Archive | April, 2008

Baheyya on Aslan

9 Apr

Baheyya wrote eloquently about Ibrahim Aslan in August. His newest book is called Something Like That and collects his most recent nonfiction. From the review:

Aslan is by far my favourite writer among his contemporaries. While very readable, Sonallah Ibrahim’s work is highly cerebral and lacks beauty (with the exception of his latest oeuvre). Baha’ Taher has become too transparently didactic and self-conscious in his writing, Khairy Shalabi’s storytelling is exuberant but unrestrainedly verbose and showy, Gamal al-Ghitani’s prose is too opaque and impenetrable, and reading Edwar al-Kharrat is grim work, what with all of his avant-garde philosophising. Mohamed El-Bisatie’s writing comes closest to Aslan’s poetic power and economical style, but his fixation on village life over-relies on predictable themes and characters.

Beautifully put! Check out Maalik el-Hazeen, or The Heron, if you haven’t read his fiction.

Yay!!!

4 Apr

My short stories just won a Chamberlain Award for Creative Writing here at the University of Michigan. I’m really excited! A portion will be donated to Hedgebrook, which nurtured me and inspired me to work on the collection. I encourage you to apply to Hedgebrook, and/or make a donation; every writer should get to experience the solace and beauty it offers.

Darwish Does Scotland

3 Apr

The Palestinian National Theatre will be putting on Mahmoud Darwish’s Jidariyya at the Edinburgh International Festival. There will also be a dance-theater piece(!) based on The Picture of Dorian Gray, and a new adaptation of Poe’s The Tell Tale Heart. The festival opens with a concert of Brecht and Weill’s Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. I want to go! The Fest is happening August 8-31. Click here for more info.

3 Apr

Guess what this paragraph is about…

“Women on the streets [here] are so sober. They don’t seem to have a sense of joy,” said Alcala. “When they walk in here, they are fun people. They love to dance, laugh and be silly, but I never see that outside.”

FInd out if you’re right here.

Events Calendar

1 Apr

ATLANTA
August 29-31
Decatur Book Festival

BOSTON
September 5
Harvard Bookstore, co-sponsored by Center for New Words
1256 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA
7PM

NYC
September 6
Blue Stockings
172 Allen Street
New York, NY 10002
212-777-6028
7PM

AUSTIN
September 11
BookPeople
603 N. Lamar
Austin, TX
7PM

ANN ARBOR
September 15
Shaman Drum
311-315 South State Street
734-662-7407
7:30 PM

LA
September 17
Skylight Books
1818 N. Vermont Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90027
Tel: (323) 660-1175
7:30 PM

SONOMA
September 18
Readers’ Books
130 E. Napa Street
Sonoma, CA 95476
707-939-1779
7:30 PM

SAN FRANCISCO

September 19
Books Inc. in Opera Plaza
601 Van Ness, SF
415.776.1111
7PM

CHICAGO
September 26
The Book Cellar
4736-38 North Lincoln Avenue
Chicago, IL 60625
773.293.2665
7PM

DETROIT
October 9
MOCAD
4454 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48201
7PM

AUSTIN

November 1
Texas Book Festival
1-2pm in room E2.028
Texas State Capitol

PORTLAND
November 11
Wordstock Festival
11AM Reading
AND
3PM First Books Panel

Texas on my mind

1 Apr

I’ve been seeing the shape of Texas everywhere. Today I thought I saw it on a sign that said, “Salad Bar,” but that was just a rude sketch of a plant. And yesterday I thought I saw it in some crawling ivy against a wire fence. I’m not going crazy. I just identify the state’s shape with a sense of home and belonging. And for someone to whom the question “Where are you from” requires a 7 sentence answer, the mandalic and healing powers of the Texas outline are sort of a big deal.

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