than human by our vain, superficial culture that coats its cruelty in hypocritical concern, dietary fads, and dangerous weight loss surgery.

Hunger is not a book about triumphant weight loss after a diet or being fifty or even 100 pounds overweight, but what physicians refer to as the range of extreme morbid obesity. Gay discusses the daily indignities she has to confront with airlines, at the gym, and in the grocery store. Her chapter about considering weight loss surgery highlights the dangers of this procedure which makes life in the aftermath sound like an even worse torture than the health hazards of obesity. As a cultural critic, Gay takes on the media's complicity in exploiting people through reality television shows such as The Biggest Loser and analysis of Oprah's public trials and tribulation with weight. Roxane Gay affirms that she "is stronger than I am broken", which gives readers hope that it is possible to live with our bodies in whatever state they may presently weigh, post-traumatic stress disorder, and to transcend cruelty and prejudice through awareness and courageous expression.

For more books on feminism, The Public Library offers the following books: 

All the Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and the Rise of An Independent Nation by Rebecca Traister

Colonize This!: Young Women of Color On Today's Feminism edited by Daisy Hernández and Bushra Rehman
Everyday Sexism by Laura Bates


Feminism Is For Everybody: Passionate Politics
 by bell hooks

Feminism Unfinished: A Short, Surprising History of American Women's Movements
by Dorothy Sue Cobble, Linda Gordon, and Astrid Henry 

Dead Feminists: Historic Heroines In Living Color by Chandler O'Leary and Jessica Spring
Fight Like a Girl: 50 Feminists Who Changed the World  by Laura Barcella 


Full Frontal Feminism: A Young Woman's Guide to Why Feminism
Matters by Jessica Valenti 

The H-Spot: The Feminist Pursuit of Happiness by Jill Filipovic  

The Mother of All Questions by Rebecca Solnit

My Life On the Road by Gloria Steinem

Sex Object: A Memoir by Jessica Valenti

The Supergirls: Fashion, Feminism, Fantasy, and the History of Comic Book Heroines
 by Mike Madrid 

Why I March: Images From the Women's March Around the World with photographs by Getty Images; editors: Samantha Weiner and Emma Jacobs 

Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture, and the Body by Susan Bordo

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Featured Author: Margaret Maron

Mystery author Margaret Maron burst onto the scene with the first novel of her Sigrid Harald series in 1981; her Deborah Knott series (for which she is beloved by us) did not begin until 1992. In the intervening years, Maron has won Edgar, Agatha, Anthony & Macavity Awards; been the President of Sisters in Crime; received the Grand Master Award from Mystery Writers of America; and many other accolades.

As of this writing, Margaret Maron has called time on both of her long-running series. She has not ruled out writing stories -which is how her career began 40 years ago -  she is "ready to be done with contracts and deadlines" though she has "learned to never say never." (!) Ohio public radio station WYSO 91.3's Book Nook program has applauded Maron's choice: "Don't you love it when somebody has the good grace to go out at the top of their game?" We'll miss Sigrid and Deborah, but we certainly applaud Margaret Maron's future plans, which include wading into her TBR pile.

If you haven't yet read any of Maron's award-winning mysteries, we encourage you to check them out! She created Sigrid Harald, a homicide detective with the NYPD, based on her experiences living in New York with her husband during the early years of their marriage. Deborah Knott is a North Carolina district judge - the change of setting reflects the author's upbringing "where the Piedmont meets the Sandhills" of that state, though she emphatically declares the character is not based on her own family life. Maron says she chose these professions for her detectives because "Other, more inventive writers can make it seem perfectly logical that a schoolteacher or real estate agent or cookie-baking mom would keep stumbling over murders that they could solve with their civilian skills, but I needed a sturdier reed on which to lean."

Sigrid Harald series
9 titles, with 2 available in the library catalog currently, Fugitive Colors and Take Out (the last 2 books of the series) 

Deborah Knott series
20 titles, beginning with Bootlegger's Daughter and ending with 2015's Long Upon the Land

These two characters of have a ying-yang relationship in Maron's mind - she created Deborah to be the opposite of Sigrid in many ways. Interestingly, Sigrid and Deborah are distantly related, and you can view Deborah's family tree - she's the youngest of a family of twelve - on Maron's website. The two detectives meet in Three Day Town, the 17th book in the Deborah Knott series.

