Browsing Archive: January, 2010

Mechanical/Cultural Musings

Posted by Roger Boylan on Friday, January 29, 2010,
"Wow, that thing has 'Irish satirical novelist' and 'literary critic' written all over it," was the heavily ironic comment of one of my colleagues when I pulled into the office parking lot in my molten-orange Ford F-150 Raptor supertruck. (Not really mine, actually; it's one of the vehicles I'm sent by various test fleets to review.) Of course, my colleague's comment went straight to the heart of the apparent contradiction between art and materialism, a supposed dichotomy that has become so a...

Continue reading ...
 

Early Scribbling

Posted by Roger Boylan on Friday, January 29, 2010,

Shoplifting at Dracula's, cont'd. 

         What did scar me was the treble isolation of being an only child of parents who were distant from me and from each other; being myself, whoever that was, amid my peers, who all seemed to have firm identities; and being a stranger in a strange land. It could have been the recipe for another Hitler, and it certainly explains in part my lifelong interest in bizarre loners, including the Führer, whom I see as a kind of crazy country cousin,...


Continue reading ...
 

Larkin In Church

Posted by Roger Boylan on Thursday, January 28, 2010,

Church Going

by Philip Larkin

Once I am sure there's nothing going on

I step inside, letting the door thud shut.

Another church: matting, seats, and stone,

And little books; sprawlings of flowers, cut

For Sunday, brownish now; some brass and stuff

Up at the holy end; the small neat organ;

And a tense, musty, unignorable silence,

Brewed God knows how long. Hatless, I take off

My cycle-clips in awkward reverence.

 

Move forward, run my hand around the font.

From where I stand, t...


Continue reading ...
 

First Years in Geneva

Posted by Roger Boylan on Wednesday, January 27, 2010,

 Shoplifting at Dracula's: a memoir, cont'd.

In our Ford Squire, Dad at the wheel (Mum never drove when he was available, regardless whether he was drunk or sober—although she was never drunk), we returned to the Continent, Dover to Calais across the choppy Channel under November skies the color of slate and, bidding Paris au revoir from the périphérique, traveled down the poplar-lined Roman highway, Route Nationale 5, through the dirty golds and muddy midwinter spinach-greens of Burg...


Continue reading ...
 

Vollmann Gets It Right

Posted by Roger Boylan on Wednesday, January 27, 2010,

I wish I could go back and rewrite my first book, You Bright and Risen Angels; I could do a better job. But in the meantime, nobody knows as much about my books as I do. Nobody has the right but me to say which words go into my books or get deleted or edited. When I'm dying, I'll smile, knowing I stood up for my books. If I die with more money, that wouldn't bring a smile to my face. Unless I got better drugs or more delicious-looking nurses.

William T. Vollmann


Continue reading ...
 

WAM

Posted by Roger Boylan on Monday, January 25, 2010,

The truth is that we mediocre men cannot even imagine what it is to be a great man like Mozart and Shakespeare and thus to be free from the domination of the contemporary prejudices, beliefs, morals, artistic rules, scruples (call them what you will) with which even the most enlightened of us are—often unconsciously—obsessed.

              W.J. Turner, Mozart: The Man and His Works


Continue reading ...
 

Paris to Geneva

Posted by Roger Boylan on Saturday, January 23, 2010,

Paris was a place of wonder. It was a real city, my first. I loved it, even peopled as it was by foreigners who insisted on speaking a foreign language and expecting me to understand—me, transatlantic princeling that I was! I had no intention of learning their jabber, yet later did, to a near-native pitch of fluency. My parents, however, remained staunchly hopeless at languages. E...


Continue reading ...
 

Anchors Aweigh

Posted by Roger Boylan on Friday, January 22, 2010,

Shoplifting at Dracula's, cont'd. (Photo is of the RMS Queen Elizabeth.)

Of the transatlantic journey that links me to that bygone era of great ocean voyages that is in turn linked to all of previous seaborne human history, I recall only teasing episodes: the bustle and excitement of boarding the Queen Elizabeth; the dark water slopping ominously, far beneath the steep gangway; the brilliance of the light at sea; the briny ocean-smell; the miniature salt and pepper shakers on the dining ta...


Continue reading ...
 

Remembering Orwell

Posted by Roger Boylan on Thursday, January 21, 2010,

Sixty years ago, this obituary appeared in the London press:         

         Eric Arthur Blair died suddenly in London on 21 January 1950 at the age of forty-six, succumbing to the tuberculosis that had plagued him for the last three years of his life.

Blair was, of course, better known by his pen name, George Orwell. He was one of the most indispensable twentieth-century writers. Only Koestler understood the dangers of totalitarian ideology as well. But Orwell was a cha...


