New Semester, New Beginnings

Now that the New Year’s Day
hangovers are a thing of the past,
it’s time to trade in the warm sofa
for cold, hard desks as the spring
semester approaches. If you are
wondering how you will possibly
make it through this semester after
barely
making it through the fall semester
you are in luck, because a new semester
brings new beginnings.
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Sloan Crosley: So Fresh and So Clean Among the Literary Elite

neyfakh-scrosley7v.jpgBefore writing about Keith Gessen, how Sloan Crosley’s cooler than him, and why I’m a bona fide loser, let’s back track a bit. (Oh, and please make note: this not a review of their works, as a colleague at CollegeCandy has already been kind enough to write about Crosley’s work. Moreover, I have yet to read these two recently published books).

Once upon a time, in a beautiful castle high above NYC, Mr. Leon Neyfakh wrote a piece about Ms. Crosley in The New York Observer

In part, the piece publicized her novel, I Was Told There’d Be Cake, but the primary focus of Mr. Neyfakh’s article praised Ms. Crosley’s aura of exuberant “niceness.” Not surprisingly, such a personality trait is all but absent, if not extinct, among the effete New York literary crowd. But is that really true? If one were to believe Neyfakh’s claims, embrace Ms. Crosley’s genuine goodness in contradistinction to the scene of blobby, degenerate, self-absorbed New York literati, the picture - in my mind - is plain boring and problematically monolithic.

For all intents and purposes, these literati types are just exhausted, absolutely exhausted from their own ennui, the same old schmoozing fests that they must endure; exquisitely over-expensive cocktails either in swanky bars in Manhattan or at some boring, obligatory party in the “country.” It’s the same ol’ picture we Kansans (and everybody else outside of/excluded from the cherished and sought after New York City publishing scene) are hand fed. Read More »

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