kristyn winters

5 July 2008

Katie Herzig

Filed under: music — Tags: , — kristyn @ 8:16 pm

Katie Herzig has a new album called Apple Tree.  You can sample it on her website.  Buy it or tell a few friends and download it immediately.  Listen to full tracks on her myspace page.  If you’re unfamiliar with her music, I highly recommend Weightless.

Track Results

Filed under: running — Tags: , , , , , — kristyn @ 10:35 am

If you’re interested, check out the Olympic Trial track results.  It’s surprising to see some of the great track runners (notice how most have CU or Colorado in common) not fare so well.  I haven’t kept up with track so much as cross country and the longer distances, but my husband checks these results all the time.

Controversial Franzen

For anyone who follows the controversy that is Jonathan Franzen and The Corrections, here is Santiago Ramos’s thoughts over at the Image blog. For extra reading, check out James Wood’s original review.

I had a hard time accepting that I liked The Corrections. I didn’t read it until late 2006, early 2007. I came to the book having read Ben Marcus’s essay in Harper’s, so I had already decided Franzen was one of the bad guys (let’s leave the Oprah fiasco out of this). Ignorantly so. The book still produces in me mixed feelings, but it was fun to read and raises so many good questions. For anyone who’s ever met or known someone with Alzheimer’s or a form of the disease, it’s interesting to see the way he shows it from the inside (imagined, of course). And I enjoyed the language, once I got over my resistance to writers who seem to be saying “look at me, look at my fancy writing tricks” with their writing (see: Dave Eggers, David Foster Wallace). But be warned, there is foul language and content that does not suit all.

The ever-present question remains: literary or popular fiction? High, middle, or low brow? Can we have both? What are the values? I will say this: Last year I had to find out what was the hype surrounding Jodi Picoult (who claims she has both critical and commercial success). Her books engage the reader, making the 400+ pages seem like 40, but from the first few pages, I cringed at her writing. Elementary mistakes distracted me from the story. I won’t say she’s not talented, but she’s certainly not on par with the great writers that have preceded us.

All that to say, I still read a mix of writers. I won’t join any of the camps, but it is an interesting conversation. Will the average American read Don DeLillo? Maybe not. Will they read Faulkner outside of the classroom? What about Flannery O’Connor? Or does the average American only read Stephen King, John Grisham, and the stock romance writers? Are books for entertainment, education, moral value, or enlightenment? What about awe? Some say it’s good enough to get people reading. Others say the reader should have to work to uncover the gems What do you say?

Currently Reading

Filed under: books — Tags: , , , , , — kristyn @ 9:19 am

Aside from the dozen books I’ve started in the last two years, books that are still waiting for my attention, I’m reading a handful of pleasant books. Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina consumes most of my reading time. Perhaps I’m crazy, but I’m also in the middle of Turgenev’s Fathers and Sons and Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov. Not sure why I always return to the Russian writers.

I’m waiting to start Slavenka Drakulic’s Cafe Europa. I highly recommend her other book: How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed.

On the American front, I’m reading Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead, a couple books on freelance writing, and a pile of magazines (Relevant, Paste, Runner’s World, Image, Ruminate, Colorado Runner, and more). And in spare moments, I’m looking for good vegetarian cookbooks so I can introduce some healthy foods into our diet before we grow bored of the few foods we do consume.

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