Tone Clusters : The Joyce Carol Oates Discussion Group
November 16 to 30



From:  Cyranomish@aol.com
 Date:  Sun, 16 Nov 1997 07:57:18 -0500 (EST)
To: jco@usfca.edu
Subject:  hello? hello?

Hello, everyone.  I've been out of town 5 days.  To my surprise, no one's
been talking here all that time.  Is there a malfunction?  Cyrano


From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 13:17:18 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: hello? hello? I've been wondering the same thing. Where is everyone?
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 17:40:59 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: hello? hello? Maybe we should start a totally groundless rumor -- kick up some controversey. Cyrano
Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 18:22:51 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: hello? hello? well, i am still here - things have gotten a little chaotic so i haven't had much time to do a lot of non-academic reading. out of curiosity, are there any borges fans on the list? - jen "...what i won't give to have the things that mean the most not to mean the things i miss..." - indigo girls
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: hello? hello? From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 20:15:04 EST well, we could always propagate the whole Erica Jong liaisons...
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:43:08 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: starting conversation... Ok- I will start something. One of my favorite JCO novels is Solstice, and it's never brought up in discussion. I'm curious to know what you all think of this novel. Also, I heard JCO speak at Barnes and Nobles in NYC last September, and she mentioned that Solstice was being made into a movie. I have yet to hear anything else about it, though. Has anyone else heard/know anything? -Lindsay
From: Amy_Hendrick@baylor.edu Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:14:07 +0000 Subject: Re: starting conversation... To: jco@usfca.edu On Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:43:08 -0500 (EST) jco@usfca.edu wrote: >Ok- I will start something. One of my favorite JCO novels is Solstice, and >it's never brought up in discussion. I'm curious to know what you all think >of this novel. Also, I heard JCO speak at Barnes and Nobles in NYC last >September, and she mentioned that Solstice was being made into a movie. I >have yet to hear anything else about it, though. Has anyone else heard/know >anything? > -Lindsay > I speed-read the novel recently (for a paper, not my preferred method), so I may have missed something--but I found it strange that I had read many descriptions of the novel that described the relationship between the two women as lesbian when in fact, there seemed to be no evidence of this in the text. (How to explain this? Crass sensationalism? Exaggeration by queer theorists? My own misreading?) I did feel there were certain overtones, that perhaps the two women might have flirted with the idea or possibility, but I unfortunately can't recall any specifics. A film of Solstice has potential, I would think--probably it's not a big budget project, but I picture Meryl Streep as the teacher and Judy Davis as Shiela Trask (great name, I've always thought--recognizable, distinctive, but not unbelievably so). Christine C.
From: diamond@math.wvu.edu (Harvey Diamond) Subject: Re: hello? hello? To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:35:40 -0500 (EST) I think we did that already - the apparently mythical JCO son (although it prompted lots of interesting stuff). > > Maybe we should start a totally groundless rumor -- kick up some > controversey. Cyrano >
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 10:01:31 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... The SOLSTICE project was being done by Jeanne Moreau, who visited Princeton several times to work with JCO on script revisions. At one point, Susan Sarandon had agreed to play one of the leads. But like most of JCO's film projects, this one has since fallen into limbo due to lack of financing. Greg
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 10:50:30 -0500 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... > A film of Solstice has potential, I would think--probably it's not a big budget > project, but I picture Meryl Streep as the teacher > > Christine C. Meryl Streep as an Oates character? You must be kidding! Ralf A. Engeldinger
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 11:05:15 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... I actually like the original Susan Saradon idea for Shiela. Hmmm... Who would play Monica? I'll have to think about that one.
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 11:05:17 -0500 To: jco@usfca.edu From: "CinemaSource, Inc." kpetras@cinema-source.com Subject: borges Jen- I am a Borges fan....what have you read recently?
