Seeing Double

When I was in wearing my editor hat, there was one writer who drove me crazy. He double-spaced every single sentence he wrote, no matter how many times I pointed out that it was incorrect.
I spent many many hours using find/replace to rid myself of all that extra space.
Any style guide used by a writer, journalist, or editor points out that a single space between sentences is the correct (and only) way to separate them.
So why do so many people not only use that double space, but also insist on it being correct? Slate has come to my rescue with a well-researched answer. The short version is that it's the old-fashioned typewriter's fault. You can read the article here.
We haven't used typewriters (or their old-school type) for years, so I wish that all you high-tech computer users would stop being so spacey.

Getting Graphic

I am a huge fan of infographics, those fabulous visual maps that break down facts, figures, and info into colorful blocks. They are kind of like board games for information.
Random House has a great new infographic for its books coming out this fall, called "What Do You Feel Like Reading?" You can find it by clicking here.
You can decide that you want to read something mysterious, and then decide if that mystery should also include ghosts, an inspector, or perhaps a serial killer. The whole thing is designed to match you with the perfect fall read.
And now I need to go add most of those books to my list of what I have to read this fall.

Your Government at Work


I'm not including a recipe with this book review, because after reading it I experienced a strange combo of nausea and heartburn. Not because of the writing, of course, just the topic. It's bad enough just watching our government at work from afar (cue ridiculous filibuster news), but this behind-the-scenes look is all you imagined it could be. And more.
This Town starts with the sad event of Tim Russert's funeral. It was a time for reflection, for moments of silence ... and for Pan Cake makeup and jockeying for position.
Russert's funeral is a crass, crazy event for Washington insiders, but actually nothing different from every other interaction between the two parties and various hangers-on. And, after the first few pages, you find yourself as agog as Dorothy was when the curtain was pulled back to reveal the true Oz. Author Mark Leibovich, chief national correspondent for The New York Times Magazine, is our guide and, thanks to his inside-yet-outside post in D.C., he has a great view of the hive of activity behind the curtain. In fact, he reminded me of a Dominick Dunne for politicos, dishing the dirt while occasionally getting a bit on himself.
I find it fascinating that Leibovich can dish and still get access later for articles and exclusives. But that's part of the game – when those in the spotlight say they don't want to be mentioned, but are devastated when they really aren't.
Pollsters, politicians, pundits, and press all get the same straight-shooter treatment in This Town – and Leibovich doesn't spare himself. He recognizes the absurdity of skewering the very group that he is a part of.
Here are a few examples of the searingly funny insights:
Describing Sen. Harry Reid: "Entrusted with a Senate supermajority and endowed with all the magnetism of a dried snail." A persnickety straight shooter who can't bring himself to employ social graces like saying goodbye on the phone. When he's done, he's done.
Former Sen. Trent Lott is described as a creature of habit who likes things just so, including "his luscious helmet of senatorial hair." That paints a picture for you, right?
And then there is the insider-speak of the Congress, which includes the phrase "my friend," as the "formal bullshit of the Senate." And the word "cordial," which is used as "the bare minimum salute and Washington dog whistle for obvious hatred."
It's funny how all of this bluster and blather seems so critical on the scene and in the hothouse that is D.C., but outside the Beltway is often laughable. Except when you realize that they are playing with our money and with our futures. Not so funny at that point.
The media is all part and parcel of the game, often participating with almost too much enthusiasm. "Founding father" Tom Brokaw nailed it when he "bemoaned what the political-media culture had become. Americans, he said, had come to view the political system as a 'closed game.' In addition, the media is now less concerned with being in tune with America than they are with promoting their own brands and worshipping celebrities. 'It's all Look at Me, Look at Me, Look at Me,' he said." Yep.
This Town also offers revealing coverage of the 2008 and 2012 elections, describing an aloof President (or candidate) Obama and his "not us" crowd who get dragged into the political fray whether they want to or not.
As the saying goes, politics make for strange bedfellows, like the sometimes sticky relationships between POTUS and VPOTUS: "While Obama had come to like Biden, he often talked about him with a patronizing over fondness – as if the VP were the beloved family dog that kept peeing on the carpet."
But the old dog can bite back too, saying that "the minute you agree to be someone's running mate, you get your balls cut off."
On the bus during the campaigns, Leibovich says that Romney's eventual running mate Paul Ryan was a "bold pick they had assumed the cautious Romney would never make." Ryan was known as a "man of substance" who wore the "Halo of the Wonk." After all, he had actually studied the federal budget, which you'll be happy to know most politicians in Washington never do.
And Romney seemed "to acquire an instant lightness after his Ryan selection -- like a shy eight-year-old transformed by a new pet turtle." It's sentences like that one that made me a fan of Leibovich's writing.
As we all know, the bruising fights between the Romney-bots and Obamites got really ugly really fast. Politicians themselves said they hated what it had all become, with supporters pumping billions into political campaigns while the net worth of American families dropped to a median of $77,300, about where it was in 1990.
In reality, though, Leibovich says, "This Town loved the trickle-down payday of it all. Millions more paid to the ad makers, 'strategists,' and networks."
The insanity of the build-up to an election can be all-pervasive and seem never-ending, and then it can oh-so-quickly vanish: "The Romney campaign had filed permits to celebrate Mitten's big victory with an eight-minute fireworks display over Boston Harbor." But within minutes of POTUS winning a second term, Mitt Romney's "Secret Service detail vanished like unused fireworks."
After the scrum of months (years, really), everyone walked away feeling a little dirty.
But even with the election hangover, it just took a few aspirin and some time apart before the whole machine started kicking in again. After all: "The only certainty is that the city fathers of This Town will endure like perennials in a well-tended cemetery."
Hillary in 2016, anyone?