Ms. Maron has also written a few non-series titles - try Last Lessons of Summer, for which she won North Carolina's Sir Walter Raleigh Award.

Thursday, August 17, 2017

Christian Fiction: Recommended Authors

Stories of Christian allegory have been rife throughout European literary history. What is catalogued as Christian fiction at your local library "does not have to involve an actual event or character in Bible history. A novel can be Christian in this sense merely because one of its characters either comes to a Christian understanding of God and of man's need for salvation from sin, or faces a crisis of his or her faith." What the genre and its most renowned publishers, such as Tyndal House, Zondervan, WaterBrook, Love Inspired, and Howard Books, have in common is a strict standard for content - as one publisher proclaims on its website, to it seeks to "minister to the spiritual needs of people, primarily through literature consistent with biblical principles" or, as another says, it publishes "...books that seek to intensify and satisfy a reader’s elemental thirst for a deeper relationship with God." As Deborah Bryan put it at the 2009 Mountain Plains Library Association/Kansas Library Association conference, in the handout for her presentation "Books For the Soul," authors writing for these publishers must "accept the infallible authority of the Bible; address life’s dilemmas through faith in Jesus; and believe that Jesus is divine, died, and rose again for the sins of humankind and that he will return again as a judge and a warrior. There are often certain 'taboos' or offensive content that [the authors] are not allowed to write about." There is a stereotype that Christian fiction is "popular with a certain readership, mostly white, female, and coming from an evangelical Protestant background," but there are countering claims that readers "love this genre because it quenches their inner thirst for knowledge, spiritual guidance, and, yes, entertainment" and that CF has started to embrace diversity, both in characters and storylines, and there has been significant genre crossover from CF's many subgenres - historical, romance (both contemporary and historical), mystery/suspense, literary fiction, legal thrillers, Amish.

It has been suggested that there has been a decline in the market for Christian fiction in the past few years - some companies have stopped publishing it altogether, or slimmed down their output - but mass market production for the genre continues to be strong. So show your support for CF by checking out some of these authors, available in the library catalog:

Terri Blackstock

Wanda E. Brunstetter

Colleen Coble

Dee Henderson 

Karen Kingsbury

Beverly Lewis

Ruth Reid

Francine Rivers

Joel C. Rosenberg

Randy Singer

Susan Sleeman

Lauraine Snelling

Michelle Stimpson 

William Young

If you'd like more suggestions, consider checking out the Christy Awards! This annual award, program of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA), is given to "honor Christian novels of excellence, imagination, and creativity." The award takes its name from Catherine Marshall's 1967 classic of the genre, due to be re-released this year. An alternative is the Carol Awards, awarded annually by the American Christian Fiction Writers to recognize "the best Christian fiction published in the previous calendar year." Also try the ACFW's Fiction Finder site.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Biographies of Children's Books Authors For Adults

Book Saleswoman . Fine Art. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/108_262773/1/108_262773/cite. Accessed 27 Jan 2017.
Thomas Wolfe said you can't go home again, and that often applies to your favorite children's books when you're an adult (though we think the Moomins stand the test of time quite well). We had a friend who found The Lonely Doll a bit disturbing as an adult, though she loved the book as a child, and this month's Smithsonian magazine has an article titled "The Little House on the Prairie Was Built on Native American Land," a critical look at Laura Ingalls Wilder's work; other books might contain ideas and/or situations that are less acceptable than they used to be, so sometimes you have to decide whether or not you want to share them with the children in your life. But what about you? How do you get your nostalgia fix if the treasured classic of your childhood no longer pulls at your heartstrings in the same way?

How about some backstory for your favorite children's literature? There are many biographies of children's authors in the library catalog. Sometimes you can learn more than you want to know about your idols - we know someone who was troubled by the T. H. White vein that runs through Helen Macdonald's H Is for Hawk - but often learning about the authors you love can be illuminating and can enhance your understanding of their books. The books on the following list tackle a bevy of different authors, some as straight biography, some as memoir, some approaching an aspect of their work. Who's the favorite author from your childhood? Let us know in the comments!

