Showing posts with label bdtdaeatc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bdtdaeatc. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Eugene Lim's FOG & CAR + boinking in a baby year


Last night I sat down to start reading Eugene Lim's FOG & CAR, the other of the two debut books from Ellipsis Press along with Eugene Marten's WASTE, which I loved and talked about a while back, I hadn't meant to read for very long but found myself unable to stop reading the book. FOG & CAR is a strange amalgam of several ideas, it begins with a dissolved marriage from which both ends begin to branch and splinter and spread back into each other in weird ways. I was surprised to be so captivated by a book about a ruined marriage, which it is only on the surface, what it really is is a puzzle and a book of worming forms, sometimes the tense shifts or lines are layered and/or repeated, there is a lot of subtle innovation, refreshing.

The first section uses these calm and almost Lutz-like renditions of the two divorcees, Fog and Car, trying to smooth their lives out into something, Eugene Lim writes about the cleaning of houses, the method of a swimming routine, and all in this meditative, language-conscious but not overtly languaged and extremely absorbing way, the book also continues to evolve by stretching the forms of the way the words are delivered, but again, in calm and nuanced methods.



In grad school Amy Hempel had us read a Mark Richard story, I can't remember the name of it, I think it is the first one in THE ICE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WORLD, Amy, in perhaps her only 'lecture-like moment' of the workshops talked some about how Richard was able to show the passage of time by using fields and dogs rather than talking about time, and how it opened the language and the feel of the words in this surprising way, I think Eugene Lim's descriptions here worked on me in that way, though rather than over the function of time it was over the function of distancing and grief, so much so that I couldn't stop wanting to propel through it, and I was so pleased to find myself reading a book supposedly about relationships about still feeling completely engrossed, as I hate relationships in books usually, for their wheel-spinning, I think people who get excited about Richard Yates would really enjoy the meditative stancing of the early sections especially.

Then there are two more sections in which Lim continues to open the way the story is built into an almost Paul Auster kind of maze, path-inducing manner, there is following and weird rooms and strange phenomenon that continue to be braided together but left open in other strands.

Here is a sentence from the book that maybe exhibits the balance of strange and familiar sense of both situation and language in FOG & CAR: "He forgot his name and became her bellybutton."

Then, in the last third of the book, which begins to develop into a really strange configuration of earlier elements and a linking of space, I hit a page, a strange development involving a man in an empty room and an elevator, and a little later, further linking, which made me stop and touch the book against my chest. I remember not knowing what to do having read it, it was very late by then and I'd stayed up longer than I meant to, and yet I wanted to keep reading, and yet couldn't the page had stopped me in a way that I felt I needed to think about rather than go on with the rest of the book right there, I went to bed. I could not stop thinking about the book in such a way that I stayed awake for several further hours, and when I finally did sleep I had a dream about writing about the book as I am now, and other dreams branching off from the book. When I woke I walked around for a while and then finished reading.

FOG & CAR is new in familiar ways and familiar in new ways, and altogether a thing that turned my mind on in such a mode that I could not turn it off.

Along with WASTE, if you haven't gotten on board already, both are available from Ellipsis as a package deal. I can't imagine an innovative fiction press with a better introductory one-two punch.










Right before I woke up for the last time this morning, I had a dream where Marilyn Manson was talking to me, he was speaking a quote, the quote, I knew somehow, was from someone named 'Vivino', talking about chess strategy, which Manson was applying to something about writing he and I had been talking about, I have no idea why I was talking to Marilyn Manson about writing, the quote was, "Begin with a false position & allow the position to become." This may become the epigram for RICKY'S ANUS, which I am deep in. Deep in Ricky's Anus.











I got a galley of Jesse Ball's new forthcoming novel THE WAY THROUGH DOORS in the mail today. Fuck yeah.











There is a new issue of BUST DOWN THE DOOR AND EAT ALL THE CHICKENS, I have a story in it, as does Sam Pink, Ofelia Hunt, Mike Young, Matthew Simmons, D. Harlan Wilson, Darby Larson and several others, I can't wait to read it, the cover is amazing. Thanks to Bradley Sands for his hard work and wild mind.

The issue is only $5 plus a little shipping, 'the squarest price in town.'

Monday, June 16, 2008

WANTED

Bradley Sands is looking for 2-5k stories to fill out the next issue of BUST DOWN THE DOOR AND EAT ALL THE CHICKENS. See guidelines here and send him some stuff.

Brief review of Brandon Hobson's THE LEVITATIONIST @ HOTBOOKS.

I am looking to trade books. I am bored as fuck today and can't get anything done except staring blankly. I think something is about to happen to the earth.

If anyone has any of these books I want to trade for them, I would buy but I don't have extra $$ right now, I have a lot of stuff I can trade, email me or comment for a list if you have any of these:

BLACK MAPS by David Jauss
KNOCKEMSTIFF by Donald Ray Pollock
THE BLOODY CHAMBER by Angela Carter
THE END OF THE WORLD BOOK by Alistair McCartney
THE MAIMED by Hermann Ungar
THE THING ABOUT LIFE IS THAT ONE DAY YOU'LL BE DEAD by David Shields
TODAY I WROTE NOTHING by Daniil Kharms
THE BALOONISTS by Eula Bliss
PAIN FANTASY by Jason Bredle
REMAINLAND by Aase Berg
TWENTY GRAND by Rebecca Curtis
MURMUR by Laura Allen
PRIMITIVE MENTOR by Dean Young
THE STREET OF CROCODILES by Bruno Schulz
LOG OF THE S.S. MRS. UNGUENTINE by Stanley Crawford
COLOR OF DARKNESS by James Purdy
JOURNAL OF ALBION MOONLIGHT by Kenneth Patchen
IT WAS LIKE MY TRYING TO HAVE A TENDER HEARTED NATURE by Diane Williams
VERA & LINUS by Jesse Ball
FRANCES JOHNSON by Stacey Levine
FLATS by Rudolph Wurlitzer
PEACE by Gene Wolfe
THE HAUNTED HILLBILLY by Derek McCormack
TIN GOD by Terese Svoboda
INCARNATE: STORY MATERIAL by Thalia Field
STORY OF THE EYE by George Bataille
THE OBSCENE BIRD OF NIGHT by Jose Donoso
SKIN by Kellie Wells
COSMOS by Witold Gombrowicz
THE TORMENTED MIRROR by Russell Edson
THE CONSUMER by M. Gira
--- more wants added ---
REASONS FOR KNOCKING AT AN EMPTY HOUSE by Bill Viola
THE DIARY OF A RAPIST by Evan S. Connell
THE BEAR BRYANT FUNERAL TRAIN by Brad Vice
JAMESTOWN by Matthew Sharpe
THE VOYEUR by Alain Robbe-Grillet
HIDDEN CAMERA by Zoran Zivkovic
ANAGRAMS by Lorrie Moore
MY HAPPY LIFE by Lydia Millet

I am becoming a moron.