Choice Quote: on Brit boys and sex

July 26, 2010

Read this book years ago and adored it. Just came across this quote again. Fantastic.

from A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That by Lisa Glatt

You’re lucky if a Brit kisses you after he fucks you–before he fucks you, for that matter. You’re lucky if he pats you on the back the morning after, that’s how removed and distant they are.

from movie Sid and Nancy:

Johnny: You’re not getting anything.
Nancy: What?
Johnny: Fucking Americans. That’s all you ever think about– sex. Non of us fuck, see. Sex is ugly.

Buy:

A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That: A Novel

Sid & Nancy


FILM: trailer for THE SWITCH with Jason Bateman and Jennifer Aniston opening August 20

July 26, 2010

CELEBS: Happy Birthday Illeana Douglas

July 26, 2010

–born 1965 in Quincy, Mass. [love her but question this birth-date]
–granddaughter of Melvyn Douglas [Being There]

Illeana Douglas stars in my all-time favorite film– written and directed by Allison Anders– Grace of My Heart.

Here’s some other notable performances:

Dummy
Ghost World
Lansky
Goodfellas
Wedding Bell Blues
Factory Girl

check out her web series Easy to Assemble

Grace of My Heart (Ws Coll)


POETRY: The Death King by Anne Sexton [1972]

July 26, 2010

I hired a carpenter
to build my coffin
and last night I lay in it,
braced by a pillow,
sniffing the wood,
letting the old king
breathe on me,
thinking of my poor murdered body,
murdered by time,
waiting to turn stiff as a field marshal,
letting the silence dishonor me,
remembering that I’ll never cough again.

Death will be the end of fear
and the fear of dying,
fear like a dog stuffed in my mouth,
feal like dung stuffed up my nose,
fear where water turns into steel,
fear as my breast flies into the Disposall,
fear as flies tremble in my ear,
fear as the sun ignites in my lap,
fear as night can’t be shut off,
and the dawn, my habitual dawn,
is locked up forever.

Fear and a coffin to lie in
like a dead potato.
Even then I will dance in my dire clothes,
a crematory flight,
blinding my hair and my fingers,
wounding God with his blue face,
his tyranny, his absolute kingdom,
with my aphrodisiac.


MUSIC: FAVORITES AT THE HALFWAY MARK for 2010

July 25, 2010


Kate Nash: My Best Friend is You
picks: Paris, I Just Love You More


OK GO: Of the Blue Colour of the Sky
picks: End Love, What the Fuck is Happening?


Athlete: Black Swan
picks: The Awkward Goodbye, Rubik’s Cube


Gorillaz: Plastic Beach
picks: Sweepstakes, Stylo


MGMT: Congratulations
picks: It’s Working, Flash Delirium


She and Him: Vol. 2
picks: In the Sun, Over it Over Again


The Radio Dept.: Clinging to a Scheme
picks: This Time Around, Never Follow Suit


The National: High Violet
picks: Terrible Love, Afraid of Everyone


Choice Quote: The Chateau with Romany Malco and Paul Rudd

July 24, 2010

This entire film about two estranged half-brothers who inherit a French Chateau was improvised by Romany Malco and Paul Rudd. It’s an unexpected, hysterical gem of a film that everyone should add to the netflix queue.

And I’m gonna turn my dick company into the biggest dick company on the planet.
–Rex [Romany Malco]

The Chateau


INTERVIEW: author Jonathan Tropper

July 24, 2010

That’s love in real life: messy and corrupt and completely unreliable. I like Penny, and I still love Jen, and I hate Jen and I couldn’t leave Penny’s sad little apartment fast enough. I want someone who will love me and touch me and understand me and let me take care of them, but beyond that, I don’t know.

The combination of honesty, darkness, and vitriol in THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU by Jonathan Tropper is fantastic!

Amy Steele [AS]: I was talking with some people on Twitter about the concept of chick lit/ women’s fiction. There’s no men’s fiction category but there’s women’s fiction, yet mostly women read fiction. What are your thoughts on this?

