A Debut Novelist: ‘Subject Matter Matters’

Ted Thompson, author of The Land of Steady Habits, talks about his business in ways that make him uncomfortable. “I feel like I’m bordering on saying something sacrilegious here, but here it goes: There’s a common strain of thinking among writers, particularly literary writers and the institutions that foster them (conference/colonies/workshops), that insists a book is only as good as its writing.”

Although he still believes in the preeminence of good writing, he know believes subject is very, very, and also very important. “Once a manuscript leaves your desk, subject matter is the primary (and often only) way it is discussed. So if you haven’t figured out a quick way to answer that cringe-inducing question ‘What’s your book about?’ in a way that interests other people, somebody else will. And that will be how the book is sold…”

He goes on to say how surprised he was that people in publishing actually want to love your book and that the slowness of the whole process is understandable.

Alone with Classics

Author Sarah Perry was “raised by Strict Baptists” in Essex and not allowed to watch movies or read contemporary books. The result? “I turned my back on modernity and lost myself to Hardy and Dickens, Brontë and Austen, Shakespeare, Eliot and Bunyan. I memorised Tennyson, and read Homer in prose and Dante in verse; I shed half my childhood tears at The Mill on the Floss. I slept with Sherlock Holmes beside my pillow, and lay behind the sofa reading Roget. It was as though publication a century before made a book suitable – never was I told I ought not to read this or that until I was older. To my teacher’s horror my father gave me Tess of the D’Urbervilles when I was still at primary school, and I was simply left to wander from Thornfield to Agincourt to the tent of sulking Achilles, making my own way.”

And she soaked in the King James Bible. Her debut novel, After Me Comes the Flood, is reviewed here. (via Prufrock)

Rediscovering the Excitement of Reading the Bible

“I remember, as a teenager, reading through the books of Samuel and, upon finishing, thinking to myself, ‘This story is as invigorating as any story I’ve ever read, seen, or heard.’ What is strange to me now is how surprising a revelation that was. Having grown up with the literature, why didn’t I already think of it as engaging?”

Mark Bertrand interviews Adam Lewis Greene on his plan for an alternative reading experience for the Bible. Bibliotheca will be a four volume edition of the Bible made for readers with beautiful book design.

Gaiman’s ‘American Gods’ Coming to TV

The Starz network is developing Neil Gaiman’s American Gods for the small screen, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The series was passed over earlier by HBO.

Gaiman is excited about it. He says, “The team at Starz has been quite certain that they wanted to give Shadow, Wednesday and Laura a home since they first heard that the book was out there. I can’t wait to see what they do to bring the story to the widest possible audience able to cope with it.”

I gather he anticipates haters.

Barnabas Piper is a Pastor’s Kid

The Pastor's Kid, by Barnabas Piper

Barnabas Piper’s new book, The Pastor’s Kid, is out today. In his interview with Matt Smethurst, Piper talks about his own feelings and what he learned from other pastors’ kids.

Your book is based on what you learned from hundreds of conversations with pastors’ kids over the years. What surprised you most as you interacted with other pastors’ kids?

Two things surprised me. The first was the consistency of the stories and experiences regardless of context. Even the phrasing of answers and the quotes they shared of what people in their churches had said to them were almost verbatim. While I expected similarities, it was almost like a bunch of people had copied the same answer on a test or something. It gave me real clarity about what needed to be addressed as well as assurance that my own experiences weren’t the outlier.

The second thing that surprised me was how many PKs are now in vocational ministry. The stereotype is of PKs who turn their back on the church, but I connected with dozens who, despite their struggles, love and serve the church.

The tendency for judging pastors’ kids was a dual expectation of perfection and rebellion. People thought these children should be models of the Christian life while also believing they would rebel and reject the church. It’s an impossible standard.

C.S. Lewis Reviews ‘The Hobbit’

In 1937, The Times Literary Supplement ran this review from Professor C.S. Lewis: “To define the world of The Hobbit is, of course, impossible, because it is new. You cannot anticipate it before you go there, as you cannot forget it once you have gone. The author’s admirable illustrations and maps of Mirkwood and Goblingate and Esgaroth give one an inkling—and so do the names of the dwarf and dragon that catch our eyes as we first ruffle the pages. But there are dwarfs and dwarfs, and no common recipe for children’s stories will give you creatures so rooted in their own soil and history as those of Professor Tolkien—who obviously knows much more about them than he needs for this tale.”

Read the whole thing.

12 Steps to Enjoying Movies More

Jeffrey Overstreet has started a 12-step group for “More Rewarding Moviegoing.” He says, “Sight Club is like a 12-step program. We’re here to cultivate ‘eyes to see’ and ‘ears to hear’ in a world full of darkness and noise. Movies give us a world of opportunities.”

A Loser’s Game

“It is a loser’s game to try to appease the claims of those who despise one’s moral convictions, but nonetheless complain you aren’t applying them fastidiously enough.”

Here’s a quote from a friend on recent news. I wanted to say this yesterday, but didn’t give it enough thought.

For Men Who Don’t Read

For the man who says he wants to read more novels, but doesn’t, Mark Mason recommends A Man Called Ove by Swedish atuhor Fredrik Backman.

“The reason it’s the perfect book for weaning men back onto literary fiction is that Ove (pronounced “oover”) is just like us. He’s a grumpy old pedant. No matter if you’re younger than his 59, or less bothered about neighbours breaking residential parking restrictions, or more relaxed about the fact that no one knows how to put up shelves properly these days, there will be a part of you that’s just like Ove. He even hits a clown at one point, and any man who tells you he hasn’t wanted to do that is lying.” (via Prufrock)

What Do The English Do on the Fourth of July?

A genuine Englishiander gives us this rundown of what his people do on The Fourth of July (besides watching American TV). One thing they do is watch fireworks:

“Crowds of people dress in red coats and gather under large scaffolds, which are extensively rigged with explosive fireworks. At an agreed-upon time across the country, the fuses are lit and the fireworks shoot downward, into the throng that has gathered underneath. This serves to remind the British people of the pain and suffering that came from the defeat endured by the King’s Army, and to prepare younger generations of English men for the eventuality of a second battle in which the Crown retakes what is rightfully British land.”