Continue reading ...
 

Birth Day

Posted by Roger Boylan on Thursday, January 21, 2010,

Shoplifting at Dracula's, cont'd. (Photo: Flagler St., Miami, 1951. Note the coincidence of McRory's Department Store, at right.)

         I was born into a tropical never-never-land of pink stucco and Jewish retirees and towering palms, on July 20th, 1951, at around two in the afternoon, seven years to the day after Colonel von Stauffenberg failed to extinguish the Führer via bomb, and precisely eighteen years before another colonel, Neil Armstrong, made his contribution to histor...


Continue reading ...
 

What's in a Name?

Posted by Roger Boylan on Wednesday, January 20, 2010,

Quite frankly, I've always thought, in my infinite naivety, that proclaiming oneself "anti-Zionist" or "anti-Israeli" rather than "anti-Semitic" gives one a hell of a license to go ahead and be, well, anti-Semitic. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the Arab world, where "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" and Mein Kampf are perennial bestsellers, and nowhere in the Arab world more than in Hamas-controlled Gaza. But it seems that the Fatah-controlled Palestine Authority (a hopeless sho...


Continue reading ...
 

More Memoir

Posted by Roger Boylan on Tuesday, January 19, 2010,
Shoplifting at Dracula's, Chapter Two

   First Travels and Travails

We don’t remember days. We remember moments.

                                             Cesare Pavese

     Two years ago, when I was trying to sell property in France, the French authorities, in their inscrutable Chinese way (not for nothing is the French ruling elite called Les Mandarins), instructed me to furnish them with the address of my parents’ first conjug...


Continue reading ...
 

The Well-Appointed Bookshelf

Posted by Roger Boylan on Monday, January 18, 2010,
Nice to know how randomly scattered are those with idiosyncratic literary tastes. This is from my friend Stephen Wesson, who recently spent a weekend in a cabin in the mountains of West Virginia and discovered therein this eclectic bookshelf.  
Continue reading ...
 

La Nuit, L'Amour

Posted by Roger Boylan on Friday, January 15, 2010,
Whenever I hear Rachmaninov's magnificent Suite for Two Pianos I think of Paris, so here's a nice shot of the Pont des Arts, and here's a link to a YouTube clip of two great ladies of the ivories, Martha Argerich and Lilya Zilberstein, playing the second part, "La Nuit, L'Amour." I can damned near smell the roasting coffee and the diesel fumes on the damp air.
Continue reading ...
 

Moscow on the Rhone

Posted by Roger Boylan on Thursday, January 14, 2010,
No, not Mother Russia, but one of her offshoots: the neighborhood church in the district of Geneva known as "La Petite Russie," or "Little Russia," where Lenin, Bakunin, Dostoevsky, and others resided during the great Tsarist diaspora and after, right up until the Bolshevik uprising of 1917. Joseph Conrad wrote a novel about the Geneva Russians: Under Western Eyes, which I still remember as capturing the atmosphere of Geneva's snowy streets in midwinter and the warmth of the expatriate Russia...
Continue reading ...
 

More Memoirizing

Posted by Roger Boylan on Thursday, January 14, 2010,

Here we finish Chapter One of my memoir–which is currently titled Shoplifting at Dracula's, by the way, for reasons that will become apparent if you stick around. (Photo: Rural Co. Tyrone.)

4. My mother’s bunch were Irish too, but they were (or became) Prods, “Scotch-Irish” in the parlance of then, an entirely inaccurate label because they were God-mad Erse through and through, those Catholic McRorys from the county Tyrone. The Catholic McRorys from Tyrone remade themselves into th...


Continue reading ...
 

Haiti Now, Lisbon Then

Posted by Roger Boylan on Thursday, January 14, 2010,

On the heels of the terrible earthquake in Haiti, in which as many as 500,000 people may have died, I think back to the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and Voltaire's reaction to it. I almost always find the Sage of Ferney a fresh breeze in the ambient fug, and in this case, as in so many others, he took on the obscurantists with gusto, and from his outrage came a poem, Poème Sur le Désastre de Lisbonne, and ultimately, of course, Candide, in which the character of Dr. Pangloss is based on the the...


Continue reading ...
 

Snow in the Mournes

Posted by Roger Boylan on Wednesday, January 13, 2010,
The Mourne Mountains extend along the coast of Northern Ireland, from south of Belfast down to Strangford Lough, on the Irish Sea. C. S. Lewis, who was born in Belfast, visited them often as a boy and was inspired by their otherworldly beauty to invent Narnia–or so 'tis said, by some. I hitchhiked through them in the spring of 1972, on my way from Coleraine, where I was a student at the University of Ulster, to Dublin, where the Abbey Mooney was. (The Abbey Mooney, and Wynn's Hotel across t...
Continue reading ...
 

