Friday, January 17, 2025

David Lynch Has Left The Building

 I cannot say I understood all of his movies (Especially Lost Highway and even Mulholland Drive), but never did I not want to watch David Lynch. 

Some things read this afternoon about Lynch.

John Semley, The Inimitable Weirdness of David Lynch (TNR)

Billy J. Stratton, David Lynch exposed the rot at the heart of American culture (The Conversation)

As someone who teaches film noir and horror, I often think about the ways American cinema holds up a mirror to society.

Lynch was a master at this.

Many of Lynch’s films, like 1986’s “Blue Velvet” and 1997’s “Lost Highway,” can be unsparing and graphic, with imagery that was described by critics as “disturbing” and “all chaos” upon their release.

But beyond those bewildering effects, Lynch was onto something.

Peter Bradshaw, David Lynch: the great American surrealist who made experimentalism mainstream (The Guardian) has a really great paragraph:

No director ever interpreted the American Dream with more artless innocence than David Lynch. It could be the title of any of his films. Lynch saw that if the US dreamed of safety and prosperity and the suburban drive and the picket fence, it also dreamed of the opposite: of escape, danger, adventure, sex and death. And the two collided and opened up chasms and sinkholes in the lost highway to happiness.

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Fixing Christmas

 I always thought the "War on Christmas" was so much BS.

Never did we hear anything about the meaning of Christmas. It has been a  commercial holiday for some time now.

How the Book Business Invented Modern Gift-Giving

Also, never mentioned was how many Christian churches had taken a dim view of Christmas; that Easter was the important Christian festival.

So, when is Christmas is probably not a question you ever asked.

You can learn more by reading Very Rev. Barouyr Shernezian's The Christmas Date Dilemma and the Call for Ecumenical Unity.

In the early centuries of Christianity, different communities observed Christ’s birth on various dates. By the 4th century, the Western Church, influenced by Roman traditions, adopted December 25. This date coincided with the pagan festival of Sol Invictus (the Unconquered Sun), symbolizing the triumph of light over darkness. The idea was to replace the pagan celebration with a Christian feast, as our Lord Jesus Christ is seen as the “Light of the World.”

Meanwhile, the Eastern Churches, including the Armenian Orthodox Church, continued to celebrate Christ’s birth on January 6, a date traditionally associated with the Feast of Theophany, commemorating both His birth and baptism. Over time, most Eastern Orthodox Churches shifted their celebration to January 7 due to differences in the Julian and Gregorian calendars.

***

While it is not our intention to assert that January 6 is the definitive date for celebrating Christmas—an argument that could be debated—the various theories surrounding this date are fascinating and worth exploring. What truly matters, however, is the spirit with which we embrace and celebrate the birth of Christ, not the specific day on which it occurs. That said, this remains an important topic for reflection and discussion among Church scholars and leaders, with the aim of reaching a thoughtful resolution. In a fast-paced, ever-evolving world, where Christian spirituality, practices, and traditions risk fading, it is crucial for Church leadership to take proactive steps in adapting and preserving these sacred traditions, making them accessible and relevant to today’s context. Preserving the Christian traditions passed down from our ancestors is indeed a sacred calling, but it is also a reminder that people play a vital role in shaping and evolving these traditions.

Think about it. 

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Weirdness, Arthritis

 I have not written my daily reports since Wednesday morning. I have been just too tired and in too much pain to do much of anything requiring any effort requiring any thought.

I saw the physician's assistant at Open Door on Wednesday night. It is confirmed that I have arthritis in my lower back. Ibuprofen and a muscle relaxer were prescribed; physical therapy and more may follow. I had already started on the ibuprofen - and had not taken any on Wednesday, which is probably why I had rolling areas of pain while at work. After walking back from the Open Door clinic, I was too tired and in too much pain to write anything.

About the arthritis, I have bony spikes projecting from my spine. That corresponds to what I feel in my back.

Also, on Wednesday, while at work, I had a job evaluation. It did not go well. I have the feeling someone has been feeding false information to the boss, but that was the big problem. The big problem is the missed time due to my not being well. I am now coming in at 7:15 because it is just too cold to be walking in the early morning hours.