American Writers Museum

What do China, Germany, Korea, Scotland, Brazil, and Ireland have that the U.S. does not have? A national writers museum. Although the U.S. has over 17,000 museums, there isn't a single one dedicated to the plethora of fabulous authors this country has produced. Yes, there are small museums that showcase a single writer, usually in his or her former home, but there isn't a national institution that celebrates all writers.
A new foundation is working to right that wrong, hoping to launch the American Writers Museum in Chicago in 2015. In the plans are core exhibits that will highlight the history of American literature in chronological order.
Other planned exhibits include Nobel Laureates, Great Characters in American Literature, Poetry of Revolution, Rare Books, Children's Literature, and Censorship: Banned Books. There will also be a Hall of Honor for major award winners, as well as art and photography exhibits to celebrate cover art.
I'm making a donation to be a Chapter One Patron. If you love books, consider supporting this amazing museum by clicking here.

The Long and the Short of It

If I didn't know better (and perhaps I don't), I would swear that my two favorite book awards are trying to one-up each other.
First came the news in January that the National Book Award was "re-examining its rules" and would for the first time ever introduce four long lists for each of its award categories - Poetry, Young People's Literature, Fiction, and Nonfiction. This would allow room for more nominees, and would also mirror what another British award program just happens to do already.
That was followed yesterday by the announcement that the Man Booker Prize had also done some soul-searching. They have long had a long list (sorry), but have now decided to open the contest up to all "writing in English," not just English writing. That may seem like hair-splitting, but the Man Booker previously was open only to UK citizens. Now this "global expansion" opens the award to writers from "Chicago to Sheffield to Shanghai."
Here is my color commentary on this one-on-one game: NBA knocked the ball out of the MBP court with its new long lists. Then MBP said, "oh no you didn't," stole the ball back, and took it right to NBA's own home turf. Boom.
If you think I'm making a Jets vs Sharks thing out of nothing, let me also point out that there was a little matter of dates. The National Book Award had said it would announce its long list right on top of the Man Booker's announce date for its short list (see the NBA long lists below). And, coincidentally, the short list for the NBA will be only one day after the Man Booker names its winner in October. Hmmmm.
But after this major change to the Man Booker, I think the ball is in your court, NBA. Play nicely, everyone.