In the Great Green Room: The Life of Margaret Wise Brown by Amy Gary

Libertarians on the Prairie: Laura Ingalls Wilder, Rose Wilder Lane, and the Making of the Little House Books by Christine Woodside

Looking for Betty MacDonald: The Egg, the Plague, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle, and I by Paula Becker 

 

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Blunt, Sarcastic, Inappropriate: A Reading List Suggested by the Works of Carrie Fisher

There were too many painful losses to count in 2016, and the death of Carrie Fisher was among the most painful for me. I’ve never seen any of the Star Wars movies–-I never got around to it as a kid and now it’s just fun to watch people’s horrified reactions when I tell them I’ve never seen the iconic films. I read her memoir, Wishful Drinking, the year I got sober. I related to Fisher on many levels–-as a recovering alcoholic, as a person who has learned not to be ashamed of her depression, as someone who is really and truly obsessed with her dog, and as a woman who has always found humor in the blunt, the sarcastic, and the inappropriate. So inspired not just by Wishful Drinking but her entire life, here are 10 non-fiction books I think the Great Carrie Fisher, Our Misfit Queen, would appreciate. 
~Katie MacBride, "A Non-Fiction Reading List In Honor of Carrie Fisher"


To many, Carrie Fisher was first and foremost an actress and Hollywood royalty. To others, like us, Carrie Fisher might have first come to our attention as Princess Leia, but we'd come to think of her as an engaging writer with a dry wit who'd penned some scathing social commentary based on her own life experiences. You can find most of her books, fiction and non-fiction, in the library catalog. She was also  a screenwriter and script doctor. But she always had a distinctive point of view.

In everything she wrote, she was a character. Our eResource NoveList describes Carrie Fisher thusly:
In both fiction and memoir, Carrie Fisher captivates readers with candid, insightful, funny revelations about the difficulties of celebrity life. Her humor ranges from amusing to darkly humorous as she relates characters' (and her own) struggles with relationships, addictions, and mental health. Even in the worst situations there is bittersweet emotion, a sense of thrill in survival by being not quite sane. Fisher's personal voice is witty, as is that of her heroines who are often sarcastic or sassy. Though drawn from her real life, scenes often resemble high-drama.
When she was cruelly taken from us too soon in December, we lost a voice that was "funny and sharp and witty even as she was laying her soul wide open," a generous soul who was also "a fervent activist who spoke openly about her own struggles with mental health and addiction." Inspired by the Katie MacBride reading list quoted above, we've tried to find other writings that echo some part of her voice, the wry humor in the face of adversity, the warts-and-all acceptance of family, negotiating celebrity, a willingness to share her highs and especially her lows with the world, the unflinching courage to speak truth to power (as Tavis Smiley explains it, "comforting the afflicted, and afflicting the comfortable"). Can you think of other titles? Let us know in the comments!

STAR WARS: RETURN OF THE JEDI (1983) - FISHER, CARRIE; HAMILL, MARK. Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/144_1475199/1/144_1475199/cite. Accessed 8 Feb 2017.
 
 
Notes From the Underwire: Adventures From My Awkward and Lovely Life by Quinn Cummings


Fisher herself, meanwhile, would like it to be reported that she was drowned in moonlight, strangled by her own bra. The joint public memorial for Carrie and her mother, Debbie Reynolds, will be in Los Angeles on March 25th. 


Debbie, Todd & Carrie. Photographer. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/115_2842483/1/115_2842483/cite. Accessed 8 Feb 2017.

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Be Our Valentine, Jennifer Weiner


New York Times bestselling author Jennifer Weiner has released her memoir Hungry Heart: Adventures In Life, Love, and Writing and it's a warm, touching, funny, and insightful book that makes you wish she was your best friend in real life. However, you can maintain appropriate boundaries and follow Jennifer on her priceless Twitter account instead and enjoy her tweets of wisdom and obsession with the ABC reality show The Bachelor.

