HOBART

month

June 2012

78 posts

Vouched Books Satellite Column on Smalldoggies | What Books Would Be on Your Vouched Table? | Smalldoggies Magazine → smalldoggiesmagazine.com

Ravi Mangla knows the deal (i.e. he’d rock two SF/LD books)

Ravi Mangla

The Weather Stations by Ryan Call
Big World by Mary Miller
How They Were Found by Matt Bell
Divorcer by Gary Lutz
Shut Up/Look Pretty by Becker, Fitzgerald, Reale, Logan, Sparks
NowTrends by Karl Taro Greenfeld
American Gymnopedies by Scott Garson
And Phantasmagoria by Thomas Cooper and All the Day’s Sad Stories by Tina May Hall if they weren’t out of print.

May 31, 20120 notes

May 2012

110 posts

Audio: Fiction Podcast: Matthew Klam reads “The Point” : The New Yorker → newyorker.com

we listened to this this past weekend, and it’s a must read/listen

thetinhouse:

Matthew Klam reads Charles D’Ambrosio’s “The Point” and discusses it with The New Yorker’s fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.

May 31, 20127 notes
May 31, 20121 note
INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS Fits Perfectly into Quentin Tarantino’s Movie Universe and Influences His Entire Filmography → suicideblonde.tumblr.com

suicideblonde:

By now, most Quentin Tarantino fans are aware of the connections interlaced throughout all of his films. John Travolta’s Vincent Vega in Pulp Fiction is the brother of Michael Madsen’s Vic Vega in Reservoir Dogs, Harvey Keitel’s Mr. White worked with Alabama from True Romance, the plot basis for Kill Bill is described as the synopsis for a TV series in Pulp Fiction, etc.

Now the epiphany that Eli Roth’s character of Donny Donowitz aka “The Bear Jew” in Inglourious Basterds is the father of the movie producer Lee Donowitz in True Romance has inspired a truly mind-blowing theory that the rest of the films (chronologically speaking) in Tarantino’s filmography take place in a world where [Inglorious Basterds spoiler] World War II came to an end when Adolf Hitler was brutally murdered in a movie theater by the Basterds.

This initial connection was brought up in an article on Cracked, but a poster on Reddit (via David Chen’s Twitter) has more eloquently summed up what this means for Tarantino’s movieverse:

As it turns out, Donny Donowitz, ‘The Bear Jew’, is the father of movie producer Lee Donowitz from True Romance – which means that, in Tarantino’s universe, everybody grew up learning about how a bunch of commando Jews machine gunned Hitler to death in a burning movie theater, as opposed to quietly killing himself in a bunker. Because World War 2 ended in a movie theater, everybody lends greater significance to pop culture, hence why seemingly everybody has Abed-level knowledge of movies and TV. Likewise, because America won World War 2 in one concentrated act of hyperviolent slaughter, Americans as a whole are more desensitized to that sort of thing. Hence why Butch is unfazed by killing two people, Mr. White and Mr. Pink take a pragmatic approach to killing in their line of work, Esmerelda the cab driver is obsessed with death, etc. You can extrapolate this further when you realize that Tarantino’s movies are technically two universes – he’s gone on record as saying that Kill Bill and From Dusk ‘Til Dawn take place in a ‘movie movie universe’; that is, they’re movies that characters from the Pulp Fiction, Reservoir Dogs, True Romance, and Death Proof universe would go to see in theaters. (Kill Bill, after all, is basically Fox Force Five, right on down to Mia Wallace playing the title role.) What immediately springs to mind about Kill Bill and From Dusk ‘Til Dawn? That they’re crazy violent, even by Tarantino standards. These are the movies produced in a world where America’s crowning victory was locking a bunch of people in a movie theater and blowing it to bits – and keep in mind, Lee Donowitz, son of one of the people on the suicide mission to kill Hitler, is a very successful movie producer. Basically, it turns every Tarantino movie into alternate reality sci fi. I love it so hard.

May 31, 201212,064 notes
Play
May 31, 20121 note
#buffalo
Play
May 31, 201241 notes
May 31, 201222 notes
#buffalo #hobart buffalo prize #contests
May 30, 20123 notes
May 30, 201216 notes
“When things get too comfortable and things get too safe, I get the feeling like I’m smothering. It’s like somebody’s burying me in feathers.” —Writer Harry Crews died on Wednesday at the age of 76. He had a hard life and didn’t made it any easier for the characters in his novels. (via nprfreshair)
May 29, 2012274 notes
#harry-crews #writing #lit #fiction
May 28, 201216 notes
#harry crews
May 28, 20126 notes
#hobart #monkeybicycle
May 28, 201218 notes
#bachelorhood #elizabeth ellen #Fast Machine
May 27, 201230 notes
May 27, 2012191 notes
Play
May 27, 20126 notes
May 27, 201210 notes
May 27, 20124 notes
May 26, 20120 notes
May 26, 20121 note
Next page →
2012 2013
  • January 103
  • February 127
  • March 92
  • April 45
  • May 62
  • June 51
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
2011 2012 2013
  • January 88
  • February 125
  • March 142
  • April 142
  • May 110
  • June 78
  • July 103
  • August 107
  • September 70
  • October 96
  • November 82
  • December 103
2011 2012
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June 23
  • July 19
  • August 26
  • September 61
  • October 84
  • November 73
  • December 49