Thursday started off well and turned stupid very quickly. I was up on time, feeling close to human, and was down to the bus station on time. The bus to work was late. Then the driver thought he was on a different run. When I pointed this out, he turned back into the station, stopped the bus, and took the time to read his schedule. I was seven minutes late when I got to my drop-off spot. Yeah, I was worried about what the boss would think. Nothing happened; which was good.

I had pain in my lower back for most of the day. The ibuprofen pretty much drove and waved at the pain and drove away. After work, I rode the number 2 bus down to the convenience store, picked up some smokes, and then got the same bus on its way back downtown. Then I rode the #1 to the westside CVS, and got my prescriptions. I chose to not fix any dinner, so I ordered a pizza when I got back from the bus station. I got home around 4. While I waited, I went through my emails. The pizza came, and I took a muscle relaxer and finished watching Aquarius. Meh, is my opinion of its second season; it doubles down on its weakest aspect - the Manson thread. The muscle relaxer reinforced my already existing weariness, and I went to bed around 6. I woke up after 10:30 and then crashed again until 4 AM.

Paul S sent me this:  Former Officer Assaulted By Mob On Jan. 6 Speaks Out As Trump’s Return Looms. I fear it all gets lost in the noise generator that is Trump and MAGA, 

I thought about seeing a movie this afternoon, but I think I will come back here and clean up. There is also the need to get groceries. The muscle relaxer has left me feeling drained. Drugs are like to me - they leave me tired.

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Thursday, January 16, 2025

Hoosier Racism - Hoosier Reactions

 The headline Video Shows Moment White Patient Shamelessly Says ‘Sorry, I Don’t Listen to Black People’ In Front of Black Receptionist at Doctor’s Office In Indiana is sure to attract attention. People will click expecting a story of Indiana racists, but they should stick around for the rest of the story:

Even though the racis t patient is heard spouting her refusal to “listen to Black people” the one time, the woman behind the camera noted that she voiced that bigoted view multiple times in the office. Once she heard the patient call the receptionist the N-word, that’s when she began recording the interaction.

The racist patient was reportedly escorted out of the office but returned a short time later.

Yes, we have our racists. So do you. That's America. The response is also us. That we can act better than our worst instincts, that we have within us to change, is what makes America great.

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Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Healthy Indiana For Who?

 Americans, Hoosiers, need to understand our healthcare system sucks. Republicans keep trying to scare us about a single-payer Canadian system, but the Canadians are not overpaying for poor health. If you want to portray yourself as a practical-minded fiscal conservative, remember that an unhealthy workforce is an unproductive workforce.

But Indiana Republicans persist in punishing working-class Hoosiers: Medicaid caps and tax relief top Senate Republican list.

Another priority bill would introduce a cap to the state’s Healthy Indiana Plan, an expansion of traditional Medicaid to cover moderate-income Hoosiers who can’t afford other options.

Sen. Ryan Mishler’s proposal would limit the number of enrollees to 500,000 — below the 692,028 beneficiaries currently on HIP — and limit Hoosiers to 36 months of coverage over their lifetime.

“Keep in mind that this is childless adults that are able-bodied, working individuals that are on this plan and will continue to be on this plan,” said Mishler, R-Mishawaka. “… there’s a lot of work to be done with Medicaid, but I think this bill is a start to work with the administration and get that under control.”

The fiscal impact of the legislation is uncertain, as 90% of HIP’s costs are covered by the federal government and the remaining 10% is funded by a hospital provider tax and cigarette tax.

Additionally, the bill would also reintroduce work requirements — something that would have to be approved by the federal government — with limited exceptions. Mishler didn’t rule out the possibility that the proposal would create another waitlist.

“If you want to take away waitlists, then you have to say, ‘Do we want to cut education to not have waitlists? I mean, those are the decisions we’ll face here,” Mishler said.

House Democrats disagreed.

“Where there’s a will, there’s a way,” said House Minority Leader Phil GiaQuinta.

GiaQuinta, D-Fort Wayne, and his colleagues pointed to a plan to expand school vouchers to the wealthiest Hoosiers as well as dollars sent to the Indiana Economic Development Corp. as potential sources of funding for Medicaid and public school priorities.

Eliminating waitlists, which include seniors, disabled Hoosiers and parents seeking child care, is one of the goals for the caucus in 2024 alongside property tax relief and “fully funding” public schools.

