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ALBANY, NY(readMedia) - In honor of its 25th
anniversary, the New York State Writers Institute at the University at
Albany has invited 25 renowned New York writers to choose a notable
book about New York -- State or City. "Books that focus on New York
themes and landscapes have impacted readers for generations. As the
Institute celebrates its 25 year history, we think it is appropriate to
draw attention to some of these books to provide a glimpse of the
enormous literary traditions that this state and its authors have to
offer," said Institute Director Donald Faulkner. "This is not intended
to be a 'best of' list, nor have we made any attempt to rank our picks.
The list represents a distinctive and slightly unconventional guide to
reading more deeply into the spirit of the Empire State," Faulkner
explained.
Below are the first ten selections with brief statements as to why
each selector views their choice as a book unique to New York. The
additional fifteen selections will be released throughout the next
several months.
Lynne Tillman on The House of Mirth (1905) by Edith Wharton
"Edith Wharton lived in Paris, but New York was her birthplace and
psychological home, where she started writing, about which she never
stopped writing. In Wharton's The House of Mirth, the
interiors and exteriors of New York City and Rhinebeck resonate with
the characters; they're never just settings for encounters. As few
other protagonists in literature, Lily Bart's entanglements, and the
consequences of her actions, are implicated, and doomed, by the rooms,
buildings, and streets she frequents. Wharton's first love was
architecture and design. She created work that stands as magnificently
as Grand Central Station, where The House of Mirth begins."
Lydia Davis on Time and Again (1970) by Jack Finney
"What is extraordinary about the experience of reading this 1970
time-travel mystery story, a minor classic, is the patience and
persuasiveness with which the narrator evokes, with his 20th-century
eye, New York City as it was in 1882. His experience of entering that
past time with his modern culture intact is so utterly believable,
because it is so meticulously detailed. It actually teaches one how to
stand in any landscape of the present and "see" a past version that in
a sense has not disappeared but merely underlies the present and is
accessible with enough effort of the imagination. After I read it, not
only was the city changed for me, but all other landscapes as well,
because the book had changed my way of looking and imagining."
Ed Sanders on Howl and Other Poems (1956) by Allen Ginsberg
"Allen Ginsberg's great "Howl," from his epoch-stirring 1956 book, Howl and Other Poems,
while truly a rhapsodic long-breathed poem celebrating all of America,
has many qualities that make it a New York State classic. When I first
read it as a senior in high school in 1957, it seemed like a clear path
to a New Holiness. I often tell those at readings that if it weren't
for the great poem beginning "I saw the best minds of my generation..."
I'd have settled on a job driving an Eskimo Pie truck in Kansas City.
It blew through the era and it was both sacred and shocking. It
revealed to an entire generation a kind of New Autobiography. It
beckoned to poets, challenging them to dare to be part of the history
of their era. Howl is the book that most changed my life."
Edward Schwarzschild on Enormous Changes at the Last Minute (1974) by Grace Paley
"I was a nineteen year-old pre-med university student and Grace
Paley was almost invisible behind the auditorium's podium. But I heard
her voice loud and clear. She began by reading "Wants," the opening
story from Enormous Changes at the Last Minute. I was
immediately, forever entranced. Early on, she mentioned a "new library"
somewhere in the New York City of my dreams. I followed that tough,
street-smart, vital voice long after that day and it led me to make
many enormous last minute changes to my life. I set off to find Paley's
new library. Then I read and read and read."
James Lasdun on Seize the Day (1956) by Saul Bellow
"I love this book. For a long time it functioned as my own private
style manual (there's nothing to touch it for the sheer crackling
brilliance of the prose), and even today its Broadway streetscapes are
more real to me than anything I see with my own eyes. As for the lives
unraveling in the magnificently depressing Hotel Gloriana where most of
the action takes place hapless, big-hearted Tommy Wilhelm and his
coldly shrewd father; Tamkin the hypnotic charlatan they have a scale
and scope and intensity that seems, quite simply, unimaginable anywhere
else but New York."
Le Anne Schreiber on Bronx Primitive (1982) by Kate Simon
"New York would not be New York without Ellis Island, and the
immigrant millions who disembarked there to remake the city and
themselves. Of the many classic accounts of life straight off the boat,
my favorite is Bronx Primitive, Kate Simon's rigorously
unsentimental memoir of her 1920s girlhood. Its reigning virtues are
clarity and candor about the physical and emotional environment that
surrounded a young girl, transplanted to the Bronx from the Warsaw
ghetto, a girl so lethally observant and renegade in spirit that she
took pride in her tyrannical father's epithet for her -'the silent
white snake.'"
Russell Banks on The Adirondacks: Illustrated (1874) by Seneca Ray Stoddard
"The Adirondacks: Illustrated had a significant influence
on the legislation that created the Adirondack Park and was a major
influence in opening the region to tourism and later economic
development. It's a story of a love affair with a region told in the
form of a guide book. It imagined the northeast corner of New York
State so vividly that it made the region in the public imagination a
permanent part of the state. It's personal, humorous (modeled on
Twain's Innocents Abroad), informed and still a pleasure to read."