National Book Award Long Lists


Fiction
Pacific, by Tom Drury
The End of the Point, by Elizabeth Graver
The Flame Throwers, by Rachel Kushner
The Lowland, by Jhumpa Lahiri (shortlisted for the Man Booker)
A Constellation of Vital Phenomena, by Anthony Marra
The Good Lord Bird, by James McBride
Someone, by Alice McDermott
Bleeding Edge, by Thomas Pynchon
Tenth of December, by George Saunders
Fools, by Joan Silber

Nonfiction (evidently the rules say the title must include a colon)
Finding Florida: The True Story of the Sunshine State, T.D. Allman
Facing the Wave: A Journey in the Wake of the Tsunami, by Gretel Ehrlich
The Wolf and the Watchman: A Father, a Son, and the CIA, by Scott C. Johnson
Book of Ages: The Life and Opinions of Jane Franklin, by Jill Lepore
Hitler's Furies: German Women in the Nazi Killing Fields, by Wendy Lower
Freedom National: The Destruction of Slavery in the United States 1861-1865, by James Oakes
The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America, by George Packer
The Internal Enemy: Slavery and War in Virginia 1772-1832, by Alan Taylor
Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington, by Terry Teachout
Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, & the Prison of Belief, by Lawrence Wright (see my review here)

Poetry
Metaphysical Dog, by Frank Bidart
Bury My Clothes, by Roger Bonair-Agard
Stay, Illusion, by Lucie Brock-Broido
So Recently Rent a World, New and Selected Poems 1968-2012, by Andrei Codrescu
Seasonal Works with Letters on Fire, by Brenda Hillman
The Big Smoke, by Adrian Matejka
American Amnesiac, by Diane Raptosh
Black Aperture, by Matt Rasmussen
Transfer of Qualities, by Martha Ronk
Incarnadine: Poems, by Mary Szybist

Young People's Literature
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, by Kathi Appelt
Flora and Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures, by Kate DiCamillo
A Tangle of Knots, by Lisa Graff
The Summer Prince, by Alaya Dawn Johnson
The Thing About Luck, by Cynthia Kadohata
Two Boys Kissing, by David Levithan
Far Far Away, by Tom McNeal
Picture Me Gone, by Meg Rosoff
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu
Boxers & Saints, by Gene Luen Yang

