Today’s video has been making the rounds lately, but for a commercial it’s quite lovely. Of course, all the icy images appeal to me, but I think the images and the direction (by Bruno Aveillan) are sleek and lush at the same time. If you go to the website for l‘Odyssée de Cartier, you’ll find some Bonus Features (about the Making Of, the Score, and the Panther).
♦ Aren’t you glad you went and listened to it? So, so good. CBC, I hope you listened.
Speaking of good, here’s one of my favorite lines this week, via Caitlin R. Kiernan‘s livejournal: “Art is a hammer. Art is meant to push.”
Also, this thought from E. B. White: “If the world were merely seductive, that would be easy. If it were merely challenging, that would be no problem. But I arise in the morning torn between a desire to improve the world and a desire to enjoy the world. This makes it hard to plan the day.”
♦ At Tor.com, Meghan Deans continues the “Reopening The X-Files” feature by exploring “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose,” which is one of my most favorite—and one of the best, period–episodes of The X-Files.
♦ Here’s a book cover that caught my eye this week:
The cover artist is the incomparable Mike Mignola, who does something magnificent with composition and darkness. Jonte gave me the heads up about this cover before I had time to read the Super Punch post on it myself, but give that link a click to see two other book covers that I think are pretty sweet.
Speaking of fairy tales, I ran across two interesting posts this week comparing the upcoming Snow White films, Mirror, Mirror and Snow White and the Huntsman: “Is Snow White a Badass?” by Kit Steinkellner and “Snow White Trailer v. Snow White Trailer: A Sorta Fairy Tale” by Leigh Bardugo. I know where my interest lies now, based solely on the trailers.
♦ For the cartography fans out there, I offer two interesting links:
Maria Popova, over at Brain Pickings, introduces readers to The Booklovers Map of America Showing Certain Landmarks of Literary Geography, designed by Paul M. Raine in 1933. Did you know the birthplace of American literature is Boston? Thank heavens this map confirms it, as seen in the detail image below. Do click through to see more images from the map, and at the end of the post is a link to another post about seven books on or about maps. Via.
My friend Matt Switliski wrote a thoughtful post about the reader, the writer, and the problem of time. I’ve been struggling with the same issue of time for reading in the last several years and, finally and after much despair, conceded that I simply will never be able to read all the books that I want to read, especially since new books constantly arrive that also want to be read. It’s a sad, sobering realization.
Sassafras Lowrey has a great interview with Jeanette Winterson about her new memoir, the power of books, and more besides. Check out her thoughts about reading and writing.
Here’s some good stuff: Book Monster by Chris Buzelli, for an article “about children who struggle with reading and are afraid of the text itself.” These monsters look pretty adorable to me, though. Via.
Last week I shared the book trailer for Caitlin R. Kiernan‘s new novel, The Drowning Girl: A Memoir. This week I offer this fantastic review by Brit Mandelo at Tor. com (the review is fantastic in its praise of the novel but also its deft understanding of it). If I wasn’t super-excited about The Drowning Girl before, I would be after reading that review. Here’s a teaser:
That’s another bit that I fell in absolute love with: the construction of an argument about what stories are or can be, and what ghosts are or can be, that revolves around an understanding of hauntings as a sort of contagious social meme.
Also, enjoy Kiernan’s poem, “Atlantis,” over at Strange Horizons.
♦ Encouraging article by Victoria Strauss at The Washington Post about why STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) is not enough and why we still need the humanities. I say “encouraging” because the more people write and talk about the humanities, the better. A lot of folks don’t seem to realize that to make technological leaps requires creativity, which is best developed through the humanities. Everything has to work together, people. Via.
How to bring this reality into the MFA world could be as simple as offering solid course material on today’s publishing business, as creative as requiring that graduates display social media competency, or as innovative as collaborative ventures with other academic areas. At the least, MFA programs owe it to their students to provide space for individuals to discover their own definition of success as a writer along with faculty-led guidance for how to build a course of study to support those goals.
Okay, friends, here’s a confession: I finally watched the first season of Downton Abbey and loved it (is anyone surprised?). Cathy Day, whose blog I also love, wrote a post in January about why Downton Abbey is addictive and instructive (for writers), which I held off reading until I watched it. She looks at the first fifteen minutes of the first episode and examines how major dramatic questions are introduced, how each scene has some spike of conflict, and also how we’re supposed to “read” the series.
