NYRB NEWS
‘Waiting for the Barbarians’ Shortlisted for PEN Literary Award
Daniel Mendelsohn’s collection of essays—Waiting for the Barbarians: Essays from the Classics to Pop Culture—has been shortlisted for the 2013 PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay. Awarded each year by a panel of judges, the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award honors work that “exemplifies the dignity and esteem that the essay form imparts to literature.”
This year’s judges are Sven Birkerts, Robert Gottlieb, and Mark Kramer. The final winners and runners-up will be announced later this summer and will be honored at the 2013 PEN Literary Awards Ceremony on Monday, October 21, 2013, at CUNY Graduate Center’s Proshansky Auditorium in New York City.
Marc Simont, 1915-2013
It is with great sadness that NYRB marks the passing of the gifted illustrator Marc Simont.
Born in Paris, Simont studied drawing with his father (also an illustrator) and at schools in France and the United States. Over the course of his illustrious career he worked on over 100 children’s books, including The Backward Day, The Wonderful O, and The 13 Clocks (all available from The New York Review Children’s Collection).
He was the recipient of a Caldecott Medal (for A Tree is Nice), two Caldecott Honors (The Happy Day and The Stray Dog), and—in recognition of his work as an occasional political cartoonist—the Grambs Aronson Award for Cartooning With a Conscience.
Margalit Fox of The New York Times described his work as “embodying both airy lightness and crackling energy.” We will miss that lightness and energy—and return to his work for its vivacity, intimacy, and charm.
Antonioni’s ‘Le Amiche,’ based on a novel by Cesare Pavese, will be screened at Film Forum
Ian McEwan Calls ‘Stoner’ “A Minor Masterpiece”
In a recent interview on BBC 4 morning radio show “Today,” acclaimed novelist Ian McEwan beamed about Stoner by John Williams.
The novel tells the story of the life of William Stoner—from his roots as the son of dirt-poor Midwestern farmers to his education and discovery of literature, from the disappointments of his professional life to his attempts to find love and solitude. McEwan called the book “a joyful discovery,” noting that “as soon as you start reading it you feel you’re in very, very good hands.”When asked whether this book—with its subtle plot and small protagonist—would make a good summer read, McEwan replied emphatically “I can’t convey well enough, this is the book to take. It will thrive in the hotel room and on the beach. It is a marvelous discovery for everyone who loves literature.”
Listen to the interview here.
A Tribute to Russell Hoban
To celebrate the publication of Turtle Diary, NYRB Classics and McNally Jackson have planned a July 8th tribute to Russell Hoban, author of many books for children and adults.
Ed Park, author of Personal Days and the introducer to Turtle Diary, John Wray, author of Lowboy, Brigid Hughes, editor of A Public Space, Damion Searls, translator of Robert Walser’s A Schoolboy’s Diary and Other Stories, and Phoebe Hoban, daughter of Russell Hoban, will be participating.
The event will take place on July 8, at 7pm at the McNally Jackson Bookstore. For more information, click here.
Happy Birthday to Helen Keller
Today we celebrate the birth of Helen Keller. Many of us are familiar with the basics of Keller’s biography—that childhood illness left her deaf and blind, that she worked with her teacher Anne Sullivan to acquire language—but she was also a prolific writer and a tireless activist, lending her support to the advancement of women and various socialist causes. Her intellectually daring memoir, The World I Live In, is available from NYRB Classics.
“While Helen Keller is better known for The Story of My Life, her later book, The World I Live In, is a warmer, more intimate and more beautiful work, one in which we encounter Helen Keller’s remarkable imagination, her originality, and her power as a literary artist. She comes alive here, vividly and idiosyncratically, more than in any other of her writings.”
—Oliver Sacks
NYRB celebrates early summer birthdays
Félix Fénéon (1861-1944) labored in anonymity in a French war office, but he was also a critic, publisher, journalist, anarchist, and “literary instigator.” His Novels in Three Lines originally appeared in the French newspaper Le Matin, and were culled from stories covered therein. They show his precision with language, his dry wit, and his calculated assessment of things. As translator and introducer Luc Sante writes, “His politics, his aesthetics, his curiosity and sympathy are all on view, albeit applied with tweezers and delineated with a single-hair brush.” We celebrate his birthday on June 22.
Also born on June 22 was the Dutch author Nescio, or Jan Hendrik Frederik Grönloh (1882-1961). Nescio—Latin for “I don’t know”—was a writer whose growing reputation and cult readership have marked him as a figure in world literature. His stories are inhabited by wastrels and charmers, the young and the no-longer-young, the bourgeois and the bohemian. He was a great stylist, capturing the mercantile city of Amsterdam and its bucolic surrounding countryside with equal vitality. NYRB has published the first English language edition of his work with Damion Searls’s translation of Amsterdam Stories, with an introduction by Joseph O’Neill.
On June 25 we celebrate the birth of Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy (1887-1938), who wrote the first patient’s-eye view of brain surgery. A Journey Round My Skull is a memoir of his brain tumor—the hallucinations it provoked and its treatment. What’s more, Karinthy manages to tell this story without being macabre or morbid. In his introduction to the book, Oliver Sacks calls it “a masterpiece,” and “one of the very best [medical memoirs].”
Yoram Kaniuk, 1930–2013
It is with great sadness that NYRB notes the death of celebrated Israeli author Yoram Kaniuk. One of the Dor Tashach—the “1948 generation” of writers who came of age during birth of the State of Israel—Kaniuk was fearless about taking on controversial issues. In his early career, his style ran contrary to those of his peers; rather than embracing realism, he reveled in a stream-of-consciousness more akin to surrealism. He valued self-criticism over self-righteousness.
1948, published in the NYRB Lit e-book series, is an autobiographical novel in which he tries to remember what did—and did not—happen during his time as a teenage soldier in the Palmach. 1948 won the Sapir Prize, Israel’s most prestigious literary award.