- Another 900-page academic book proves what most artists already know to be true: that “talent is highly overrated,” “practice makes perfect,” and “when it comes to choosing a life path, you should do what you love.” The key, what some of us might not be so aware of, is “deliberate practice”: “setting specific goals, obtaining immediate feedback and concentrating as much on technique as on outcome.”
- Later this month, Michael Silverblatt is going to interview Stuart Dybek. Listen to a previous interview on Bookworm.
- Barry Yourgrau will be the guest blogger on Powell’s this week. Read a previous essay on writing his latest book.
- Emmy The Great’s new single was produced by my old friend Jeremy. You can listen to it at MySpace.
HOW COULD I SAY NO?
We don’t know a millionth of one percent about anything.
– Thomas Edison
- New interviews with George Saunders and Etgar Keret.
- Read Edward Gorey’s meditation on the literary life, THE UNSTRUNG HARP, online.
- I mean, here I am sitting in Cleveland, Ohio. What do I know about the New York literary scene?
- Speaking of Cleveland, Mac’s Backs finally has an operational website, and Books Cleveland is a website for all the independent bookstores in the area.
- The first vignette of Daniel Handler’s (aka Lemony Snicket) ADVERBS, and the review, which calls the book a “concept album.” (I had no clue he played accordian on 69 LOVE SONGS.) As far as concept albums go, my ambition is to write the literary equivalent of Wire’s PINK FLAG.
- 1-2 punch: Destroyer’s “European Oils” [MP3] and “Painter in Your Pocket” [MP3] Stream all of RUBIES. And, oh heck, just go here and fill up your Ipod with Destroyer.
WHAT SAVES YOU
LUNCH AT BOB’S: NO SURPRISES, PLEASE
This was inspired by Maureen’s post about taking her mother to Bob Evans for lunch. I’ve gone out to lunch with my mom and grandma several times, and grandma always picks “Bob’s.” When I looked around at the people there, I always wondered what was the appeal…
Then, a few years ago, Meg came across this article in the NYTimes. It profiles a small town in West Virginia where there are two major restaurants: a cozy, somewhat David-Lynchian diner, and a Bob Evans. And the writer, in this really wonderful way, turns the two restaurants into symbols of two different Americas. But this was the excerpt that really caught me:
The goal at every Bob Evans restaurant is to be the same as every other Bob Evans restaurant. ”We want to make sure the experience someone has in New Martinsville is the same as the one they’d have in Orlando, St. Louis or Baltimore,” said Tammy Roberts Myers, the P.R. director at the Bob Evans headquarters in Columbus, Ohio. The company’s guiding principle is simple: consistency, in everything from ambience to the distance between tables to the arrangement of food on your plate.
”Going out to eat is risky,” said Steve Govey, the Bob Evans regional manager for the Ohio Valley. ”You never know what you’re going to get. But at Bob Evans, that’s not true. Our strategy is being completely predictable, something people know they can count on.”
When I think about all the changes my grandmother has witnessed in her lifetime, and the way her body and her mind is changing, I think, “no wonder she wants to go to Bob Evans.” There aren’t any suprises there. It’s safe.
I’d like to turn this into a full length…
EVERY-DAY SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES
This is the beginning of a new comic…
- Diagram 6.2 is up.
- Stephen Wiltshire is an autistic man who can draw like crazy. I first read about him in Oliver Sacks’ ANTHROPOLOGIST ON MARS. In a recent documentary, they flew him in a helicopter over Rome, and he sat down afterwards and drew a panoramic view of the city.
- I’ve never read VICE MAGAZINE, but they have a comics issue coming up with a ton of great artists. Oh, and it’s free. Anybody know where you can get it in Cleveland?
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