Jonathan Tropper [JT]: I try not to think about it. I was really disappointed when I made it as a novelist and the publishers basically told me that men buy non-fiction and women buy fiction. I was a reader and I only read novels and I supposed many men do. Proportionally they sell more books to women than men. Novels. Men seem to buy biographies and books on war and other non-fiction. At least that’s the sense of things in the publishing industry. I certainly hear from many men who read my books. Even if women are buying the majority of novels it doesn’t mean that women want to only read books by women and about women.

AS: You focus a lot on relationships and even if they are about guys I can totally relate. They are really insightful and funny and yet you have the darker side to them. How did you develop your style?

JT: I didn’t really think about it. I was partly inspired by the books I read. I wanted to tell stories about how contemporary men deal with the issues we all deal with in an honest and unflinching way. I try to write from a male perspective and present a fully realized portrait of how today’s suburban men think. What their values are. What there challenges are. I didn’t think of the style. I write the way I write.

AS: Did you make a conscience effort to become a writer?

JT: I really wasn’t good at anything else. I really thought I wanted to be a writer. I went to grad school for writing [masters in creative writing from NYU]. I was always writing. I wanted to write novels. I tried one or two that didn’t work. I picked it up again and I wrote one that I managed to sell. I never believed I could actually do it successfully.

AS: What do you learn in a creative writing program?

JT: You can’t learn to write certainly. It’s very motivating for a writer to be surrounded by other people who are trying to do what you’re trying to do. Pretty much no one in my life was attempting to be a writer and it feels almost validating to just sit in a room full of people who are willing to talk about character and plot. It legitimizes it as a real pursuit for you. Through that process of work-shopping stories, I think you develop your own ability to critique your work a little better than if you just wrote in a vacuum.

AS: How do you separate yourself enough so that you’re writing for yourself but also writing to attract a readership?

JT: I have to know enough if I’m spending the next year of my life working on this story. I’m an avid reader and I know what speaks to me and I know what would appeal to me. I try to write the type of characters that I’d be interested in reading about.

AS: Are you as observant in reality as you are in your writing?

JT: Writers in general, by their very nature, tend to be more observers than participants. I pay attention to people: the way they talk, the way they move, the way you can see their motives. I’ve always been focused on watching people and their behavior.

AS: You’re central characters are mostly GenXers like you and me. I know that most authors draw on their own experiences. How much of your own experiences go into your writing?

JT: Not factual or autobiographical experiences. There are things I write about that intrigue me. None of the things that have happened to the characters have ever happened to me but it’s all fueled by what’s around me– by all my observations, feelings. No one that I write about would be out of place living in my neighborhood.

AS: Why did you choose to write about sitting Shiva?

JT: I was writing a book about this man who lost all the things that made him a man. He lost he wife, he lost his job. I wrote all these pages and he wasn’t that interesting to me. I wrote a chapter where he goes home to his parent’s house and I introduced all his siblings and his mother. And that was the only time that I felt the book was becoming alive to me. So I decided I wanted to make the book about the Foxman family and I just had to come up with an excuse to keep them together for more than a few hours. That’s when I came up with the idea of a Shiva.

AS: What appeals to you about that setting in drawing out character stories?

JT: It was about trapping all these adult children who have all these issues with each other and they’re spending time in the same house and in their childhood house. They regress back to their childhood issues.

AS: How do you write: characters first or plot/ story first?

JT: It’s always the character first and then the journey I want the character to take. Then I sort of build the plot around it. It has to be something larger than a premise you’re writing about. This is Where I Leave You is not a book about Shiva. It’s a book about family. It’s a book about marriage. If it is a big idea, it’s just a cool idea and you’re going to run out of steam. I know I need to be grounded to the character, at least, before I get to the plot and the premise.

AS: How do you balance humor and pathos?

JT: I get asked that a lot. I don’t really think about it. The question actually surprises me because it’s not a conscious act. I’m just writing the way I write. If I’m writing a dramatic moment chances are the humor’s not going to pop up at that moment. I write books that are honest in their focus.

