Author: Michael Janairo

  • Black History Month: “The Intuitionist”

    intuitionist.jpgThis 1999 novel by Colson Whitehead imagines a world in which a new style of elevator inspectors — those who inspect via intuition — are disrupting the mainstream inspectors — the empiricists — who work by checking everything out. And in this original, fully imagined world, which has in addition to its speculative fiction — or even sci-fi aspect to it — a 1940s or 1950s feel, the issues of race and gender still dominate.

    With this first novel, Whitehead established himself as a fresh, vibrant voice in contemporary fiction.

    Here’s an excerpt for a great interview he gave with Laura Miller at Salon.com:

    Another unusual thing about your book is that often, when black writers are writing about race, they feel it needs to be very realistic. Do you feel you have more freedom than previous generations?

    Yeah. Definitely, decades ago, there was the protest novel, and then there was “tell the untold story, find our unerased history.” Then there’s the militant novel of insurrection from the ’60s. There were two rigid camps in the ’60s: the Black Arts movement, denouncing James Baldwin and Ralph Ellison for being too white, and Ralph Ellison calling the Black Arts writers too militant and narrow, not universal enough. Now I think there are a lot more of us writing and a lot more different areas we’re exploring. It’s not as polemicized. I’m dealing with serious race issues, but I’m not handling them in a way that people expect.

    You’re using elements of a style that people associate with white men — the Thomas Pynchons and Don DeLillos of this world. People who don’t like that kind of book tend to dismiss them for being white men. By writing these big novels that make big statements about society they’re supposedly showing a bogus sense of entitlement.

    I love all those guys. And I certainly don’t feel that way. I think they’re great writers and I think they’re attacking, grappling with, the culture in a way that interests me. I think if it’s a good book, it’s a good book.

    You are in this literary territory that isn’t usually associated with black writers, though.

    I think Ishmael Reed has done it — “Mumbo Jumbo” and “Flight to Canada” are in the same sort of vein, I think he’s overlooked as a groundbreaking voice in black fiction. And Jean Toomer’s “Cane,” a ’20s novel. He’s a Harlem Renaissance guy. I think it’s always been there, it’s just that mainstream critics, maybe even readers, don’t see the linkages.

    They don’t see that there’s a tradition of the black intellectual novel?

    Yeah. This guy Charles Wright, not the poet, had some very crazy books that came out in the ’60s, and Clarence Majors, his book “All Night Visitors,” which came out in the early ’70s. You could say it’s been ghettoized. No one’s really picking up on experiments that were going on in the late ’60s.

    The complete interview is here.

    Listen to the author read an excerpt here.

    The previous authors and writings featured on this blog:
    “The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano”
    Gwendolyn Brooks
    August Wilson
    “Our Nig” by Harriet Wilson
    “Twelve Years A Slave” by Solomon Northup
    “The Souls of Black Folks” by W.E.B. Du Bois
    Langston Hughes
    “Cane” by Jean Toomer
    “The Great Negro Plot” by Mat Johnson
    “Passing” by Nella Larsen
    “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass”
    “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”
    “I Have a Dream” speech”
    “Sula” by Toni Morrison
    “The Known World” by Edward P. Jones
    “The Color Purple” by Alice Walker

  • A dust-up between Japan, Australian author

    A Japanese publishing house won’t publish a book about Princess Masako.

    An Australian journalist refused Wednesday to bow to the Japanese government’s demand that he apologize for “groundless claims” in a book he wrote about Crown Princess Masako.

    Instead, Ben Hills, an award-winning investigative reporter, went on the attack, saying the government’s reaction to the book, which was released in Australia in November, has been “bizarre, unprofessional and bewildering.”

    “I regard this as an attempt by the Japanese government to suppress and censor my book, and I think it is absolutely outrageous,” he said.

    On Monday, diplomats from the Japanese Embassy in Canberra delivered letters to Hills and publisher Random House Australia, protesting the content of “Princess Masako, Prisoner of the Chrysanthemum Throne.”

