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Bolaño Hits the Powerball Jackpot, and Other News
By
Dan Piepenbring
March 17, 2015
On the Shelf
Illustration by Hache Holguin
Chicago’s Goodman Theater is mounting
a five-hour adaptation of Bolaño’s
2666
. The production is underwritten by a grant from “an actor and stage manager turned Episcopal monk who pledged last year to give away much of his $153 million Powerball jackpot” to support the arts.
Are you tired of suffering through novels rife with profanity and cussing? Try Clean Reader, “
the only e-reader that gives you the power to hide swear words
”—it’ll change
bastard
to
jerk
,
damn
to
darn
, and presumably render most David Mamet plays unreadable. And here’s a winning slice of the Clean Reader philosophy: “Will some authors be offended that some of their consumers use Clean Reader to pick out most of the profanity in their books? Perhaps. Should the reader feel bad about it? Nope. They’ve paid good money for the book, they can consume it how they want.”
For the literary critic F. R. Leavis—who was, by the time of his death in 1978, totally out of fashion—
great books were judgments about life
, and “when a great novel or poem is used to support some generalization about culture, the qualities which make it worth reading tend to be ignored.” Leavis abstained, dogmatically, from the pleasures of pop: “Leavis declined ‘intellectual slumming’ of any sort. If he got winded, he put Schubert on the gramophone or read a neglected classic.”
How
music hijacks our sense of time
: “In 2004, the Royal Automobile Club Foundation for Motoring deemed Wagner’s
Ride of the Valkyrie
the most dangerous music to listen to while driving. It is not so much the distraction, but the substitution of the frenzied tempo of the music that challenges drivers’ normal sense of speed—and the objective cue of the speedometer—and causes them to speed.”
On
getting a start as a critic
: “I drew on a quality—a resource, a tool—that is very dear to me, and, I’d venture to say, very dear to most people who write reviews: arrogance … There’s good arrogance, too, just like there’s good cholesterol: arrogance that bolsters you, that allows you to feel that your judgment might be sound, that it might—and this is when the reviewer’s mind starts warming up, starts humming—be even better than sound.”
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