Speak On, Memory

Posted by Roger Boylan on Tuesday, January 12, 2010,

And on we go, down all the days of Boylans and others; we're in about 1888 now. The photo shows an original DuPont powder mill on the Brandywine River, Wilmington, Del., ca. 1905.

3. Widowed Mary Boylan was left to bring up Ned Junior and Bob as best she could, which she did by moving from the slums of South Philly twenty-odd miles SSW to more salubrious surroundings in less grand but smaller and cheaper Wilmington, Delaware. There, in the city of the DuPonts, she determinedly pursued succ...


Continue reading ...
 

Memory Marches On....

Posted by Roger Boylan on Monday, January 11, 2010,

...and on and on. Here's the next bit. I'll go on like this until I've serialized the whole thing, à la Dickens. Maybe some kind editor will spot it and ask to publish it. (All right, all right, you can stop laughing now.) Intermittently, I'll be posting pieces on other subjects than myself, which will be a pleasant change.         

2.  In the 1870s a mysterious crisis that led directly to my being born an American occurred in the Boylan house of hogs in Clones. Whether the casu...


Continue reading ...
 

Memories of the Old Country

Posted by Roger Boylan on Friday, January 8, 2010,
I'm working on a memoir. This is how it begins. (The picture shows where it all began: Monaghan, Ireland.)

1.
  My parents were thoroughly Irish types, thoroughly American that they also were: she, the lace-curtain pasionaria; he, the desperate chancer. Delaware-born, they were both of immediate or intermediate Irish stock: the Rogerses, originally McRorys, on her grandfather’s side; the Boylans on his father’s. His branch of the Boylans were formerly of Co. Monaghan in south Ulster, near...
Continue reading ...
 

The Hudson Commodore, ca. 1949

Posted by Roger Boylan on Thursday, January 7, 2010,

Memories of another car, another era (I have my car-guy hat firmly on today): This boat-like conveyance, the Hudson Commodore of 1949-50, quite upscale for the time, boasted Hudson's then-famous straight-six engine, the finest, creamiest powerplant from the finest American car manufacturer of the day after Lincoln and Studebaker. An off-white Commodore convertible similar to the one in the picture, with red leather interior, three on the tree, and all-tube in-dash radio, belonged to my mot...


Continue reading ...
 

V.S. Naipaul Never Had a Day Job

Posted by Roger Boylan on Wednesday, January 6, 2010,
Lucky bugger. And he explains why.

"With each job description I read, I felt a tightening of what I must call my soul. I found myself growing false to myself, acting to myself, convincing myself of my rightness for whatever was being described. And this is where I suppose life ends for most people, who stiffen in the attitudes they adopt to make themselves suitable for the jobs and lives others have laid out for them." 

True. And then there are the rest of us day-jobbing journeyman writers. Ch...

Continue reading ...
 

Chessex's Last Bow, De Sade's Last Skull

Posted by Roger Boylan on Tuesday, January 5, 2010,
Browsing the Tribune de Geneve, online edition of the newspaper of record of Geneva, my favorite ex-hometown, I learn posthumous news of the great Jacques Chessex, the Swiss writer whose death I commemorated in a previous post. Chessex's last book, Le dernier crâne de M. de Sade (Mr. de Sade's Last Skull)–which he finished on the morning of the 9th of October last, collapsing later that same day of heart failure while shouting down a heckler at a reading in the Swiss spa of Yverdon-les-B...
Continue reading ...
 

More Sorrentino

Posted by Roger Boylan on Monday, January 4, 2010,

Unfortunately, life made Gilbert Sorrentino an expert on the letdowns, rejections, and deceptions inherent in the writing life; fortunately, he turned his disappointments into satire, as a satirist does. Here are some excerpts from "Sea of Rains," a chapter in his very funny parody of the arty and literary worlds, Lunar Follies (Coffee House Press, 2005), in which imaginary but all-too-real rejection letters pour from various publishers onto the desk of the agent of a writer known only as "...


Continue reading ...
 

Sorrentino

Posted by Roger Boylan on Saturday, January 2, 2010,
I'm doing a review of Gilbert Sorrentino's final book, The Abyss of Human Illusion, for the New York Times. While researching it, I came across a couple of peppery interviews with Sorrentino, who died in '06 at the Nabokovian age of 77; like VN, he upheld a high literary standard, while despising affectation; and like VN he was a man of strong opinions and unique style. He refused to seek the well-trodden roads of bestsellerdom and artistic compromise. Life, he said,was ridiculous; you only h...
Continue reading ...
 
 

Categories

Make a Free Website with Yola.