Review + Interview: Southern Exposure

Review: Lookaway, Lookaway

by Wilton Barnhardt

A wise woman once said that there is more truth in comedy than in tragedy. That's usually most true in a Southern sense of humor, where there is a razor-thin line between laughter and sadness.
Comedic entertainment was the reason I was drawn to Lookaway, Lookaway in the first place. Previews lauded it as a deliciously dishy look at the Southern country club set and their good-time Greek-life offspring. As a Southerner myself, the touch-the-pearls cover art had me reaching for the popcorn (and wine), ready to sink into a satiric send-up of the moneyed crew in Charlotte, N.C., near where I grew up.
Lookaway delivered with a fabulously snarky take on all that can be rich-kitsch in the South: cotillions, country clubs, family secrets, deadly serious Civil War reenactments, debutantes, divas, and grown women calling their fathers "daddy." Perfect.
And at the center of it all is the dysfunctional Jarvis/Johnston family, a motley crew of loud-mouths, spoiled girls, society matrons, and crazy uncles. The heart of the blue-blood tribe is Jerene Jarvis Johnston, a dynamite doyenne with a mighty triple-J monogram on her silver who shepherds her brood through triumph and tragedy with a cool hand wrapped in a silk glove. While each family member has a say in Lookaway, with a chapter detailing his or her slice of life and also moving the plot forward, Jerene is always in the middle of it all like every good "steel magnolia."
But, just as I thought I had Lookaway all figured out, Barnhardt delivered a one-two punch of bittersweet twists and on-the-mark writing, revealing a slice of tragedy under the coating of comedy. The Southern voice is a true one – not the cornpone-and-julep version that makes me grit my teeth. And there is enough pathos to tip a hat to the very best of the Southern Gothic tradition.
I realized I was close to shedding a tear (heaven forfend) over Jerene's daughter Jerilyn and her not-to-be-spoken-of time in college, Jerene's sad sister Dillard, the sweetly befuddled Duke Johnston and his thwarted career in real estate, and pastor Bo, who struggles to fit in at his own church.
Yes, there was plenty of humor in characters like Jerene's mother Jeanette, who refuses to acknowledge reality. Or in Gaston Jarvis, a frustrated famous author who wishes he could step away from his schlocky-but-successful set of Civil War novels. But there was also a sense of misspent-youth and anger in Gaston that kept him from slipping into a buffoonish character.
Gaston also delivers the best homage to Southern homesickness, thanks to Barnhardt's deft writing: "He longed to instead be driving on the tar-patched macadam of N.C. Highway 49, speeding from Charlotte to Durham, still an undergraduate racing back to campus in his rattletrap used car, the red earth of the roadside embankments, the surprise views of the ancient Uwharrie Mountains, that upland ridge connected to no other, smack in the middle of the state for no logical geological reason, dense green woods crowded with deer, roadside vegetable stands with hand-painted signs, red painted scrawl on a whitewashed board, that last chance in September for a taste of the Sandhills peaches..."
Those memories, and that writing, can start up a yearning in me that can't be described to someone who didn't grow up here.
That's the yin and yang of the South, the push and pull of our love for place and family, and our railing against its shortcomings and faults. It's why the Southern literature genre is so rich and why we Southerners can't imagine life in any other way.


Author Interview: Wilton Barnhardt

Lookaway's author Wilton Barnhardt was kind enough to answer a few questions for me about his Southern roots, "steel magnolia" women, and his favorite Southern authors. He must have heard me muttering "please say Faulkner, please say Faulkner" as I sent him the questions...

I grew up outside Charlotte and the Myers Park clique that you so perfectly captured in Lookaway, Lookaway. You also grew up on the fringes of that “moneyed” group in North Carolina – how did that shape you, and this book?
Wilton Barnhardt: My dad was a chemist at R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, my mom a schoolteacher, so we were not High Society or even low society. But in my day, rich kids and aristocratic scions actually went to public high school so I got to meet people from the upper echelons. It was really their mothers who fascinated me – the bearing, the dress, the perfect appearance, so different from my earnest harried homemaker Mom. Since I've been in the arts and in the MFA world down here at NC State, I have mingled with my share of the elite as well, since we spend a lot of time fundraising and schmoozing – but also just plain socializing, since the well-off are often the cultured, well-read people, too. I'm sort of a grubby kid outside the mansion looking in, but, like lots of American writers before me, I am fascinated by the privileged and their rules and rituals.

Which of the Jarvis/Johnston family members do you most relate to yourself? Is there a part of you in any of them? Or in all of them?
WB: All of them, a little bit. I've got Annie's weight problem and big mouth!

One thing I appreciated about Lookaway, is that even with the satire, the Civil War reenactments, the country clubs, and the debutante balls, you didn’t fall into a mean-spirited indictment of the South. Each character represents something good and something flawed about Southerners. Too often we’re lumped in as one general stereotype – what is the one generalization that you find most unfair about the South?
WB: I'm happy you said that. Because we're so traditional (another way of saying we can't escape from our history), people imagine we're not modern or at the cutting edge of technology or art like anywhere else in the country. They're surprised to meet game-designers and software pioneers with Southern accents. We're also assumed – the whites, anyway – to have a monopoly on racism. I think racism is mostly alive in our politics, but not so much in our day-to-day mingling and socializing. Ghettos seem to me a Northern template; a lot of the work of integration goes on every day in the South in a way it doesn't always up north.