    The government’s letters said the book is defamatory and contains “disrespectful descriptions, distortion of facts and judgmental assertions . . . pertaining to the birth of Her Imperial Highness Princess Aiko and the physical conditions of Her Imperial Highness the Crown Princess Masako.”

    The government has demanded an apology and corrections.

    Hills said the letters had no details about which parts of his book are wrong or inaccurate.

    “They (the letters) really didn’t specify anything in particular they were complaining about,” he said. “They were just a complete, widespread rave. It was most unprofessional.”

    Hills said the diplomats told him one of the defamatory points was his claim that the Crown Princess’ daughter, Princess Aiko, was conceived by in vitro fertilization.

  • Black History Month: “The Color Purple”

    colorpurple.jpg
    Alice Walker’s 1982 novel “The Color Purple” won the Pulitzer Prize, and has been made into a movie and musical. Centering on the story of Celie, a woman who is abused and made powerless, largely because of her gender and the color of her skin, the novel moves toward her finding strength with the help of other women.

    Here’s an excerpt from a review on the African American Literature Book Club Web site:

    Alice Walker once told an interviewer, “The black woman is one of America’s greatest heroes. . . . She has been oppressed beyond recognition.”

    The Color Purple is the story of how one of those American heroes came to recognize herself recovering her identity and rescuing her life in spite of the disfiguring effects of a particularly dreadful and personal sort of oppression. The novel focuses on Celie, a woman lashed by waves of deep trouble—abandonment, incest, physical and emotional abuse—and tracks her triumphant journey to self-discovery, womanhood, and independence. Celie’s story is a pointed indictment of the men in her life—men who betrayed and abused her, worked her like a mule and suppressed her independence—but it is also a moving portralt of the psychic bonds that exist between women and the indestructible nature of the human spirit.

    The story of Celie is told through letters: Celie’s letters to God and her sister Nettle, who is in Africa, and Nettle’s letters to Celie. Celie’s letters are a poignant attempt to understand her own out-of-control life. Her difficulties begin when, at the age of fourteen, she is raped by her stepfather, who then apparently sells away the two children born of that rape. Her sister Nettle runs away to escape the abuse, but Celie is married off to Albert, an older man that she refers to simply as “Mr.” for most of the novel. He subjects her to tough work on his farm and beats her at his whim. But Celie finds the path to redemption in two key female role models: Sophia, an independent woman who refuses to be taken advantage of by her husband or any man, and Shug, a sassy, independent singer whom Albert loves. It is Shug who first offers Celie love, friendship, and a radically new way of looking at life.

    The complete review is here.

    Thanks to Barbara Smith, author and member of the Albany Common Council, for her suggestion.

    From Playbill, about the making of the musical version of the novel:

    The one-hour documentary “The Color Purple: The Color of Success,” about the making of the Broadway musical The Color Purple, will premiere on the cable channel TV One Feb. 18 from 8 PM to 9 PM.

    “The Color Purple: The Color of Success” looks behind the scenes at the development of the musical and follows the story’s path from book to film to Broadway. The documentary includes interviews with Alice Walker, the original novelist, Quincy Jones, a producer of the film and the musical, and others involved with the work.

    The documentary debuted on TV One’s video on demand service on Feb. 5. After its premiere Feb. 18, it will replay later that night at midnight, plus on Feb. 20 at noon, Feb. 22 at 11 AM and March 3 at noon. TV One is a cable channel aimed at African-American adults.

    Some other links:

    BBC audio interviews.

    The previous authors and writings featured on this blog:
    “The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano”
    Gwendolyn Brooks
    August Wilson
    “Our Nig” by Harriet Wilson
    “Twelve Years A Slave” by Solomon Northup
    “The Souls of Black Folks” by W.E.B. Du Bois
    Langston Hughes
    “Cane” by Jean Toomer
    “The Great Negro Plot” by Mat Johnson
    “Passing” by Nella Larsen
    “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass”
    “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”
    “I Have a Dream” speech”
    “Sula” by Toni Morrison
    “The Known World” by Edward P. Jones

  • ‘Masada Scroll’ gets Windy City press

    This is my first post on Michael’s blog, and I want to thank him for allowing me to contribute. I’m the author of The Masada Scroll and recently was interviewed on this blog (click here). I’m busy at work on the sequel to the novel but have been taking some time to promote the first book — which is something I’m a bit uncomfortable doing. Fortunately my co-author, Robert Vaughan, has a lot of experience in that regard, so I’ll be flying out to Chicago on Wednesday to join him for some book signings.

