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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: radio drama, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 2 of 2
1. Help Me Write: What Constitutes Literary Importance?

Author Kevin J. Hayes has been very busy writing American Literature: A Very Short Introduction, but he needs your help. Find out what you can do below.

Last week I boasted to friends that I had written my first blog. Longtime bloggers may find my sense of accomplishment overblown, but last week’s blog did mark my entry to this innovative world of communication. Being new to the blogosphere, I was unsure what kind of responses I would receive. As things turned out, the comments were quite useful. They point to a major problem facing American Literature: A Very Short Introduction. This little book about a big topic requires me to make some tough choices. Who should I include? Who can I exclude? Where should I discuss each author?

Responding to my query about American travel writers, James suggested I include Hunter S. Thompson. Though a great Thompson fan, I am excluding him from the travels chapter. Instead, I’ll put him with novels. The sixties took the postmodern novel to a dead end, but it gave rise to an exciting literary movement: New Journalism. For a time, journalists exceeded novelists in terms of literary virtuosity. As a digression in my novels chapter, I will discuss the work of such writers as Truman Capote, Peter Maas, Tom Wolfe, and Hunter S. Thompson.

Ideally, I would like to discuss every author only once. But what should I do about authors who wrote in different genres? Pick their most important genre and ignore the others? Only major figures who excelled in multiple genres can justify separate discussions. Take Henry James for instance. Best known as a novelist, James was also a fine travel writer and memoirist. I can justify discussing James in two or three different places, but I do not have room to discuss every genre of every author.

So, here are my questions. Which American authors excelled in more than one literary genre? Where should I discuss them? Are they important enough to deserve discussion in more than one chapter? Boy, that’s a loaded question. Here’s a more fundamental one: what constitutes literary importance?

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2. Publishing Spotted: No More Complaining About How Expensive Book Tours Are

Samedi the Deafness (Vintage Contemporaries)You think you're shy? Think you don't have enough money for a book tour? Think again!

Check out this homemade video project at The Bird in Snow. It's the launching pad for the world's smallest book tour. 

Ed Champion has just sent out a digital casting call for a brand new radio drama series, a hardcore recording project looking for a few good volunteers. My brain is already churning:

"I’d like to do an initial set of ten thirty-minute radio dramas — a tough and socially conscious (but not didactic) contemporary anthology series in the vein of Quiet, Please and Dimension X ... If you have a pitch for a story you’d like to write that would be acceptable for a thirty-minute production, email me and we’ll volley."

The Millions reviews a new book by Jesse Ball, and I gotta say, Samedi the Deafness sounds right up our hardboiled alley.

Check it out: "James Sim by name, witnesses an act of political murder that draws him into a web of intrigue (or, as my friend Colin's dad liked to put it, "a tissue of lies.") Confined to an asylum for compulsive prevaricators, Sim must ferret out the truth."

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