William Kennedy on The Stories of John Cheever (1978) by John Cheever
"John Cheever turned the suburbs north of Manhattan into a
three-ring circus where a clownish fatalism attached to most lives. He
made ordinary places sacred and absurdly profane at the same time. He
raced his characters through their improbable lives with such
extraordinary language that the improbable became inevitable, and
exquisite, and suburbia became a mythic community whose boundaries
reached the ends of America. Cheever's masterpiece is his Stories, splendid proof of what a superb writer he was all his life."
Rebecca Wolff on Turn, Magic Wheel (1936) by Dawn Powell
"A novel as fascinating for its flaws as for its dazzling array of
successes. Skewering with vicious certainty and disconcerting
prescience everything from the marketing impulses of literary
publishers to the self-perceived poverty of the very rich, to the
novelist's own work of spinning fine experiences-especially of those
most dear to us-into pure dross, Turn, Magic Wheel is at
times lavishly overwritten, but ever in the spirit of nailing the dirty
hearts of those who live (in this case in the vivid social provinces of
1930s New York City) and those who write about them."
Donald Faulkner on Hardwater Country: Stories (1979) by Frederick Busch
"There are at least six collections of Frederick Busch's marvelous,
spare, evocative short stories set in that broad region of landscape
and imagination known as 'upstate New York.' I list Hardwater Country because
it was my first encounter with a writer who should be celebrated like
Chekov or Trevor. And, as each of those writers explored human nature
in literary settings that became uniquely their own, Busch laid claim
to those tough semi-rural places that are near-forgotten in the
literature of New York. Someday there will be a 'Collected Stories of
Frederick Busch' but for now I encourage any reader to wander among the
fictions of Absent Friends, Don't Tell Anyone, and Rescue Missions."
In 1983 Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist William Kennedy founded the
Writers Institute at Albany with funds from his MacArthur fellowship. A
year later Governor Mario Cuomo signed into law legislation creaeting
the New York State Writers Institute and giving the Institute a mandate
to provide "a milieu for established and aspiring writers to work
together to increase the artistic imagination." Since then the Writers
Institute, located at the University at Albany, has sponsored a vast
number of author visits, film screenings, symposia, staged readings,
and writing workshops. Over 1,000 writers - in all genres, and winners
of every major literary award in the United States and abroad - have
shared their work with both student and community audiences, making the
Writers Institute one of the premiere sites for promoting the art of
the written word.
For additional information contact the Writers Institute at 518-442-5620 or online at http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst.
Selectors' Brief Bios:
Russell Banks, fiction writer, previously served as New York State Author from 2004 to 2008. His novels include The Reserve (2008), The Darling (2004), a Los Angeles Times Book Award Finalist, and Cloudsplitter (1980), a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He lives in Keene and Saratoga Springs.
Lydia Davis, 2003 MacArthur fellowship winner and 2007 National Book Award Finalist for Varieties of Disturbance (2007), has just published her Collected Stories (2009). She resides in Columbia County.
Donald Faulkner, director of the New York State Writers Institute, is the author of two books of poetry and four critical works, including Portable Malcolm Cowley. A Danforth Fellow, he is an advisor to the PBS documentary, Paris: The Luminous Years. He lives in the Capital Region.
William Kennedy, novelist, and founder and
executive director of the New York State Writers Institute, is known
for fiction set in his native city of Albany. His novels include Legs (1975), Ironweed (1983), winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and Roscoe (2002). He lives in Albany and Averill Park.
James Lasdun, poet and fiction writer, winner of
the first United Kingdom National Short Story Prize (2006), is the
author of the new short story collection, It's Beginning to Hurt (2009). He lives in the Catskill Mountain region of New York.
Ed Sanders, poet, is a past winner of the Frank O'Hara Prize and the American Book Award. He is the author of the three-volume, America: A History in Verse (2000-04). He lives in Woodstock.
Le Anne Schreiber, former sports editor of the New York Times, and winner of a National Magazine Award, is the author of the memoir, Midstream (1996), a New York Times Notable Book. She lives in Copake in the Taconic foothills.
Edward Schwarzschild, fiction writer, is the author of the novel Responsible Men (2005), a San Francisco Chronicle Best Book of the Year, and the story collection The Family Diamond (2007). He lives in Albany.
Lynne Tillman, a National Book Critics Circle Award finalist for the novel, No Lease on Life (1997), is the author most recently of the novel, American Genius: A Comedy (2006). She lives in Manhattan.
Rebecca Wolff, National Poetry Series winner for Manderley (2001), and founding editor of FENCE magazine and FENCE Books is the author most recently of The King: Poems (2009). She makes her home in Athens, NY.
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