From: cambre@juno.com To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 08:33:22 -0800 Subject: Re: starting conversation... On Mon, 17 Nov 1997 10:50:30 -0500 "Ralf A. Engeldinger" >> >Meryl Streep as an Oates character? You must be kidding! > >Ralf A. Engeldinger > Actually, I think that's rather a good fit; not just any Oates character, of course, but Streep IS able to play a wide range of roles. It's just that she's gotten herself pigeonholed as a dialect - obsessed actress that audiences (and critics) now tend to look only for her technique when they're watching her. Speaking of actresses, after I saw Juliette Lewis in Natural Born Killers, I think I finally filled out my mental picture of Thalia, in "What I Lived For".
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 12:52:38 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Solstice Hello, Christine, Jen, all. I reviewed Solstice for a Boston newspaper when it first appeared -- god how time flies! I considered the possibility of its having a lesbian theme, but then decided Sheila & Monica's relationship was basically a power struggle: the kind of jockeying that most people do when they first become acquainted, but since this acquaintance is taking place in a JCO novel, the terms will be set for EXTREME.Sheila is the dominent personality from the moment she first appears -- riding up to Monica's cottage on a gallant steed like some fairy tale hero. Solstice made me think about the ways in which extreme, domineering people like Sheila can change the lives of people who have tried to keep their lives safe and comfortable. The change is usually a mixture of good and bad. Think of the hero in Double Delight -- his suburban cozy life is ruined at the end and he may even be about to be murdered by his new acquaintances, but he is nevertheless happy in a way he's never before experienced. I recall that Monica suffers rape on one of Sheila's adventures, but I can't remember whether she feels wrecked at the end of the novel or on the brink of some thrilling new life. I'll go check whilst y'all kick it around. Cyrano
From: diamond@math.wvu.edu (Harvey Diamond) Subject: Re: hello? hello? To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 12:58:38 -0500 (EST) Borges is a favorite writer and Labyrinths a favorite collection of his. He wrote a number short pieces concerning old mathematical paradoxes and philosophy (Avatars of the Tortoise, A new Refutation of Time, Death and the Compass, the Library of Babel) which are very enjoyable and wittily erudite - but maybe it helps to be a mathematics teacher to get a kick out of this writing. The Zahir is one his most enjoyable stories for me, starting out with a long discursion on the ever-changing dictates of fashion and ending with a vision of the entire world fixated on a magical coin. He has, above all, that distinctive style: Intellectually curious and ruminative, a quiet modesty with a self-deprecating wit, a consummate gentleman without pretense. I happened recently to come across a slide I used to use as a prologue to research talks, a bit from one of his short stories: "Trapani said to me, 'Someone showed me your Carriego book where you're talking about hoodlums all the time. Tell me Borges, what in the world can you know about hoodlums?' He stared at me with a kind of wonder. 'I've done research', I answered." Of course there are many experts, and much expert opinion, on Borges. Harvey Diamond
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 14:08:12 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: borges I've read El Aleph and Ficciones and I *adore* him - I thin he is pure genius. - jen "...what i won't give to have the things that mean the most not to mean the things i miss..." - indigo girls
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 14:09:56 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: hello? hello? My favorite Borges story is definitely "El Aleph" because it is a really awesome mix of his usual cerebralness and something a little more personal where he gives us a look into his private life - his idea of love (Beatriz) and includes us because of the infiniteness of El Aleph. - jen "...what i won't give to have the things that mean the most not to mean the things i miss..." - indigo girls
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 18:35:58 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... To Lindsay and everybody-- Solstice is my favorite JCO novel---I have it in paperback and first edition hardback---and Lindsay, two years ago when I met her she said that Solstice was being made into a movie, that she was writing the screenplay and that Jeanne Moreau was going to direct it.....it sounds great, but that's the last I've heard of it......JCO did say it hadn't been cast yet..... Ellen Haggar
Date: Tue, 18 Nov 1997 15:12:41 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Marie Keller belljar@ptdprolog.net Subject: Re: starting conversation... Hi~ My name is Marie, and I'm new to the list. I haven't heard anything about SOLSTICE being made into a movie, though I did see or read something about FOXFIRE being made into a movie. Marie *****************belljar@ptdprolog.net************ "Be master of your will and the slave of your conscience." ~Hasidic saying
To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Tue, 18 Nov 1997 22:25:49 -0800 From: olivetr987@juno.com (Anthony P Shoemaker) i would like anyone who can to send me any information of Joyce Carol Oates. web sites r welcome. i am doing a research paper on her and would enjoy plenty of sources for a thorough report. thanx.