Is it that Indiana Democrats were feckless in campaigning on this issue, or that Hoosiers prefer what the Republicans give them?

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Did The North Lose The Civil War?

 Reading dispatches from The New Republic, it seems the South has gotten its revenge.

First, The GOP Is Rewriting What It Means to Be a Person:

The groups of people whose Fourteenth Amendment rights to be recognized as full humans are under attack from Republicans are deeply connected to one another. “It’s an error to read these things separate from one another,” Bridges said, adding that the obsession with mass deportations is connected to the desire to end birthright citizenship, which are both tied to wanting to revert to traditional gender and family norms, and that’s linked to the interest in giving rights to fertilized eggs. “All of these things are part of the same project,” she said. “This is about whiteness and patriarchy. It’s about creating the U.S. as a nation for white men.”

So who gets to be a citizen, or a person with equal rights? Not women or people capable of pregnancy, certainly not trans people or their affirming parents, and definitely not Black or brown people. In the Trump 2.0 era, we can expect to see escalating rhetoric that some people really aren’t people, they’re property—either of the state or of their family patriarch. So much for the dignity of equality.

The 14th Amendment was the second of what are called the Civil War Amendments. 

Southern segregationists jumped on private schools as the way to escape integration imposed through the 14th Amendment. Now, they have the ear of the federal judiciary.

Second, Why the Christian Right Demonizes Discourse 

This concept of heterodoxy isn’t simply that these works contain themes or ideas counter to Christian teaching; the central belief about ideas is that they are akin to demonic possession, much like the New Testament accounts we heard in Sunday school. This belief—that ideas themselves have a unique, uncontested power to infiltrate and corrupt our minds and souls—reflects the fundamentalist evangelical worldview, one deeply skeptical of intellectual engagement and critical thinking. Rather than the notion that ideas can be critically analyzed and either accepted or rejected, it held that dangerous ideas can indoctrinate and possess you if you are merely exposed to them. To read a book or discuss a theory, in this worldview, is not to exercise one’s intellectual faculties but to risk being overtaken by a seductive, malevolent force with no hope of resistance.

***

Today, through the decades-long marriage of evangelical Christianity and the political right, this intellectual skepticism is no longer confined to the pews. The evangelical distrust of intellectual inquiry has found a powerful ally in American right-wing politics, reshaping the nation’s cultural and educational landscape. The rise of Jerry Falwell Sr.’s Moral Majority and its embrace by the Reagan campaign provided organizational structure to these fears, helping translate religious anxieties about intellectual corruption into political action. Building on the foundation laid during the Reagan administration, figures like Pat Robertson continued to leverage this partnership in the 1990s through organizations like the Christian Coalition of America.

They capitalized on fears of moral decline to mobilize voters and influence policy, solidifying evangelical influence within the Republican Party. This relationship deepened with the rise of culture wars, as issues like banning abortion, putting Christian prayer in schools, and limiting LGBTQ rights became rallying points for evangelical activism. Under George W. Bush, this alliance reached new heights with the establishment of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, which provided federal funding to religious organizations for social services, and the emphasis on “compassionate conservatism,” which appealed to religious voters while advancing right-wing political goals.

This now firmly established connection between religious conservatives and the political structures of the right have created a feedback loop in which religious fears about moral corruption justify political intervention in education and culture, while political power gives religious leaders unprecedented influence over public institutions (all while they don’t pay taxes to the government). This dynamic reached new and absurd heights during the first Trump administration, when evangelical leaders like Franklin Graham and Paula White portrayed Trump as a divinely appointed leader against secular corruption and defender of Christian values, despite his well-known history of flamboyantly immoral personal conduct. The movement’s willingness to embrace such a morally compromised figure reveals that the real priority of the Christian right has always been the accrual and maintenance of its own political power and influence over the control of policy, information, and ideas—not moral virtue or devotion to God.

The following paragraph is what I have long called the-she-protests-too-much-defense:

This movement’s profound fear of intellectual engagement reveals a deep insecurity about its own beliefs—after all, truly robust ideas don’t require such elaborate protection—and, in fact, a profound respect for the power of ideas. You don’t construct elaborate systems of thought prevention unless you believe, on some level, that exposure to new, better ideas really could transform society. 

