Friday, July 31, 2020

Running away with the field

Running away with the field (Ive come out of blogger hibernation to post something too awesome not to share, and hope you all dont mind. Welcome to the new bloggers and have a great first semester, Class of 2011!) As I wrote in a previous entry about Spring 07 classes, I took a short story writing class with Professor Junot Diaz. I was inspired to take it by Nadja 07 and Yang 09, each of whom had taken a class from him and recommended it. Good call, guys. We students in the class knew he wrote a well-known book in 1996, but he never really discussed it and that was that. Fast-forward to two weeks ago, when I was surfing the web and reading some of New York Magazines picks for the fall. Junot (we didnt call him Professor Diaz) was interviewed about his new book, and I ignored the possibility of awkwardness just long enough to email it to the class. (Junot is also on the class list. awk) Date: Sat, 25 Aug 2007 From: Mitra Subject: NY Magazine raves To: [emailprotected] http://nymag.com/guides/fallpreview/2007/books/36501/ Hope youre all doing well! mitra Heres a quotation from the article: Díaz, pushing 40 but looking 30, is talking about the eleven years it took him to follow up on his best-selling, six-figure-advanced, award-winning book of short stories, Drownâ€"by most accounts the first great work of Dominican-American fiction. Every now and then you catch one, bro, and I caught a f*cking bad one. At long last, thanks to his gentle agent, his hard-nosed editor, Sean McDonald (who also editedâ€"and survivedâ€"James Frey), a good therapist, and “sheer ornery stubbornness,” his first novel, which fulfills his two-book contract, is doneâ€"and in many ways it’s even better than Drown. Yay. Then, much to my surprise, Junot (sort of) emailed back. Date: Sat, 25 Aug 2007 From: Junot Diaz Subject: And Time Magazine To: [emailprotected] Professor Diaz is away but if youre trading reviews try this one: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1655718,00.html Cordially Ysabel de León Assistant to Professor Diaz Heres another juicy quotation for the click-averse: Then Díaz more or less disappeared for 11 years, long enough for most readers to assume that, like most next great hopes of American literature, he wasnt coming back. Now he has, and with a book so astoundingly great that in a fall crowded with heavyweightsRichard Russo, Philip RothDíaz is a good bet to run away with the field. You could call The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Riverhead; 352 pages), out on Sept. 6, the saga of an immigrant family, but that wouldnt really be fair. Its an immigrant-family saga for people who dont read immigrant-family sagas. and my favorite paragraph of the review: Díaz has written Oscar Wao (a mishearing of Oscar Wilde) in a mongrel argot of his devising, a mixture of straight-up English, Dominican Spanish and hieratic nerdspeak crowded with references to Tolkien, DC Comics, role-playing games and classic science fiction. (What more sci-fi than the Santo Domingo? Oscar asks, What more fantasy than the Antilles?) In lesser hands Oscar Wao would merely have been the saddest book of the year. With Díaz on the mike, its also the funniest. As Oscar and Lola grow up and go to college, they find themselves fighting the lingering dooms of the old country, the alien demands of New Jersey and the depredations of their romantic hearts, all at the same time. Its an unwinnable three-front war, and the outcome isnt a fantasy; its brutal reality. You know exactly what kind of world we live in, Díaz writes. It aint no f*cking Middle-earth. Yes, this is pretty much how Junot speaks during class. We then shifted from trading reviews to trading tour info Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 From: Brooke Subject: go see Junot! To: [emailprotected] hey everyone, Our esteemed professor is going on tour and will be reading at the Brattle Theater september 12. tix available through harvard book store: http://www.harvard.com/events/press_release.php?id=1879 Hope to see some of you there! Brooke Date: Fri, 31 Aug 2007 From: David Subject: Re: go see Junot! To: [emailprotected] Hell also be at the Union Square Barnes Nobles this friday in NYC. So if (like me) you now live a little south of Boston David Date: Fri, 31 Aug 2007 From: Louis Subject: Re: go see Junot! To: [emailprotected] Anyone know anything about any California events? Ysabel swoops in again with a lifesaver email Date: Fri, 31 Aug 2007 From: Junot Diaz Subject: Re: go see Junot! To: [emailprotected] Professor Diazs tour schedule can be found at: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/tnyevents Cordially Ysabel de Leon Assistant to Professor Diaz Um, how hot is it to have your tour schedule posted by The New Yorker? So very hot. Finally came the big one From The New York Times review Junot Díaz’s Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is a wondrous, not-so-brief first novel that is so original it can only be described as Mario Vargas Llosa meets Star Trek meets David Foster Wallace meets Kanye West. It is funny, street-smart and keenly observed, and it unfolds from a comic portrait of a second-generation Dominican geek into a harrowing meditation on public and private history and the burdens of familial history. An extraordinarily vibrant book that’s fueled by adrenaline-powered prose, it’s confidently steered through several decades of history by a madcap, magpie voice that’s equally at home talking about Tolkien and Trujillo, anime movies and ancient Dominican curses, sexual shenanigans at Rutgers University and secret police raids in Santo Domingo. Who wrote this review? Carrie Bradshaw-hating author and critic Michiko Kakutani. Nice. Do check out both Drown and The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. And then laugh at people who think that MIT doesnt have a strong humanities department. (Give them the books too, since that was kind of mean.) Edited to add: Junot Diaz on Charlie Rose!