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Thu, 20 Nov 1997 11:33:36 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... Marie- Yes, we've discussed the Foxfire movie before, but since you weren't around, I'll warn you. It is possibly the worst film I have ever seen. It completely butchered the novel and was a disgrace to JCO's beautiful creation. Foxfire is one of my favorite JCO novels, and I wanted to cry as I sat through this movie, it was so disgustingly awful. Don't even bother seeing it out of curiosity; it will only upset you. -Lindsay
Date: Thu, 20 Nov 1997 13:27:27 -0500 (EST) From: Heather L Ormiston To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... I love Foxfire too, and haven't even seen the movie because I heard that it was so bad. I think that one of the reasons it is so bad it because they updated it to the nineties. The book is more powerful in the fifties because at that time no one was talking about sexual abuse and harrasment. The thought of young women stading up for themselves then was unheard of, and that it what becomes one of the most powerful elements of the book for me. In our days of girl gangs and Anita Hill it just doesn't seem as powerful. Heather
From: "J D" jdx1138@hotmail.com To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: A site you might like Date: Thu, 20 Nov 1997 15:13:59 PST I found this place while surfing and even though it's a conservative site (ugh, ick, blech) it has a lot of literary message boards, though too many students asking for help post. http://killdevilhill.com/literarychattalkcafe.html Also, check out the commons and quad discussions. They hardly get any action, so I think it would probably be free reign on the literature board. http://mobydicks.com/commons/common.html Just a little note for those interested, JD
Date: Thu, 20 Nov 1997 23:36:51 -0800 From: Randy Souther Randy Souther To: jdx1138@hotmail.com, jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: A site you might like JD, I don't know if your message was intended as a joke, or if you are just blindly posting it to every literature group you can find, but in either case, it is wholly inappropriate for this particular discussion list, as you should well know. -------------------------------------- For those in the group who don't know what I'm talking about, the web sites listed are affiliated with The Jolly Roger, a group who claim to be leading a "conservative literary revolution" and who seem to have originated, in part, through their violent and vocal antipathy toward JCO. They're entitled to express their opinions, of course. Just not in my group. Randy Souther
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: A site you might like From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Fri, 21 Nov 1997 18:05:31 EST Amen, Randy. The group is to modern literature what Muslim extremists are to Middle Eastern countries. DAVID
From: Gary Couzens gjcouzens@btinternet.com
To: "'jco@usfca.edu'"
Subject: RE: starting conversation...
Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 00:51:25 -0000

Since I started the Foxfire movie thread originally... There are two JCO movies
I'm aware of. Smooth Talk is based on the short story Where Are You Going,
Where Have You Been? Directed by Joyce Chopra (who has since made The Lemon
Sisters and a lot of TV material, none of which I've seen) in 1985 for
American Playhouse, it stars Laura Dern (who is excellent) and Treat Williams.
Opinions differ on this one: the story was opened up a lot in the adaptation.
If memory serves (I saw this about 11 years ago), the new scenes
work quite well. The encounter with Arnold Friend (which takes up about half
an hour of the running time, too long) is most faithful to the original
story. The problem is, the two elements don't sit well together in the same
movie.

The other is Lies of the Twins, based on the Rosamond Smith novel Lives of the
Twins (aka Kindred Passions). This was directed by Tim Hunter for cable TV in
1991 and starred Isabella Rossellini and Aidan Quinn. It's not at all bad.

Several of JCO's other novels have been optioned for filming, but so far none has
seen the light of the projector lamp. Since the previous discussion,
"Foxfire" has now been released here in the UK, straight to video.