I agree that conservatism is a neurotic condition. Fascism is the refuge of the frightened.

As far as I am concerned, if you were born in America, then you are an American. Strange how it is the American Firsters do not share my view.

(That's sarcasm, folks, they see White Americans as True Americans. How many are, like Donald J. Trump, later-comers to America?)

The Evangelical problem can be solved in two ways.

  1. Remind them that they are to treat others as they would have themselves treated; anything else is heretical to Christianity. Those holding they have a right to treat others as less than human are not Christians.
  2. How come they do not baptize the fetuses they have fetishized?
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Hodgepodge of The Literary - Videos. A True Grit Essay, Zora Neale Hurston, and More!

 I really like pulp fiction - Hammett, Robert E. Howard - even the pulpiest heroes - Doc Savage, The Shadow - can be fun.


J.M. Coetzee is one writer who I have read less of (two novels, a couple of short stories) than who I found videos on YouTube:





Daphne du Maurier interested me because I have never understood Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds". She wrote the story on which it is based.


I managed to read two Iain M. Banks's Culture novels while in prison. If you think you like science fiction, that you have read great science fiction, without reading Banks, then you are missing out. Seriously missing out.


Speaking of Iain Banks:

Michael Connelly is one who I found in prison, and I am still wondering  where to place him. He is not a prose stylist, but it is hard not to get attached to his characters.


I have not read much of J.G. Ballard - did I get a novel of his read in prison? I have read much about him. Here is a documentary on him, hopeflly it will inspire you find his books:


Alasdair Gray on writing and painting:


Ross MacDonald:

Groucho, Capote, Ring Lardner:

Indiana represented:

Philip Roth at 70: Interview with David Remnick is not what what I heard on The New Yorker Radio Hour. It is more than that. Roth was one of my great discoveries while in prison. Yes, I knew about him when I was a teenager, but did not read him. I wish I had read him instead of Saul Bellow; Roth's world is far mre accessible to me than Bellows'.



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While in prison, I read an anthology of Russian fantasy and science fiction. I used the interlibrary loan program to get more current Russian writers; one was Victor Pelevin's A Werewolf Problem in Central Russia.  What I picked up was the idea of using fantasy where social realism is insufficient to tell us about life. Why I am adding to this already too long post is that The Guardian published a long read on Pelevin: The mysterious novelist who foresaw Putin’s Russia – and then came to symbolise its moral decay.

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In He Got Away With Everything: Reading True Grit After the Reelection of Donald Trump (LitHub) Piers Gelly offers a reading of True Grit which is beyond anything I have read about Charles Portis' novel. 

On its face, this decision to write fiction rather than journalism might seem like a turn away from reality—a reality in which, by the time he started writing True Grit, Kennedy and X and King had all been murdered. But in Portis’s writing, and in True Grit especially, I see an Oklahoma of the mind in which these convulsions are powerfully resonant. True Grit is a story about how, in times of upheaval, the mind clings to systems for safety. And in staging this psychological fact, Portis’s novel echoes a contemporary novel not typically mentioned in the same breath: The Crying of Lot 49, which was published three years earlier. What’s implicit in Portis is explicit in Pynchon: both novels, I think, are attempts to represent a mind metabolizing the upheavals and anxieties of the era.

***

Similarly, the quest at the heart of True Grit isn’t just about revenge; it’s also a quest for meaning in a world grown increasingly slippery and strange. As Mattie travels further and further into the Choctaw Nation in search of Tom Chaney, her father’s killer, the reality of True Grit begins to warp. Psychological and moral ambiguity come with the territory: beyond the borders of the United States lies a lawless land of rumor, deception, and plain old oddity. Out here, names drift. Tom Chaney’s name, we learn, might actually be Chelmsford. The villainous Permalee brothers are named Darryl, Carroll, Farrell, and Harold, which has a rather Pynchonian mouthfeel. In this context, Mattie’s theological gloss seems more and more like a desperate insistence—not an attempt to describe order but to create it.

 ***

The quietly anarchic possibility of this gesture, in the context of the whole, made me feel certain that Portis’s subject matter wasn’t predestination itself, but rather the tendency of the human mind to seek refuge in rigid systems, in doctrines, but to do so imperfectly, incompletely, for the mind contains doubts and contradictions that doctrines simply do not. Mattie’s hopefulness is, for me, a final act of courage—grit, even—and although we can never know that LaBoeuf did, in fact, read those pages, we can hope. 