AS: Why did you want to write about a shock jock and the radio setting?

JT: It wasn’t just that he lost his life but that he lost his life in such a public setting.

AS: Who are some of the authors who have influenced you?

JT: I love Richard Russo. I came up reading Jay McInerney and Bret Easton Ellis. Before that I read Stephen King and Kurt Vonnegut. I’m kind of all over the place.

AS: What inspires you to write?

JT: The rock star thing didn’t work out.

###

Title: This Is Where I Leave You
Author: Jonathan Tropper
ISBN: 978-0452296367
Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Plume; Reprint edition (July 6, 2010)
Category: contemporary fiction
Review source: publisher
Rating: 5/5

Jonathan Tropper is currently on tour in support of the paperback release of This Is Where I Leave You.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010, 7:00 pm
Huntington Book Revue
313 New York Avenue
HUNTINGTON, NY

Wednesday, July 28, 2010, 8:00 pm
Elliot Bay Books
1521 Tenth Avenue
SEATTLE, WA

Thursday, July 29, 2010, 7:00 pm
Book Soup

8818 West Sunset Blvd
LOS ANGELES, CA

Tuesday, August 3, 2010, 7:00 pm
Newtonville Books

296 Walnut Street
NEWTONVILLE, MA

Wednesday, August 4, 2010, 7:00 pm
92Y Tribeca

(panel with Peter Hedges)
200 Hudson Street
NEW YORK, NY

twitter

This Is Where I Leave You: A Novel

Shop Indie Bookstores


MUSIC: Video for Broken Bells “The Ghost Inside” with Mad Men star Christina Hendricks

July 23, 2010

TV: White Collar Contest

July 23, 2010

USA Network kicks off your Tuesday evening with the best looking night on television! Watch the return of White Collar at 9pm. One of the fall season’s most critically acclaimed dramas, stars Matt Bomer, Tim DeKay, Tiffani Thiessen, Willie Garson, Sharif Atkins and Marsha Thomason.

Visit the official White Collar website for games, photos and weekly prizes. Visit USA Network’s Character Arcade to play games, challenge friends and for more chances to win prizes!


ENTER TO WIN a WHITE COLLAR Gift Bag!

Gift Bag includes:
–Modern Gentleman’s Guide
–White Collar Hat
–White Collar T-Shirt
–White Collar Season 1 DVD

to enter: leave your email in the comments section

Open to residents of the U.S. & Canada
Prize courtesy of USA Network. Prize pack value: $112

Contest Ends: AUGUST 9


TV: My Boys S4 premieres July 25 on TBS

July 22, 2010


I completely dig the little talked about My Boys on TBS but am not sure if anyone really watches it. First, it focuses on PJ [the extremely versatile and sparkling Jordana Spiro] a sports columnist in Chicago, who hangs out with mostly guys, thus the title. She does have one close female friend, Stephanie [Kellee Stewart]. PJ covers sports, is laid back, and is pretty much “one of the guys.” The humor in the show revolves around the usual things: work, dating, and day-to-day events. My Boys remains topical but not trendy or inside, easy to relate to and well-written. The show does not angle to be like any other show. My Boys does not try to make cutesy couples or catch phrases or have quirky characters.

When Season 4 begins, PJ’s brother has re-located to China and the gang brainstorms to find a replacement for poker night. PJ and Bobby [Kyle Howard] are still going strong and the latest- some might think a surprising and mix-matched– pair is Stephanie [Stewart] and Kenny [Michael Bunin], who used to barely be able to be in the same room together. In the meantime, it’s down memory lane with flashbacks about how everyone met each other. For instance, PJ and roommate Brendan [Reid Scott] went to college together. That’s also how PJ and Stephanie became friends.

My Boys is a refreshing sitcom that doesn’t follow the tired format of many others. The honesty, germaine characters and situations as well as funny jokes bring me back each week.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,891 other followers