Incidentally, I'm wondering if British publishers have stopped publishing JCO
altogether. The last novel to be published here was What I Lived For, a year and
a half ago. At least some of London's bigger bookshops stock American import
copies...

Gary Couzens

Date: Fri, 21 Nov 1997 20:17:11 -0500 (EST) From: Matthew A Cheney To: "'jco@usfca.edu'" Subject: Movies There's also, I believe, a short film of "In the Region of Ice", which I've heard is quite good -- if you can find a copy. Matt Cheney
Date: Fri, 21 Nov 1997 21:46:14 -0500 From: "Thomas A. Hulslander" t-hulslander@top.monad.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Movies Matthew A Cheney wrote: > > There's also, I believe, a short film of "In the Region of Ice", which > I've heard is quite good -- if you can find a copy. > > Matt Cheney I've seen the film version of "In the Region of Ice" on my local public televison stations... Maybe if viewers called/wrote, and asked for it, local stations may be able to show it. Krista
Date: Fri, 21 Nov 1997 19:26:46 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Marie Keller Subject: Re: starting conversation... Thanks for your replies. It seems to me, the consenus here so far is that Foxfire the movie was terrible. I will heed everyone's advice and not waste my time seeing it. I hate to waste time. Forgive me, if this topic has already come up. Have there been other JCO novels that have been made into movies?I think it would be quite difficult to make a movie based on her work, because of its complexity--all the layers. Marie *****************belljar@ptdprolog.net************ "Be master of your will and the slave of your conscience." ~Hasidic saying
From: Shmoopak@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 14:01:40 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... I'm new in this group, and I've mostly been listening, but I just reread Solstice and I would love to discuss it. I also just saw a play last night of JCO's Heat. Love to discuss that too if anyone's interested.
From: Shmoopak@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 14:02:32 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... Hmm. I can't imagine Susan Sarandon in either of the two leading roles.
From: Shmoopak@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 14:04:47 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... don't you think Meryl Streep would be too old? i just seemed to sense the teacher as more innocent, and younger than streep?
From: Shmoopak@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 14:08:52 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... For some reason, I always pictured Thalia as almost bald, I don't know why. Maybe it's because I think of her as really sickly. I know she's supposed to be anorexic, but I always thought she would look like a cancer patient. I always pictured Sinnaed O'Connor, or maybe even a bald Winona Rider. Although now that you mention it, Juliette Lewis would seem to be a good call too.
From: Shmoopak@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 14:12:15 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... I saw one version of foxfire that's now on video - and it's been on again on cable. It was made in a very nineties kind of way, but it still seemed to work. Some parts seemed a little overblown and preachy though, but the cinematography (if you're into that kind of thing) was really beautiful in some parts. Has there been talk of yet another film version of Foxfire?
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 16:12:20 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: JCO movies Hi, all. W. Rider as she appears on this week's People Mag. would make a great Thalia -- demure and lethal, only no smiling please, Ms. Rider. I haven't yet located "Region of Ice." Another JCO story from WAY back -- "Norman & the Killers" -- is also a short movie. Anybody seen it? What's it like? Sometimes an author's short stories make better films than do the novels. One of my favorite adaptations is John Cheever's great story, "The Swimmer." A couple named the Perrys filmed it back in the late 1960s with Burt Lancaster looking good in swimming trunks, swimming his way across Weschester County from one pool to the next as he makes his way down the socioeconomic scale. I've shown it to classes with very gratifying results. It elicits a lot of discussion, despite is somewhat dated look. Check it out. Your videostore may have a copy; every public library SHOULD. (J. Cheever fans will note with delight to seem him make a brief, nonspeaking appearance -- beaming and dressed in a white suit -- in the background of a big poolparty scene. Cyrano
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 16:18:52 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... Wow, "Heat's" being performed as a play! Where? Is it going to tour? To Boston, I hope. It's one of my favorite JCO stories. What was it like? Did you find it exciting? Cyrano
From: Amy_Hendrick@baylor.edu Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 16:10:16 -0600 Subject: Re: starting conversation... To: jco@usfca.edu On Sat, 22 Nov 1997 14:04:47 -0500 (EST) Shmoopak@aol.com wrote: >don't you think Meryl Streep would be too old? i just seemed to sense the >teacher as more innocent, and younger than streep? I don't remember what the character's age was supposed to be--if it was ever mentioned at all. But oddly enough, I don't picture the character as being a young innocent--just a little sheltered, not very experienced, and perhaps a little unimaginative. She had, after all, been through a divorce, and I seem to recall that she was somewhat distressed that her "golden girl" image was on the wane. BTW, I completely agree with whoever said that they can't picture Susan Sarandon in either part. She's too stable, too much the "earth mother" (albeit a glamorous one) to play Shiela--and I don't think she could ever look like a natural blonde for the teacher role. Christine C.