Mr. Gelly may be onto something here that applies to Portis' other novels. This conflict between systems and the contradictions that reality imposes on those systems. That I agree with him on how Trump mangles reality with his lies does not affect my opinion on this reading of True Grit.

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Where to start with: Zora Neale Hurston - it doe not mention any of her plays, but it does place her memoir high on the list. That is where I started with Hurston. Start, you will not mind going on.

How Zora Neale Hurston's posthumous novel was rescued from a fire and published. It may be that her biographers may need to change their views on the last decade or so of her life. This makes it sound like she never quit writing (unlike myself).

Until today, outside of a handful of scholars, the world had not seen Zora Neale Hurston's final novel, The Life of Herod The Great.

Hurston, the accomplished Black writer, folklorist and anthropologist in the Harlem Renaissance era, worked for many years on the pages to The Life of Herod the Great until she died in Fort Pierce, Fla., in 1960 at the age of 69.

In this novel, Hurston looked to redefine the legacy of Herod, who reigned as king of Judaea from 37 BCE to 4 BCE. In a 1953 letter to her editor Hurston wrote, "You have no idea the great amount of research that I have done on this man. No matter who talks about him, friend or foe, Herod is a magnificent character."

And today's reading of the Gospel touched on Herod's slaughter of the innocents. I keep saying this, Hurston is very much worth reading. That she was forgotten for so long is a blot on America's literary conscience.

Gallardo: I wanted to talk about Jan. 7 when the novel debuts, which would have been Hurston's 134th birthday. What should the world remember about Hurston?

Plant: She loved life. And she loved humanity. And everything she did, her anthropological work, her work as a novelist, dramatist, her political activism, everything was about having us see one another as different variations of divine expression … We want to remember her as a humanitarian who was courageous in her effort to have us see ourselves, whole and complete. Undiminished.


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5 Reasons Writing Is Important to the World

Here are five reasons writing a story is possibly the most powerful act for good you will ever accomplish in your life.

And they are good reasons. They buoyed my feelings this morning of excruciating pain and disgust.

I came to Leonard Cohen late in life. Of Federico Garcia Lorca, I read his plays in prison. I offer “In love for life”: The poet who changed Leonard Cohen’s life by Callum MacHattie to point out the strange ways inspiration pollinates creativity.

However, decades before, Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca was forging the path upon which Cohen’s lyrics would follow. Lorca was a member of the ‘Generation of ‘27’, a collection of Spanish poets in the 1920s who spearheaded a movement that showcased romance and tragedy through surrealist imagery. While Cohen’s work has carved him an individual lane in contemporary music, he has often cited Lorca’s work as deeply formative in terms of his influence: “I was fifteen when I began to read Federico Garcia Lorca. His poems perhaps have had the greatest influence on my texts. He summoned up a world where I felt at home. His images were sensual and mysterious: ‘throw a fist full of ants to the sun.’ I wanted to be able to write something like that as well”.

Until today, I never heard of Kate Braverman. That I is due to The Paris Review posting her short story Histories of the Undead. I am thinking hard about my prose for "Chasing Ashes". I like Braverman's style - it has an energy that I think mine lacks.

She remembers now, in the long mornings when Flora and Bob are gone, that she always detested fragments. Or more accurately, the need to order them, to invent a spine, a progression, a curve that resolves.

The Paris Review also posted a link to Kate Braverman Is Dead by Leah Mensch. I like Ms. Mensch's prose, too.

In the photo, she stands in front of a shop window, naturally disinterested. “Beverly Hills,” the sign reads. It’s one of the only shots I’ve ever seen where she looks relaxed, her hands in her pockets. She wears a skirt long over her knees, pulled up to her waist, fastened with a belt. She’s thin, but her cheeks are full. She’s just published her first book of poetry, Milk Run, and her debut was a success: her friends at Momentum Press had underestimated the print demand. Open, all open the places. Never mind that she’s going to walk home through a dark and filthy LA alleyway. Never mind that afterward, she’ll heat speed over an open flame, because the world, for the first time, has made space for her. Los Angeles’s streets overflow with art and literature, and her mind, full of sex and rage and sprawling sentences, is not only tolerated, but, at last, celebrated. “She has,” a critic wrote, “come to a place on the narrow landscape of American poetry where her art and talents cannot be denied.”