Hungry Heart is part memoir, part essays, and all heart when it comes to her generous sharing of life lessons about being a writer, mother, wife, and dog lover. She courageously confronts painful memories of being a nerdy outsider as a child, her parent's divorce, and her father's descent into mental illness and addiction. Weiner takes her family along for the ride, including her mom, sister, and beloved Nanna having to deal with the mean girls in the retirement home. Every chapter contains sparks of wisdom, humor, and forgiveness, along with deep inner strength that comes from resolving to accept oneself and strive for independence.

Weiner's feminist perspectives on weight and beauty are liberating and made me feel like pursuing self-care instead of self-condemnation. Her letter to her daughters about being more than our looks should be required reading for preteens. She doesn't give the publishing industry  a break when it comes to inequality and misogyny either. Her squabble with the insufferable writer Jonathan Franzen who dissed Oprah and her popular book club several years ago was blatant disrespect and a reason why Oprah went through a spell of only promoting dead writers, because they were far less troublesome and ungrateful.

Jennifer Weiner is more that Oprah sticker worthy, so read her fabulous canon of chick lit that deserves some respect!


Good In Bed

In Her Shoes

Little Earthquakes

Goodnight Nobody

The Guy Not Taken: Stories

Certain Girls

Best Friends Forever

Fly Away Home

Then Came You

The Next Best Thing

All Fall Down

Who Do You Love?

Littlest Bigfoot



Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Remembrance of Literary Hoaxes Past


London Lesbian & Gay Film Festival - Foyles Bookstore, Charing Cross Road. [Photography]. Retrieved from Encyclopædia Britannica ImageQuest. 



The documentary, Author: The JT Leroy Story, written, directed and produced by Jeff Feuerzeig, revisits a decade-long literary hoax perpetrated by writer Laura Albert. Albert, who has avoided the media, is the focus of the documentary, giving her a generous opportunity to share the story of her life and the evolution of her literary avatar: Jeremiah Terminator (J.T.) Leroy.

J.T. Leroy was a blond, blue-eyed, transsexual hustler HIV-positive boy, who was addicted to heroin and hailed from West Virginia. He was the son of an abusive teenage mother who worked as a truck stop prostitute or "lot lizard". J.T. Leroy embarked on a Kerouac-ian On the Road odyssey with his monstrous mother, only to be abandoned in San Francisco among the other discarded gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered (GLBTQ) runaways with substance abuse problems who relied on prostitution and homeless shelters to survive.

J.T. first surfaced through a suicide hotline in the 1990's. He was treated by psychologist Dr. Terrence Owens through phone calls, but never in person. Dr. Owens encouraged his transient patient to write his life story in order to heal from abuse and trauma. J.T. claimed that because he wanted to write more than he wanted heroin, he was able to kick his addiction. Despite a complete lack of education, J.T. produced novels in the Southern Gothic tradition that were lyrically entrancing and violently salacious. J.T. reached out to his literary heroes: Sharon Olds, Mary Karr, Brucer Benderson, Joel Rose, Laurie Stone, and  Dennis Cooper. Publishers were eager to give him book deals and publicity that most writers spend lifetimes to acquire. Hollywood followed suit with movie offers.  J.T. Leroy's novels The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things, Sarah and Harold's End became bestsellers that were translated into over twenty languages.

Celebrities adored J.T. and agreed to read his books at readings since he was too emotionally fragile and would only rarely appear in public concealed behind Andy Warholian wigs, massive sunglasses, and elaborate costumes. J.T. spoke in feminine whispers with an unconvincing Southern accent. His lack of Adam's apple was explained by his being a preoperative transsexual on massive amounts of hormones whose growth was stunted by horrific abuse. J.T. was always accompanied by his grating British publicist Speedy and her musician husband Astor, his adoptive family who had formed a band they called Thistle, which opened every reading event.

Leroy branched out into publishing articles and posing for fashionable magazines. His imminent death due to HIV was no longer spoken of, and inconsistencies regarding his upcoming gender reassignment surgery also baffled supporters. Writers and journalists connected to the San Francisco arts and the literary community began to compare notes and tallied their doubts and concerns. Journalist and writer Stephen Beachy wrote an outstanding article for New York Magazine that dared to ask the question, Who Is J.T. Leroy?