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: The Swimmer From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 17:37:43 EST The Swimmer is Cheever's most anthologized work (followed by The World of Apples and The Enormous Radio); and I agree about the movie -- it was excellent. I missed Cheever's cameo, though -- shame. Anyway, The Swimmer also marked the motion picture debut of compoer Marvin Hamlisch's film music. Hamlisch tells how he sat in his little New York apartment with reels of the film and a piano, and wrote his first score -- to The Swimmer. David
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sat, 22 Nov 1997 23:02:51 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Swimmer Hi, David. Don't forget Cheever's great story "The Five-Forty-Eight," a tale that would do any feminist writer proud, also filmed as a pbs movie and available at some libraries. I thought of that story at the end of WE WERE THE MULVANEYS, when Marianne's brother tracks down her rapist, makes him grovel in the mud (almost drown in quicksand -- trust JCO to push matters to their extreme possibility), and -- like the Cheever heroine-- find "some saneness in me that I can find and use." (great line) Cyrano
From: JonWendell@webtv.net (John Eggers) Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 02:05:18 -0600 To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: My Heart Laid Bare Is everyone else pleased that the next novel published will probably be MHLB? I really have been waiting for the gothic series to continue. Also, does anyone know why the only format "them" is available in is that cheesy mass market paperback (with the original cover art from the sixties)? Am reading the new Drabble "The Witch of Exmoor" and really enjoy it. This novel was reviewed by the Chicago Tribune together with Man Crazy. Joanne Creighton (sp?) was the reviewer. Both novels received a thumbs up. Like the thread of short story into film. I will check out my library for The Swimmer. All for now
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 08:42:05 -0500 (EST) To: jco@lovelace.usfca.edu Subject: them's cover Hi, John. When I taught them last summer, I used a Quality Paperback Book Club edition that I'd lucked out finding in a remote Arizona trash-and-trinkets-second-hand-store (along with a mint hardcover ed. of Cheever's collected stories.) The Quality Paperback has a smokey b&w photo on its cover of a sinister Detroit street during the 1967 riot, and it contains both JCO's forward and her mid-1980s afterward. In the afterward, she appears to be backing off her earlier statement in the foreward that Maureen & Jules are/were real people. The afterward says they were actually composites and that readers who have fallen in love with Jules should stop trying to look him up. I always thought the Wendell kids (including Betty) were all aspects of the author -- in that sense, they are/were real. Anyways, the students in my class had either a hardcover library edition of them or the aforementioned cheesy 1960s cover. I like that old cover, though, it evokes for me my discovery of JCO when that kind of graphic was what you saw in bookstores -- back in 1971 when the book upset me so much that I could only read a few pages before I angrily flung the novel into a corner. Then, of course, I'd retrieve it from wherever it had landed, a few days later, and press on. That's what great literature does -- shocks & intrigues us and makes us angry and confused and thoroughly enthralled. Cyrano
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 13:38:04 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... actually, we do know their ages. Monica is in her late twenties- possibly twenty-seven, and Sheila is in her forties. I don't know, fellow Oates fans, you really couldn't see Susan Sarandon galantly riding up to the house on a beautiful horse? I really think it might work. -Lindsay
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: them's cover From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 13:38:29 EST i have a book-of-the-month club hardcover copy of them, which i picked up for $5 at a local barnes&noble, and the cover is much the same of cyrano's description of the sinister detroit street. i, too, am fond of the 60's cover, though. i think that them is jco's only mass market paperback (all the rest are trade, so too have john updike and paul theroux moved to trade from mass market). david