David Malki !’s Wondermark is one of my favorite webcomics, and this week he slipped in some really good writing advice. Check out “The Wish of the Starhorse“—and be sure after you’ve finished to run your cursor over the cartoon. That idea is important to keep in mind when you’re writing your characters, whether they’re the heroes or (perhaps even especially) the villains.
Trying to figure out how to be more or at least more consistently creative? Simon Whaley recommends keeping a creativity diary.
There’s more cutting, sorting, organizing in my future, because I really do need to get my life into some semblance of order. I know the life I want to create for myself. It’s just a question of whether I have the courage to do it, the will to work hard enough. I think I do.
Of course, I’ve been telling myself I need to my life in order for a while….
♦ Over at The Comics Journal, Ken Parille’s very fine article, “‘This Man, This Monster’: Super-Heroes and Super-Sexism,” had some fascinating insights into why and how male heroes are depicted (I share a lot of these insights—if only I’d written my essay about this subject when I had the chance!). Here’s a teaser for you:
Our ancestors were one in a long line of societies in which religion’s defining struggle—the war against the flesh—revealed itself in ideas about clothing. These codes have been most visible in female fashion: since the sight of an ankle or a wrist can instantly send men into a sexual frenzy, they must be protected, not from female temptresses, but from themselves, from their own uncontrollable animalistic and even monstrous nature.
The actions of fanatical males around the world remind us that a woman can be stoned (or worse) if she fails to comply with her culture’s dress code. It would be easy, then, to think that such codes are fundamentally about the patriarchy’s need to control girls and women, while liberating boys and men. But such systems also tell us about males’ fears and desires about other males’ bodies.
♦ Don’t watch this commercial if you’re easily creeped out (the still image might tell you all you need to know), but I really liked the visual imagery—yes, a pun! Plus, it reminded me and will probably remind other Sandman readers, of The Corinthian. Via.
♦Another well-done commercial, Levi’s Stretch to Fit jeans. Some lovely modern ballet (thanks to Micah for linking to this video on Facebook!), and those jeans do stretch to fit.
♦And I leave you with astrophysicist Dr. Neil DeGrasse Tyson‘s response to the question, “What is the most astounding fact you can share with us about the universe?” (via):
What I like about Tyson’s astounding fact—that we are made of the universe—is that how perfectly it can work with any belief system, secular or religious (if you replace “universe” with your deity of choice). And it puts me in mind of one of my favorite quotations about religion, from the Babylon 5 television series, wherein Delenn attempts to explain her people’s religious beliefs: “We believe that the universe itself is conscious in a way that we can never truly understand. It is engaged in a search for meaning. So it breaks itself apart, investing its own consciousness in every form of life. We are the universe trying to understand itself.” Or, to quote E.M. Forster, “Only connect….”
Today I have another fairy-tale adaptation video for your viewing enjoyment, Navin Dev’s Red Hood. Many of you know that Little Red Riding Hood is one of my favorite fairy tales, and Dev makes some fun and interesting choices with his short film. Here’s the official description:
Once upon a time, cloaked in her favoured red hood, Little Red Cap set off to Grandmother. But soon she was drawn away from the designated path by what the surrounding woods had to offer—mysteries, beauty, and the Wolf. Red, now a 40-year-old woman, still bears the same fears, guilt and anger as she remembers the day her life changed. Creating a new red hood for her daughter, she must now make the ultimate choice as to whether or not to pass on her identity and in turn her fate.
Red Hood is about a parent’s hope and the creation of fateful decisions through inner confrontation. The truth behind the production was to remain faithful to the original intentions of the Brothers Grimm. Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm describe that tales are “fragments of belief dating back to the most ancient times, in which spiritual things are expressed in a figurative manner.” Stitching a new red hood reminds Red of that fateful day as a child when her duteous routine of attending to Grandmother broke as she began to take in wonders of the outer world around her—including the Wolf. Her Grandmother once passed on her very own fears of growth in the symbolic form of the red hood to Little Red; could this cycle repeat again?
Winner of Best Foreign Film award at the Washougal International Film Festival 2008 (US). Shortlisted for Best Short Film award at Sefton Short Film Festival 2008 (UK).
Here are some shiny things that caught my eye recently:
♦ PistolesPress makes some beautiful, beautiful book art. Check out this accordion tunnel book:
Naomi Bardoff has more pictures of this book over at the SFCB blog; below she offers this description:
Tunnel books, or peepshow books, are books in which cutouts allow the viewer to see through several pages or the entire book to create an illusion of depth and create a stage-like scene. They are usually in concertina form, which allows the book to stand on its own for display, and for more space staggered between the pages. PistolesPress instead uses accordion books, and codex-bound books with the cut-out pages staggered, to create scenes.
