Tag Archives: London

Granta: Three Questions for Nicole Krauss

Nicole Krauss is the multi-award-winning author of three novels, including the bestseller The History of Love, and was chosen as one of Granta’s Best Young American Novelists in 2007. Her new novel, Great House, was published this month. The plot centres on an imposing 19-drawer desk, once owned by a Chilean poet who died under Pinochet’s regime. It has one locked drawer. The story is narrated first by a reclusive New York writer, then by a widower in Jersualem and finally by another widower in London as he tries to understand a secret his wife kept from him for five decades. Saskia Vogel caught up with Nicole to ask her three questions about the book.

SV: In the first part of Great House the narrator asks two questions: ‘Do you think books change people’s lives?’, and the more cynical, ‘Do you think anything you write could mean anything to anyone?’ They are very different questions, but both make me wonder how you feel about the author as a public figure.

NK: Are they such different questions? I see them as different phrasings of the same question, or the same question asked in different moods. I know both of those moods well, and the many shades in between, too. I don’t think a writer can get away without wondering about the impact of literature, or questioning the worth of what she does. Obviously it’s easy to make an argument for the importance of literature in general, but almost impossible to sustain any conviction about the specific value of one’s own work. And that’s where the problem begins, or one of the problems.

Your style of storytelling has been described as ‘kaleidoscopic’. Do you feel this is accurate? What attracts you to telling a story with so many strands?

Yes, I think it’s fair to say that I’m very interested in patterns – within a single life, and between many lives – and equally interested in where those patterns break or become ambiguous. I think this attraction is connected to some innate fascination with structure, specifically to forms where disparate parts are drawn together to form an unexpected whole. I find it incredibly pleasing to make things in this fashion. Why that should be is a more complicated question. I’ve been thinking about metaphors recently. Why do we love metaphors? Because, when we link or juxtapose two seemingly unrelated things to reveal a commonality that feels at once surprising and inevitable, it confirms in us a sense of the unity and connectedness of all things. It’s a very joyful feeling, and one supported in art far better than in life. I suppose one could say that I like to create metaphors on the narrative or structural level by discovering the bridges, patterns, and allusions between stories that at first seem remote from one another. And one could also say that, having discovered them, I have a paradoxical urge to resist those same patterns, to break and deny them. For as much as I am invested in the consolation of meaning, I’m also very much aware that ours is an uncertain life, and I’m moved by the struggle of what it is to live in doubt, or with the unknown.

Both The History of Love and Great House carry a sense of the impossibility of ownership and the inevitability of loss. How did you become interested in these themes?

I wouldn’t describe my themes exactly in that way, but that doesn’t mean much; the writer isn’t the only authority on her themes. But if you’re asking about the subject of loss, I’d say that I’m interested in how people respond to tremendous loss, and specifically a response that involves a form of reinvention. Take Samson Greene, the protagonist of Man Walks Into a Room, who loses twenty-four years of his memory and has to reinvent a coherent self out of what remains. Or Leo Gursky in The History of Love, who responds to his loss by altering his reality; for whom memory is a creative act; who draws vitality from his irrepressible imagination. Or the story that the title Great House is taken from – to my mind one of the most beautiful stories in Jewish History – about how the Jews, under the guidance of Yochanan ben Zakkai, reimagined themselves after the loss of the Second Temple and Jerusalem, a radical reinvention that allowed them to survive in the Diaspora.

Reposted from Granta.com

Lucy Fox-Bohan is Brilliant

And she flatters me endlessly by putting me in view of her lens. Lucy’s sensuous minimalism is sublime. Enjoy her at http://coppertantobacco.blogspot.com/ For my California brethren: London can have blue skies, too.

Erotic Review 97: My Favourite Pornography

Here’s a taste of an article on my favorite pornography for the “Working Girls” issue of the Erotic Review. Enjoy!

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I probably shouldn’t admit this, but I am a plague to the porn industry. I’m not sure I would feel guilty if I were just another one of the faceless people who surfs the next for seconds, minutes at a time for free pornography. But, my job is to make sure instead of free clips, wankers like me pay top dollar for videos and all the bells and whistles that go with.I’m your friendly neighborhood adult industry trade magazine editor. I have on my shelves more hardcore DVDs than I know what to do with. (When I moved to London from Los Angeles, I left my car boot full with the crème-de-la-crème of 2007’s adult films for the next owner to dispose of). I know more about hardcore pornography than I never imagined wanting to. Before I landed a job in adult entertainment, my erotic inquisitiveness stopped at Radley Metzger’s The Lickerish Quartet, where, as best I remember, a group of friends hole up in a Tuscan villa to watch erotic Super-8s. Becoming obsessed with one of the female performers, they think they see her in the local circus’ motorcycle Ball of Death, somehow get her back to the villa for some fine 1970s softcore. That’s about as hard as I needed it to get. For most of my teens, I was stuck on Kryzstof Kieslowski’s drama White, where Julie Delpy mounts her down-and-out ex-husband in her shop in Paris for one last cruel mercy fuck. For more, click here.