I love your send-up of a steely Southern matriarch in Jerene Johnston, showing that most Southern women may soften their consonants while at the same time hardening their resolve. You have said your own mother is most definitely not the inspiration for Jerene, but don’t you find that all Southern women have a bit of that ‘steel magnolia’ inside them?
WB: Not all, I suppose, but the interesting Southern women are always are tough as nails. That may be a stereotype, for both black and white, the matriarchal unbreakable titan... but that one's truer than most!

Like Gaston Jarvis in the book, you “ran away” from the South, intent on never coming back. And, just like so many other Southerners, you were sucked back in. I thought you perfectly captured that feeling with Gaston’s longing for the memories and sensory experience of riding along the highway between Charlotte and Durham. What did you long for when you were away from the South?
WB: Our people look a certain country way. The red clay banks on the side of a tar-patched concrete highway through rolling hills of jungle-like vegetation and an overlay of kudzu, devouring abandoned shacks and telephone poles. Barbecue. Good black preaching on an AM station, fading in then fading out. Roadside peach stands.

You have said that you will only write one Southern novel. Why only one?
WB: I try not to repeat myself on anything – in part, to focus myself, to say everything I have to say when I'm on a subject. I have a European novel next, then a Western.

Who are your favorite Southern writers and why?
WB: Faulkner and Welty are the twin towers. For living writers, it's hard to beat Ron Rash and Jill McCorkle in short stories; Edward P. Jones, Valerie Martin, Gail Godwin; I try not miss what George Singleton and Percival Everett get up to, south of the Carolina border. No one does what Lee Smith does better than Lee Smith. I send my students to Pinion by Claudia Emerson and Kyrie by Ellen Bryant Voigt – books of poetry as deep and satisfying a narrative as any novel.

Did you really research Lookaway by hanging around sorority houses at Chapel Hill during Rush Week? Did you have any run-ins with the sorority sisters themselves who wondered why you were there? Sounds like another novel waiting to happen…
WB: I'm sure they took no notice of me! It was actually their public blogs and rush accounts that helped me most. I went to the statewide Debutante Ball in Raleigh, too; visited a Civil War renactment. That's the most fun part of writing – the so-called research.

And Then There Were Six

I made a bit of a veiled threat last week about the Man Booker Prize - and it worked. Obviously my power knows no bounds since We Need New Names was right there at the top of the Man Booker short list, announced today. 
Luckily, the books I have already read are the ones that made the list as well, including The Luminaries, Harvest, The Lowland, A Tale for the Time Being, and The Testament of Mary. 
At this point, my money is on either We Need New Names or The Testament of Mary. But I'll reserve final judgement after I've read them all - and I'll give you my review of all six before the official winner is announced on Oct. 15. 
It has been a great week so far with the announcement of this short list and the amazing Bookmarks festival on Saturday. See my photos below. Really looking forward to the next Bookmarks event in October when I'll get to meet Lemony Snicket. Hey, don't judge. His books are awesome. 





It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year

Forget those overblown winter holidays. If you're any kind of book lover, fall is the season that we dream about, thanks to new books, fab festivals, and lots of prizes and awards.
This Saturday, I'll be heading to one of my favorite book festivals, BookMarks, held in nearby Winston-Salem. Last year, I had a blast meeting authors like Michael Malone and Gillian Flynn. Gillian even signed my book with an nod to our weird names and the constant mispronunciations we both endure (hers is pronounced like Gilligan, not like Jillian).
This year's line-up is just as promising, and includes Jill McCorkle, Debbie Macomber, Carl Weber, Ann B. Ross, and Craig Johnson. I will also be volunteering at a table for the Bienenstock Furniture Library, the largest furniture specialty library in the world. That library is based in High Point, NC, and has over 5,000 furniture and design books in its collection. I've had a sneak peek at what they will sell at the festival, and let me just say that I already know I'll be dropping some serious dollars at that table.
It isn't just the one-day festival that I love, though. BookMarks hosts Lit/Flix, a showcase of movies made from novels, and Eat & Greet events that showcase why food and books make such a delicious combination. If you're going to be in the area this weekend, be sure you head to their website to see what's coming up (http://bookmarksnc.org).
In just a few days, the Man Booker Prize will announce its short list of finalists. I've been plowing through the long list, and I'm not sure I'll make it through all of them before the short list comes out on Sept. 10, but I do have some favorites already. We Need New Names had better be on that short list.
On Sept. 12, the National Book Award announces its long list - which means it's time to add to my ever-growing list of books I must read immediately. The new long lists for the NBA will include 10 titles now, in the same four categories of Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry, and Young People's Literature. That is 40 books, in case you don't want to do the math. While I appreciate that the National Book Award execs believe this will allow them to recognize more fantastic books, I'm not sure they realize what they are doing to me.
Look for a post from me about Bookmarks next Monday, and the short list from Man Booker Prize on Tuesday, and the National Book Award long lists on Thursday. And then don't look for me anywhere else; I'll be cocooned in my house with thousands of books.