    Robert and I were interviewed recently by Pioneer Press, which is owned by the Chicago Sun-Times and publishes a number of suburban papers in that area. The resulting story in the Evanston Review was published online and and can be read here. The story angle was a combination of how two authors go about collaborating on a novel and how the resulting book, which is similar in concept to The Da Vinci Code, was developed earlier but couldn’t find a publishing home until Dan Brown’s blockbuster created a market.

    I’m looking forward to seeing the print version of the review when I’m visiting Robert. It makes the “getting published” process seem more real when you see a story in print. It sure would be great to have a similar story in our local paper, the Times Union (hint hint).

    I’ll write again after the book signing and tell you how it goes.

    Paul Block, Delmar, NY
    paulblock.com

  • Library book sale

    VALLEY FALLS – The Valley Falls Free Library, 42 State St., is holding a book sale of used books at a $1 a bag with bags supplied. The sale will be held through February and March.

    Here are directions: Interstate 787 North to Rte 7 into Troy. Turn left on Rte 40. Take Rte 40 to Rte 67 east at fairgrounds. Turn right. Cross the bridge. Do not turn left. Jog right onto State Street. The library is in a tan brick building on the left.

  • Black History Month: “The Known World”

    knownworld.jpg
    The Known World won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize and the 2003 National Book Critics Award in fiction. It is a stunning story in that it imagines the reality and consequences of a free black man in pre-Civil War Virginia who owns slaves.

    From the publisher:

    In one of the most acclaimed novels in recent memory, Edward P. Jones, two-time National Book Award finalist, tells the story of Henry Townsend, a black farmer and former slave who falls under the tutelage of William Robbins, the most powerful man in Manchester County, Virginia. Making certain he never circumvents the law, Townsend runs his affairs with unusual discipline. But when death takes him unexpectedly, his widow, Caldonia, can’t uphold the estate’s order and chaos ensues. In a daring and ambitious novel, Jones has woven a footnote of history into an epic that takes an unflinching look at slavery in all of its moral complexities.

    A story from NPR.

    Author’s Web site.

    Jones will be in the Capital Region to give a reading with the New York State Writers Institute. April 18 (Wednesday): Novelist and short story writer Edward P. Jones
    Reading – 8:00 p.m., Room TBA, Rensselaer (RPI), Troy

    Thanks to Lisa Stevens for pointing out this book.

    The previous authors and writings featured on this blog:
    “The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano”
    Gwendolyn Brooks
    August Wilson
    “Our Nig” by Harriet Wilson
    “Twelve Years A Slave” by Solomon Northup
    “The Souls of Black Folks” by W.E.B. Du Bois
    Langston Hughes
    “Cane” by Jean Toomer
    “The Great Negro Plot” by Mat Johnson
    “Passing” by Nella Larsen
    “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass”
    “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”
    “I Have a Dream” speech”
    “Sula” by Toni Morrison

  • “Philosophy porn”

    Eventually, someone would have to think of this. (Thanks KR Blog)

  • Edith Wharton’s “The Mount”

    The blog the Elegant Variation reports on Michael Gorra’s review of the new Edith Wharton biography, which includes comments about her estate in the Berkshires, The Mount. The post is here.

    Gorra’s Times Literary Supplement review of Hermione Lee’s EDITH WHARTON is here.

  • Calvin Trillin and Mark Singer

    Maud Newton’s blog gives a link to an interview between the two old friends that is available in audio from the New Yorker web site.

    Earlier this year, the Times Union ran a Miami Herald review of “About Alice.” Click “more” for an excerpt.
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