For the next forty years, she’ll struggle to fit more than an arm and the backside of her torso into this space. She’ll try everything: Prozac, Lithium, hiding her breasts, pulling her shirt over her head on the Venice boardwalk. Her future efforts will be deemed too desperate, too ambitious, her fiction’s protagonists — double-fisting a syringe and a pen, leaving men behind, gasping for air — too intense and severe. Her rage and her obstinacy, which will drive her work, will trap her, too. “Girl child of the already decomposing streets of Los Angeles,” she’ll later call this 1977 self, with all her bursting naiveté.

From what I read about Braverman, another American writer ignored by America.

So much of her work was born from this: her desire to make a man sit down. Across four decades, she would publish twelve books — poems and short stories, novels and a memoir — all of which are populated with unorthodox women. A revulsion toward conventional womanhood drives the rage in her writing. Womanhood should, she believed, confer outlaw status; it should encompass everything from single motherhood to murder, creation to destruction, the full alphabet of human possibility. Central to her narratives are characters with addictions or criminal records, or who court instability — people who, like herself, have a penchant for danger, a penchant for pain. Sex, pain intermingling with pleasure, were regular subjects. Intimacy and sentimentality were not: “you never understood this man / or why you need him,” she wrote. “Surely another could have tied your wrists / and made your hidden parts open, glistening.” Elsewhere, she wrote about rejecting men’s company altogether: “by choice I sleep alone.” 

And people wonder why women got angry at us men:

Like Palm Latitudes, Squandering the Blue failed to satisfy the publishing world. Though some of Braverman’s female contemporaries, like Kathy Acker and Mary Gaitskill, were gaining momentum, the ‘80s were still largely dedicated to literary men. “If I were male,” Braverman said, “[the writing] would be normal. But good girls don’t write about drugs, single motherhood, and rage.” That she had deliberately rejected fluency in the publishing industry’s language, choosing instead to stand on her own power and intellect, was a point of pride. She’d expected some reward for it, but instead — perhaps because of some convergence of her subject matter, her womanhood, and her temperament — Braverman struggled to regain a foothold. And it made her angry. Angry that she’d been left behind by the Ackers and Gaitskills, that she’d been rejected by their publishers. Angrier still that men like Bukowski, who was then publishing about a book a year, were celebrated and revered for their writing about addiction. Bukowski also, around this time, gave an on-camera interview during which he kicked his soon-to-be wife and called her a whore.

I sit here amazed by her story. 

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 Back in the archive, I posted about Lincoln Michel inveighing against novels slavishly imitating film. He posted a link to an earlier entry in this discussion, Your Novel Should Be More Like Moby-Dick. When I was filling the holes in my literary education during my prison stay, I began noticing the differences between Nineteenth Century novels and those of the Twentieth Century. I put this down to film coming into its own after 1915. Check out the difference between Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace and James Jones's From Here to Eternity - in terms of themes, but as to the visuals contained in the stories. Jones's novel was filmed much more easily than ever has been the case of War and Peace. Hemingway and Hammett are much easier adapted to film.

The obsession with plot movement rendered through televisual scenes at the expense of other pleasures seems a very modern and very American attitude. I have to imagine much of it comes from the domination of Hollywood in American culture, which has passed down many “rules” of storytelling to other mediums. While I don’t necessarily agree with those rules for filmmaking anyway, they’re bizarre to apply to novels. Many of the film and TV rules for storytelling have to do with the basic constraints of filmmaking. Primarily, it costs a lot of money. And film is a visual medium where story is conveyed by actors moving and talking. But novels are not bound by production costs, fitting in commercial breaks, or the need to convey story only through actors’ actions and dialogue.

A novel should lean into the pleasures and possibilities of a novel, I say. The novel is an explosive, expansive, and exuberant form. It can encompass anything. Certainly early novels like Don Quixote and Tristram Shandy knew this, as did modernists like James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. Such writers leaned into the varied possibilities of fiction and were always willing, even eager, to shift form and style.

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