In Philip Roth’s latest novel, aviator and Nazi sympathizer Charles Lindbergh defeats FDR for the U.S. presidency, and a nightmare scenario of American anti-Semitism unfolds. It’s fiction, of course, but the Lindbergh character is based on a very real human being, and the book is raising eyebrows in his home state of Minnesota. Lindbergh is held up as a local hero in Minnesota – the airport is even named after him – and many locals aren’t keen to be reminded of the more sordid details of his life. But the book is providing an opportunity for the state to reexamine its own prejudices, and its devotion to a man who was not always what he seemed.
Category: publishing
Ducking Responsibility
Philip Roth’s decision to write a fable of American politics and hate was less about surface prejudice than it was about every human being’s capacity to ignore the suffering of others. “The deepest reward in the writing and what lends the story its pathos wasn’t the resurrection of my family circa 1941 but the invention of the family downstairs, of the tragic Wishnows, on whom the full brunt of the anti-Semitism falls – the invention particularly of the Wishnows’ little boy, Seldon, that nice, lonely little kid in your class whom you run away from when you’re yourself a kid because he demands to be befriended by you in ways that another child cannot stand. He’s the responsibility that you can’t get rid of.”
A House Divided
“Lawyers for the estate of author John Steinbeck’s widow are seeking to quash a lawsuit begun by his other relatives over royalties and copyright. Steinbeck’s son, Thomas Steinbeck, and granddaughter Blake Smyle are suing the late Elaine Steinbeck’s estate for at least $18 million. They are also seeking greater control of Steinbeck’s classic novels.”
Hurston/Wright Awards Announced
Art and literature are supposed to be color-blind, of course, but there’s no escaping the fact that the vast majority of literary prizes are presented by white people to white people. Thus the necessity of the Hurston/Wright Legacy Awards, which annually honor the best of black literature. This year’s prizes were handed out last week: “In the debut fiction category, Purple Hibiscus, the story of a Nigerian teenager growing up in a rich and troubled family, by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie; in nonfiction, In Black and White: The Life of Sammy Davis, Jr. by Wil Haygood; and in the fiction category, Hunting in Harlem, the tale of three ex-cons in contemporary New York, by Mat Johnson.”
A Whole New Life
Life magazine, which defined America in pictures for much of the 20th century, is back on newsstands again, only four years after its last comeback attempt floundered. “The photo journal disappeared from newsstands in 1972 and a short-lived revival in 2000 failed to match its circulation during its heyday from the 1930s to the 1960s. A new revival, featuring the classic red-and-white logo, appears on Fridays as a supplement in more than 70 newspapers around the country.”
Army Enlists Children’s Book To Help Families
“The Kissing Hand,” a children’s book about a raccoon trying to assuage her baby’s separation anxiety, rose in popularity after 9/11, when the American Library Association recommended it. The book has just sold an additional 14,000 copies to a single customer: the U.S. Army. In a first-time effort, the army plans to distribute the story to help military families cope with wartime separation.
Alice vs. Harry: Who’s More Dangerous?
Once upon a time, the Harry Potter books could be counted on to incite the most alarm among those who seek to protect America’s youth by removing objectionable books from schools and libraries. Now Harry and his magic have been toppled from their No. 1 spot by a lesser-known series: Phyllis Reynolds Naylor’s well-reviewed “Alice” books, whose sexual content provoked numerous challenges in 2003.
And Weighing In At Over 800 Pages …
Short attention span? What short attention span? In seeming contradiction to the sound-bite culture they inhabit, readers are snapping up ever-heftier books, and this fall will bring more of them.
Scottish Publisher Keeps On Growing
“Scottish publisher Birlinn has added another asset to its growing business with the buy-out of Tuckwell Press, the Scottish academic publisher. Tuckwell Press’s founders and owners, John and Val Tuckwell, are to work with the Edinburgh-based Birlinn. Birlinn is riding high on the huge sales of the novels of Alexander McCall Smith. The company bought the Polygon imprint in 2002, acquiring the publisher of the No 1 Ladies Detective Agency series just as they exploded into a huge international success. McCall Smith’s sales have helped push Birlinn’s annual turnover to the £2 million mark.”
A Bookstore Where The Paranormal Is The Norm
Even in a market that may be tougher than ever for independent bookstores, there are niches — like, say, the paranormal — that the big chains just can’t fill as well as a single passionate shop owner. At Germ, in Philadelphia, the “new and used books all fit under the umbrella of what might be called Apocalypse Culture: UFOs, Bigfoot, Kennedy assassination, ghosts, time travel, conspiracy, ESP, the unexplained, unknown and just plain peculiar.”