New York Times journalist Warren St. John was also following his own leads and produced an article:  The Unmasking of J.T. Leroy: In Public, He's a She. J.T. Leroy was revealed to be Laura Albert's partner musician Geoffrey Knoop's half-sister Savannah Knoop, an aspiring clothing designer. Laura Albert never apologized to anyone then, and continues to not acknowledge that she harmed or deceived anyone. Albert insists that her avatar J.T. Leroy merely surfaced and did everything for her creatively, that she was unable to do for herself.

Laura Albert's confessions in Author reveal her insecurities and mental illness which was compounded by an abusive childhood and time spent in a group home, where she developed a habit of calling crisis hotlines. Albert attended the New School in New York, but was discouraged by her professor to write in a male voice. Albert's education was disrupted by another nervous breakdown and she abandoned writing. For several years, she worked as a phone sex operator, had a child with her partner Geoff Knoop, and underwent a gastric bypass surgery after a lifetime of compulsive overeating left her at 325 pounds.

Albert denies that she has multiple personality disorder, but the emergence of J.T. Leroy produced what Albert called a "psychic limb" that propelled her back into the literary world and fulfilled her wish to be a blond, blue-eyed boy that gay men would desire and love. Albert's protestations that she was merely using a pen name ring false, especially since J.T. Leroy and his entourage traveled the world and signed lucrative contracts under false pretenses, sheltered by a fake corporation put in Laura Albert's mother's name. Albert was sued by a movie company for $350,000.The chaos left in Albert's wake prompted debates over the literary merits of her novels.  Whether Albert would have been published without her avatar J.T. Leroy, who titillated the publishing industry and tugged at the heart strings of his supporter and readers is doubtful.

Author is a fascinating documentary that also gives the viewers moments of schadenfreude in witnessing self-indulgent celebrities gush over an imposter, especially through the phone calls Albert illegally taped, including Courtney Love, Gus Van Sant,, and Asia Argento.  Author is one-sided and fails to account for the emotional devastation experienced by ordinary people who considered themselves to be friends of J.T. Leroy. Many friends were subjected to Laura Albert's terrifying dissociative episodes and suicide threats and found themselves emotionally drained by the experience. The Cult of J.T. Leroy by Marjorie Strum tells their stories much more sympathetically.  I made a staff suggestion for the library to acquire Strum's superior documentary, which includes the deposition of Dr. Terrance Owens, who appears to be the most compassionate and thoughtful psychologist on the planet. Dr. Owens is still working with homeless runaways and Laura Albert continues to be his patient, even after her fraud came to light. 

An interview with Ira Silverberg, Leroy's former agent discussed the predatory cultural appropriation of a straight, middle-class woman impersonating a HIV positive, marginalized transsexual during a period in the 1990's when a generation of gay artists and writers perished. Albert's hoax preyed on a community that was receptive to helping anyone struggling with AIDS, especially since sufferers were frequently abandoned by their families and the disease at that time was in and of itself, an automatic death sentence, before the advent of the AIDS cocktail and scientific breakthroughs that increased the chances of survival.

One of the fatal flaws in Albert's scheme was having J.T. Leroy be HIV positive. Albert was lazy when she decided to use the blueprint of another woman named  Joanne Victoria Fraginals, a middle-aged woman who claimed to be a social worker who had saved and adopted a young AIDS-stricken, sexually abused boy named Anthony Godby Johnson, who had escaped a ravenous pedophile ring lead by his parents in New York City. The fourteen-year-old "Tony" released a treacly memoir entitled "Between a Rock and a Hard Place" that went through six printings and had a forward by poet, AIDS activist, and author Paul Monette and an afterward by the beloved Mister Fred Rogers. In the midst of this hoax, acclaimed novelist Armistead Maupin, who is famous for his Tales of the City series,  was befriended by Tony over the phone. However, no one had ever met Tony in person. Newsweek journalist Michele Ingrassia started to ask simple questions about Tony and also attempted to locate Tony's felonious parents, but the district attorney had no record of ever trying such a notorious case. The pathetic hoax quickly collapsed despite Fraginals strenuous efforts to keep the hoax going and Armistead Maupin channeled his experience into his extraordinary novel The Night Listener which was turned into a less than spectacular movie, but one that delivers on the hair-raising creepy suspense of dealing with the unraveling of a fraud's mental and imaginary construct.

