« March 2006 | Main | May 2006 »

April 26, 2006

elizabeth's longest blog entry ever

because: I am just barely back from my vacation and it's so weird to have the internet again. I feel really aware of the bits of it that can get draining (like even thinking about the email) verses the bits of it that are inspiring, like this interview with Exene Cervenka from the suicide girls website (see, I can't even talk about the internet with the appropriate lingo anymore) (the water was turquoise and I stayed in there for 2 hours yesterday) (I thought it was one hour) (also at night we went kayaking in this glow-in-the-dark bay, not of New Jersey variety glow-in-the-dark but phosphorescent plankton variety) (I know how to get a kayak out from under a mangrove tree when it gets stuck now) (also, I know how to steer one even while sitting up front so I won't need to get, um, kayak-towed by the very nice guide man).

Anyway. My favorite thing about this excerpt is the very last sentence:

DRE: It seems like the new kind of thing to do is for girls to get naked on the Internet.

Exene: Yeah, I think it’s destroyed any chance women have to build on the Feminist gains of the 60’s and 70’s. I think it’s really sad that women have decided that they’ve given into the whole sex object thing and have decided that that’s the highest level they can reach in life is to be in a porno film. I’m not a Feminist per se because I think it has bad connotations and I don’t believe in segregation. I think I’ve been an example of not having to do that and I’m proud of that. But on the other hand, perhaps that’s all women are. Maybe they’re just sex objects. Maybe that is the highest level they can reach in our society. As far as popular culture goes, maybe Paris Hilton is the most important thing to aspire to and maybe having a porno film of yourself and your boyfriend on the Internet is your goal in life and that’s a total accomplishment for you. Maybe men are just voyeuristic adolescent idiots. Maybe that’s who we really are. So if that’s the case, then fine. I’m not participating in it, nor would I if I was young, but it’s not my problem. My problem is making art.

(Criticizing Paris Hilton/porn/plastic surgery/scary TV culture using the term "sex object" freaks me out. I wish there were an easier way to dismiss this nasty plastic porn culture yet still honor the power of women's beauty and sexuality and the honest pleasure men and women both get from that--pleasure that doesn't have anything to do with fake boobs or giant Lindsey Lohan sunglasses.)

Okay, wait, but there's more. The interviewer brings up Dave Chapelle who is going to be the patron saint of the Grace boys night if we ever do a big reading of the guy artists we love (which I really hope we do soon) (I just need to go on maybe one more vacation first)

DRE: Dave Chappelle has been doing a lot of interviews lately; did you ever watch his TV show?

Exene: Yeah, I’ve seen him live too.

DRE: He said that one of the reasons he stopped doing his show is because when they were taping they did a joke making fun of racism and there was one crew member that laughed weirdly, like he was enjoying the racism in the wrong way.

Exene: He didn’t get the irony. Right.

DRE: It made Dave realize that with so many people watching his show, he has more of a responsibility than to just be funny. At what point did you have this realization for yourself?

Exene: It was a long time ago. Punk was founded on this whole different cultural model than what we have today. It was against the excesses of rock stars and it was against the wealthy and had all these ideals about anyone who could get on stage and play an instrument. There was no sexism and there was no racism. That was the model. When the Go-Go's went on the cover of Rolling Stone wearing just towels, I think that model got skewed. I’m from a different time. I’m a time traveler and I come from a time when abortion was illegal. When the civil rights happened, I was around. When rock and roll started, I was around. I respect all those people that broke through some of those sexist and racist barriers because it was really hard to do and a lot of people died doing it. So I still have that model and the punk rock model that I live by and self-respect to me is really important and respect for other people is really important. Not objectifying people is really important and not degrading people is really important because it makes for a better culture and a better society.

Fuck yeah. Okay. Thank you Exene. I know I'm not the only one who turns to you in a moment of lost faith. xxoo Elizabeth

April 24, 2006

excuse me, she internalized it?

I let out a little chick-lit related gasp when I read this in USA Today.