Goodbye to Summer

Summer is the time of year that is most likely to revive my childhood nostalgia, particularly for what seemed like endless sunny days and nights full of adventure.
At this unofficial close of the summer, I've selected three of my favorite books from this year that captured all that is fun, bittersweet, and occasionally exasperating about summer vacations.
My selections were based on their success at hitting that perfect note, with one about chaotic and crowded family vacations, one about summer camp (that turned into a longer stay), and the final one takes me right back to my high school days when I worked at a local amusement park.
So as the leaves turn and the nights get crisper, recapture your summer memories with these great reads.

Shorecliff

by Ursula DeYoung
When you're an only child, taking a vacation with 10 older cousins sounds like the very best way to spend a summer, which means that 13-year-old Richard Killing can hardly wait to get to Shorecliff, his mother's family estate in Maine. In that summer of 1928, he's ready to throw himself into endless games of croquet on the lawn, wading into the ocean, and picking buckets of blueberries. But his older cousins aren't quite as interested in those types of games anymore, and adult feelings of love, jealousy, frustration, and a need for independence cause ripples in those halcyon days. Richard is bewildered by how his cousins have changed, and isn't entirely sure why things are so different. He listens and observes at the periphery, sometimes hearing deeper secrets than he expected. Suddenly the summer isn't all fun and games, and Richard's eavesdropping is unfortunately at the heart of what finally goes awry.

The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls

by Anton DiSclafani
As the Depression deepens in the South, 15-year-old Thea Atwell is sent away from her Florida family for the summer, to a riding camp deep in the North Carolina mountains. She isn't sent away to protect her from events, but instead to punish her for a horrific act that shocks her family. Away from her sheltered life and beloved twin brother for the first time, Thea is dropped into a world of girls that she doesn't understand. There are codes and rules of behavior that she hasn't learned, necessary survival skills that she must grasp quickly to fit in. As summer ends, Thea realizes that she will continue on at the year-round Yonahlossee school. Feeling ostracized from her family and hurt by the rejection, Thea finds solace in her favorite horse, and yet still searches for someone to love her as she is. A forbidden relationship helps her heal, but leads to more rejection as Thea learns that navigating adulthood is far more difficult than she thought.

Joyland

by Stephen King
If you know anything about Stephen King, you know that he is not merely the master of the thriller. He has always had the innate ability to write about nostalgia and childhood in a way that transports you straight back to your own early days. In Joyland, that wistfulness is back again, this time capturing the feeling of that first job that you really loved, of early romance, and of summer trips to amusement parks. This gentle (and fantastic) ghost story is more like The Body than The Shining, telling the story of a young man who finds a summer job in 1973 at a possibly-haunted amusement park on the North Carolina coast. Having spent three summers working at the same sort of park in my youth, King's attention to detail took me right back, with the secret passages for employees, the smell of grease and salt early in the morning, and the crazy costumes and games. Luckily, I never had the same experiences as King's hero, 21-year-old Devin Jones, who contends with ghostly capers, a dying boy with a special talent, and an unsolved mystery at Joyland.