Author: Michael Janairo

  • Black History Month: “Cane”

    cane.jpg

    From the publisher, Norton:

    A literary masterpiece of the Harlem Renaissance, Cane is a powerful work of innovative fiction evoking black life in the South. The sketches, poems, and stories of black rural and urban life that make up Cane are rich in imagery. Visions of smoke, sugarcane, dusk, and flame permeate the Southern landscape: the Northern world is pictured as a harsher reality of asphalt streets. Impressionistic, sometimes surrealistic, the pieces are redolent of nature and Africa, with sensuous appeals to eye and ear.

    “By far the most impressive product of the Negro Renaissance, Cane ranks with Richard Wright’s Native Son and Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man as a measure of the Negro novelist’s highest achievement. Jean Toomer belongs to that first rank of writers who use words almost as a plastic medium, shaping new meanings from an original and highly personal style.” —Robert A. Bone, The Negro Novel in America

    From the Modern American Poetry Web site:

    While many critics have credited this work with ushering in the Harlem Renaissance, noting the book’s representations of African-American characters and culture, others have located it within the Lost Generation, owing to its literary experimentation, its romantic primitivism, and its critiques of postwar values. Part one of the book presents portraits of six women of the rural South, in a style reminiscent of Sherwood Anderson’s gallery of grosteques in Winesburg, Ohio (1919). Part two shifts to the urban North, using paysage moralisé settings in Washington, D.C., and Chicago to depict the modern world as a postwar wasteland. In Part three, “Kabnis,” the setting shifts back to the rural South and dramatizes a portrait of an artist struggling to represent the parting soul of the African-American past in art.

    For more info:
    http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/s_z/toomer/life.htm

    http://www.dclibrary.org/blkren/bios/toomerj.html

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

  • Local books: “Macrolife”

    ‘Macrolife’, one of the best sci-fi books, is back

    Delmar-resident George Zebrowski’s 1979 novel “Macrolife: A Mobile Utopia,” hailed by Library Journal as one of the top 100 science fiction books ever, has been recently reissued (PYR; 284 pages; $25 for limited edition hardcover; $15 paperback).

    The story combines the best elements of science fiction — a well-imagined world where the philosophical questions about the human struggle to survive play out. In particular, the novel centers around utopian space habitats that are both mobile and self-reproducing.

    The action of the story takes place in three time periods: the near future, a thousand years from now and a hundred billion years from now, all the while showing how this technology transforms what it means to be human.

    None other than British sci-fi writer Ian Watson, whose career includes the screen story of Steven Speilberg’s “AI,” says in the book’s introduction, ” ‘Macrolife’ is a major vision of social intelligence transforming the cosmos.”

  • Adirondack Review short fiction contest

    Short story writers, you got until March 1 to submit your story or stories to this contest. (There’s a submission fee.) Details here.

    The Adirondack Review is an independent on-line quarterly of literature and the arts published by Black Lawrence Press. It is dedicated to publishing quality poetry, fiction, artwork, and photography, as well as interviews, articles, book reviews, and film reviews. TAR was established in the spring of 2000, with its first issue appearing that summer.

  • After Alex Rider, “Maximum Ride”

    Now that my stepson has read all of Anthony Horowitz’s Alex Rider books and must wait until November for the next one to come out, he is zooming through James Patterson’s Maximum Ride books.

    This is from the James Patterson Web site:

    STRAP YOURSELF IN for the thrill ride you’ll want to take again and again! From Death Valley, California, to the bowels of the New York City subway system, you’re about to take off on a heart-stopping adventure that will blow you away…

    YOUR FAITHFUL COMPANIONS: Max, Fang, Iggy, Nudge, the Gasman, and Angel. Six kids who are pretty normal in most ways – except that they’re 98 percent human, 2 percent bird. They grew up in a lab, living like rats in cages, but now they’re free. Aside, of course, from the fact that they’re prime prey for Erasers – wicked wolflike creatures with a taste for flying humans.

    THE MISSIONS: Rescue Angel from malicious mutants. Infiltrate a secret facility to track down the flock’s missing parents. Scavenge for sustenance. Get revenge on an evil traitor. And save the world. If there’s time.

    There’s been two books so far: Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment; and Maximum Ride: School’s Out-Forever. Perhaps Patterson, who is already wildly popular with adults, is tapping into the Alex Rider readership, considering his books came out in 2005 and 2006, while Alex Rider first appeared in 2000.

    But unlike the next Alex Ride, which won’t be out until next school year, Maximum Ride’s next tome is due in May.

    And how do you know that Patterson is a publishing empire, he has a Web site like this.

    Now, if I can only get my stepson to read “The Outsiders” that I gave him as a gift a while ago…

  • Got a book club? Change the world

    “What would happen if the thousands of book clubs across the country…

    … paired up with the thousands of people in the trenches of literary warfare, the people who daily struggle to bring the power of books to those who need that power most?

    Book Club Works gives book clubs and literacy activists a place to find each other, adopt each other, and make a difference.”

    http://www.bookclubworks.com/

  • Black History Month: Langston Hughes

    langstonhughes.jpgThis image of Langston Hughes (1902 to 1967) was taken by Gordon Parks in 1943 and copied from the Library of Congress.

    Langston Hughes was one of the major figures of the Harlem Renaissance. He was a poet, novelist, playwright, short story writer and newspaper columnist.

    This is one of his most famous poems (from the Poetry Foundation Web site). It was first published in 1951:

    Harlem
    by Langston Hughes

    What happens to a dream deferred?

    Does it dry up
    like a raisin in the sun?
    Or fester like a sore—
    And then run?
    Does it stink like rotten meat?
    Or crust and sugar over—
    like a syrupy sweet?

    Maybe it just sags
    like a heavy load.

    Or does it explode?

    More information about Hughes is available:
    Poet.org
    Thompson Gale
    Red Hot Jazz

  • Local books: “Baseball Without Borders”

    Essays show baseball an international hit

    Can’t wait for the baseball season to begin? Then it is the perfect time to read about baseball.

    Union College anthropology professor George Gmelch returns to the game in his latest book, “Baseball Without Borders: The International Pastime” (University of Nebraska Press; 326 pages; $19.95).

    The collection of essays Gmelch edited aims to expand Americans’ understanding of baseball by showing how it has been adopted in 14 countries, and not just the usual suspects like Japan and Cuba, but also unexpected places such as Holland, Italy and Australia.

    “The essays are diverse not only in the cultures they describe,” Gmelch writes in the introduction, “but also in the perspectives adopted by their authors who range from anthropologists to historians, from journalists to English professors, with a few independent scholars as well.”

  • Events for Wednesday, Feb. 7

    Julie Lomoe is a published poet and a regular at various open mike readings throughout the Capital Region. She’s also an accomplished artist, whose paintings were on exhibit at the original Woodstock Art and Music Fair at Bethel in 1969. (Yes, there really was an art exhibit held in conjunction with the massive rock festival).

    On Wednesday, she’ll be the FEATURED POET AT CAFFE LENA! Text of the announcement from Caffe Lena follows:

    Caffe Lena Poetry Open Mic
    Wednesday, February 7
    Doors open at 7, reading starts at 7:30
    Featured Poet
    Julie Lomoe!!
    $2

    hosted by Carol Graser
    Caffe Lena, 47 Phila St. Saratoga Springs
    583-0022
    www.caffelena.org

  • The world’s most expensive book

    If you are going to be in Lower Saxony before March 18, you can view what’s called the world’s most expensive book.