WLT and Science Fiction

WLT or as most people know it, World Literature Today, published by the University of Oklahoma, has just put out what I believe is it’s most readable and enjoyable issue yet. International Science Fiction.  While the journal has always been scholarly it has sometimes lacked appeal. Over recent years it seems to be moving in the right direction, of course that’s IMHO. Anyway please try to pick up this latest issue, guest edited by Christopher McKitterick, including a  feature article by him. And China Mieville  ( I’m impressed) introducing Fiction by Reza Negarestani.

WLT is our reminder of a bigger world, not exclusive to American ideas and writings but consistently seeking a broader perspective.  Step outside that door and look around, you’ll be amazed.


Laundry day book definition, and “Reading Matters”

My friend said I need to define the term “Laundry Day Book” if I’m going to keep using it because who wants to go back and read all the posts trying to figure out what I’m talking about.

Laundry Day Book  it has to be a book you can put down and pick up again, nothing too intense so you can stop and move clothes from the washer into the dryer, nothing too unputdownable so the dryer clothes don’t remain there to become hopelessly wrinkled.

So while I’m on here, I found a quote in WLT (World Literature Today), University of Oklahoma literary magazine, that I would like to share and hope I take to heart when writing in my blog.

“We readers who say we want to share our love of books all too often choose to act as commentators.   As interpreters, analysts, critics, and biographers, smothering great works in pious testimonies. Victims of our proficiency, the words in books give way to our own. Rather than allowing a book’s intelligence to speak through our mouths, we replace it with our own intelligence as we talk about it. Rather than acting as emissary for the book, we become guardians of the temple, boasting of its wonders in the very words that slam shut its doors: Reading matters!

from The Rights of the Reader by Daniel Pennac 

(forthcoming from Candlewick Press in November 2008)