♦ While the reviews of the set suggest it’s pretty craptastic for the price, I love the design of the 31-disc Harry Potter Wizards Collection boxed set. But the Amazon-discounted $350 is a bit pricey, even for my aesthetic. Via.
♦ On Facebook, Alison McMahan gave me the heads’ up about Cole Gamble and Cathal Logue’s article on Cracked about 9 Foreign Words the English Language Desperately Needs. My favorites are the Georgian shemomedjamo (“To eat past the point of being full just because the food tastes good”), the Finnnish pilkunnussija (“A person who believes it is their destiny to stamp out all spelling and punctuation mistakes at the cost of popularity, self-esteem and mental well-being”), and, perhaps the most important to my own life, the German Kummerspeck (literally translated as “grief bacon”: “Excess weight gained from emotional overeating”). Mmmmmm, grief bacon.
Tor.com has devoted March to The Palencar Project, wherein David Hartwell found an unassigned painting by John Jude Palencar (see image at left) and commissioned short stories based on the art from five writers: Gene Wolfe (March 7), James Morrow (March 14), Michael Swanwick (March 21), and Gregory Benford (March 28). The first story, “New World Blues” by L.E. Modesitt, Jr., debuted February 29th.
Kelly Thompson posted a list of 10 Graphic Novels for the Literary Minded at LitReactor. Whether you’re interested in short fiction, young adult, fantasy, action/adventure, mystery, or science fiction, Thompson has a suggestion.
I was so happy that Greer Gilman posted about “a newly discovered short story by Sylvia Townsend Warner,” “Flowers” (and there are three others). The lost stories were found in the New York Public Library archives, and Warner fans have much cause for rejoicing. Unfortunately, these stories (collected as The Doll’s House) are not available yet in America. If you’re unfamiliar with Warner (she wrote the luminous Lolly Willowes, about an unmarried older woman who decides to become a witch), Gilman also linked to a great essay about her by Sarah Waters.
If you’re a fan of Goodnight Moon and Dune, you’ll love Goodnight Dune(thanks to Cameron for the link!). It made me really happy.
Thanks to Elizabeth Hand for on Facebook posting about this New York Times article, “Internet Archive’s Repository Collects Thousands of Books,” by David Streitfeld. In short, Brewster Kahle, who founded the Internet Archive, wants to “collect one [physical] copy of every book in existence” and has already spent $3 million building his repository. I have to say, I do feel a little better about the future now (which, for me, is saying something!).
♦In the category of “I want one of these inside my house,” why is it always California that has cool stuff like a 24-hour cupcake-dispensing ATM?
♦Patrick Smith designed minimalist posters visually expressing six mental disorders, and they’re pretty spot on (click here to download PDFs of all the designs). Below are the two that spoke to me the most, which you can click to see larger. (I’d seen the first versions of these posters about two years ago, but they came back to my attention recently via.
♦ I couldn’t wait until Friday to share this video, which just cracked me up. Nathan Fillion and Tim Daly are pretty awesome. Also, I can’t believe Tim Daly has an adult son! Via.
♦CaitlínR. Kiernanhas a new novel coming out this month, The Drowning Girl: A Memoir, which I’m excited about (a new Kiernan book is always cause for excitement). Below is the book trailer, which is exceptionally lovely (directed by Kiernan with photography byKyle Cassidy and Brian Siano).
Today’s video is The Tree Man (2009), written and directed by Navin Dev, which is an interstitial adaptation of Pinocchio. Here’s the official description:
Set between Chapters 15 and 16 of Carlo Collodi’s classic novel The Adventures of Pinocchio, The Tree Man depicts Pinocchio’s seemingly final minutes as he hangs from a tree. As he slowly dies, the wooden marionette spiritually journeys into an inferno of fear, guilt and hope through his encounters with key symbolic characters such as the Maiden with Azure Hair and the ghost of the Talking Cricket. As he falls deeper into darkness he learns the crucial dangers and virtues of the mortality he seeks.
Winner of Jury Award for Best Short Film at Puppets on Film Festival 2011 (UK).
Next week, Dev’s short-film adaptation of “Little Red Riding Hood”!
"How should we be able to forget those ancient myths that are at the beginning of all peoples, the myths about dragons that at the last moment turn into princesses; perhaps all the dragons of our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us once beautiful and brave. Perhaps everything terrible is in its deepest being something helpless that wants help from us.” ~Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet, trans. M.D. Herter Norton