Literary frauds are nothing new, but in the course of visiting Laura Albert's world, I learned about other icky phenomenon's, like misery lit and grief porn, which even a connoisseur of true crime books, documentaries, and TV shows (like myself) find distasteful. Perhaps we could go outside and get some fresh air and find healthier ways to cope with our dark sides, or you could check out some of the following books and movies. 


The Oxford Book of Parodies edited by John Gross 

Catfish [DVD]

Fraud [eBook] : essays by David Rakoff

The Family Romance of the Impostor-Poet Thomas Chatterton by Louise J. Kaplan 

Geronimo's Bones: A Memoir of My Brother and Me by Nasdijj. 

The Man In the Rockefeller Suit: The Astonishing Rise and Spectacular Fall of a Serial Imposter by Mark Seal

The Hoax by Clifford Irving  

Three Cups of Deceit: How Greg Mortenson, Humanitarian Hero, Lost His Way by Jon Krakauer 

A Million Little Pieces [eBook] by James Frey


 

Thursday, January 19, 2017

The Multi-Faceted Nick Cave

"At the end of the 20th Century, I ceased to be a human being. I wake, I write, I eat, I watch TV...I'm a cannibal - looking for someone to cook in a pot."
~Nick Cave, 20,000 Days on Earth 

We'd like to put forth the claim that Australian musician Nick Cave is a polymath (he's been called "the renaissance man of the “postpunk” generation"); if not that, you have to admit, he's one of the harder-working men in show biz. He writes and plays music (with more than one band - 16 albums with the Bad Seeds, movie soundtracks with Warren Ellis, and is part of Grinderman), writes novels and screenplays, and has acted (as himself, sort of) in movies. "Commited Cave divers" (his fans have some wacky names) will not be disappointed by his prodigious output.

Cave's work is not for everyone - he's been called "too dark, too alternately demonic or densely romantic; too literate, strange and grandiose" as he writes about some of his favorite themes, "[l]ove, violence, death and America." We ourselves are latecomers to his oeuvre - he started out in The Boys Next Door in 1977 (later to morph into the Birthday Party in 1980), and started up the Bad Seeds in 1984 - but, apart from brief exposure to the song "Into My Arms" in the 1990s when Cave was dating PJ Harvey, we have to confess our interest was piqued first by the film 20,000 Days On Earth. Here's one of our favorite quotes from the film:

All of our days are numbered. We can not afford to be idle. To act on a bad idea is better than to not act at all because the worth of the idea never becomes apparent until you do it. Sometimes this idea can be the smallest thing in the world; a little flame that you hunch over and cup with your hand and pray will not be extinguished by all the storm that howls about it. If you can hold on to that flame, great things can be constructed around it; things that are massive and powerful and world changing. All held up by the tiniest of ideas.

The library catalog has a good sampling of Nick Cave's work, if you choose to give it a try. Whatever you do, don't miss "End Crawl" on the Lawless soundtrack! A lovely piece of instrumental music.


Albums

Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!

Murder Ballads

The Boatman's Call

Push The Sky Away

Skeleton Tree 

Grinderman


Screenplay

The Proposition


Soundtracks

Lawless [CD + DVD]

West of Memphis [DVD]

Hell or High Water [hoopla eMusic]

The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford  [CD + DVD]


Books

The Death of Bunny Munro

The Sick Bag Song


Film

cameo (with the Bad Seeds) in Wings of Desire

Johnny Suede [hoopla eVideo]

20,000 Days on Earth


For Children

one song, "Sweet Rosyanne," with Dan Zanes on Catch That Train!


Nick Cave is also participating in the "grown-up children's tales" charity book Stories for Ways and Means, and you can listen to The Wire's Andre Royo perform Cave's story "The Lonely Giant" online.