A Harvard sophomore accused of plagiarizing parts of another novelist's work apologized on Monday and said her book would be revised for future printings to eliminate "inappropriate" but "unintentional" similarities between them.

Kaavya Viswanathan, 19, received mostly positive reviews (including one in USA TODAY) for her April chick-lit title, How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life.

But Viswanathan's book, about an Indian-American teenager who sets her sights on Harvard, includes passages that are strikingly similar — and sometimes the same — as passages in two novels by Megan McCafferty: Sloppy Firsts, published in 2001, and Second Helpings, published in 2003.

Check the article out. This is not a case of a young writer magically internalizing prose, as she claims. That is not the way it works. She held the book open and copied. If you covet another writer's sentences, you know exactly where they are on the page in the book on the shelf in the room and you never ever ever go there.

April 20, 2006

shari goldhagen in LA

If you missed the fabo Shari Goldhagen at Grace this month because you happen to live in LA, do not fret. Shari will be reading at Dutton's in Beverly Hills and she would love to see your little face there!

Friday, April 21 – Los Angeles
Dutton’s – Beverly Hills
Reading, Q&A, signing
447 N. Canon Dr.
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
7:00 p.m.

All the info, the skinny, the lowdown you need here.

April 19, 2006

thanks everybody

That was such a fun reading tonight. I am out of here for bad-bachelorette vacation on an island with the bookslut for a week, and let me tell you I almost didn't even need the vacation because hearing Shari read and watching Ellis do an actual tea ceremony and then read was super calming. We got to experience that thing where a person has been crafting and zoned in to this particular frequency--whether it's a set of characters or the rhythm of the tea ceremony--for many years, training and re-drafting. The ensuing mastery is a pleasure to be around, you get to relax as a reader because the writer is doing her job very very well. Love that.

I'm out of here. Have fun--Emberly will blog for you from Berkeley which is magic even though it is not an island, technically. xxooElizabeth

April 13, 2006

next Tuesday, 4/18: Shari Goldhagen, Ellis Avery at Mo Pitkin's, 7pm

Don't miss our next reading at Mo's, this Tuesday, with Shari Goldhagen and Ellis Avery!

April 11, 2006

there's our girl

My lawyer Quinn Heraty took this picture of Girly in the St. Marks Bookshop window. (She is an amazing lawyer, let me tell you--she is smart & artsy & on point and was recently quoted in the print version of Venus magazine as an expert in women's upstart businesses. She does not play, let me tell you.)

Girly is right in the middle--this pic is from February--and I love how she's right next to Three Incestuous Sisters because I think of them as kind of cousins--huge expanses of both books were created at the Ragdale Foundation and the prairie there infuses and sort of holds up both of them, you can feel it if you know to look for it. Big magic prairie, can hold all kinds of art.

April 06, 2006

free mini-class with Elizabeth now available online

Hey everybody. Besides doing Grace I also teach writing workshops, and you can as of today listen to a mini-workshop for free online. I sound more glamorous than usual due to the Tenacious Bronchitis of 2006 but I don't think it should distract you too much.

There are two separate 3-minute clips of Q&A with me, and then you can also do a couple of longer writing exercises if you've got 15 minutes or so to dive into your creativity and get some writing done.

My next workshop, the very popular NOVELLA CLASS, starts 4/10, that's next Monday, in Soho and I have a couple of spaces left. You will write 70 pages of your novel, stories, essays, or memoir in 10 weeks and learn how to feel amazing about yourself as a writer, instead of feeling grouchy and self-loathing way too much of the time.

It's called Novella because you'll write the length of a novella, whatever genre the work shows up in.

April 05, 2006

APRIL BOOK CLUB SELECTIONS ARE HERE!

Hi everybody. We have our new picks for the April edition of the ready and waiting for you. Cristina Henriquez has a debut book of stories, Come Together, Fall Apart in hardcover, and we have picked 2 paperbacks as well--The Seas by Samantha Hunt and Holy Skirts by Rene Steinke.