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 15:39:57 -0500 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Solstice Doozer411@aol.com wrote: > > I don't know, fellow Oates fans, > you really couldn't see Susan Sarandon galantly riding up to the house on a > beautiful horse? I really think it might work. -Lindsay I think Susan Sarandon simply is too warm a person to play an authentic Sheila Trask. What about Theresa Russell? Or Sigourney Weaver? It would have to be an actress who can credibly cover both the intellectual as well as the cold, manipulative side of her. I'm trying hard to think of someone for the Monica Jensen character but I just can't think of anyone. Someone who inspires pity, but is not really likeable, someone who makes me feel that she basically gets what she deserves. By the way, I love that phrase of Sheila's, "as shallow as a dime store teaspoon." I found myself quite often agreeing with her intellectual analysis, even though I couldn't stand her as a person. This is the only novel I've ever read where I disliked all of the leading characters but still was completely absorbed by the novel. (It had been my second novel of JCO's only, thus it played an important role in getting me hooked on her.) Ralf A. Engeldinger
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: belljar From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 16:34:05 EST i didn't know HEAT was a play! boy, i find that very interesting. very, very interesting. I like the e-mail address, "belljar" that is somewhat creative, very "plath-ian." speaking of sylvia plath, how is ted hughes doing? it seems has been producing a steady body of work and is more respected as a poet now as ever. a recommendation for a cold, winter night between thanksgiving and christmas -- DELIVERANCE! by James Dickey is an excellent book, as is his more recent, TO THE WHITE SEA. REQUEST: I am trying to get a copy of James Dickey's 1987-88 book "Alnilham." Can anyone help!? It doesn't seem to be in print anywhere. Thanks. David
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 18:00:46 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: them's cover Speaking of cheesy covers -- I used to see copies of WITH SHUDDERING FALL that had one of those gothic soap opera-type covers: big man, little woman; and a WONDERLAND in which a man -- supposedly Jessie, the hero, looms gigantically, glaring into the middle distance, while a women about half his heighth cowers at his side -- for protection, I guess. My battered old 1973 paperback of her short story collection MARRIAGES AND INFIDELITIES has a romance-novelette looking cover: wholesome boy and girl cuddling in the foreground; in the background the requisite gothic, many-turreted house connoting stability and prosperity, not dark secrets and torment. One nice thing about those covers -- all kinds of readers grabbed them up, expecting a certain product. Imagine their surprise
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 16:00:10 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Marie Keller belljar@ptdprolog.net Subject: HEAT Tell us more about the play, HEAT. It is such a powerful, moving story. Did it adapt well to the stage? Or was a lot of meaning lost? Marie *****************belljar@ptdprolog.net************ "Be master of your will and the slave of your conscience." ~Hasidic saying
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 16:09:11 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Marie Keller belljar@ptdprolog.net Subject: Re: them's cover Yes, I also have the "Cheesy" paperback. I bought it as part of a set, and it was my initiation to JCO. Though I prefer hardback copies for my personal library, I am happy to acquire any of JCO's work, hard copy or paperback. Around here, her work is scarce. I was fortunate enough to find some original hardbacks at a library fundraiser recently. I wonder what possessed her to retract her statement about Maureen and Jules being "real." Perhaps too many people were pestering her for updates/sequels, or they were trying to look up the actual characters themselves. I've always thought that when a writer creates a story, bits of the author appear in every character. When I read a work of fiction, I don't care whether it's based on actual events or people. It's fiction, after all. All I care about is whether the author makes the story "real" for me. Has anyone read the collection, NIGHT-SIDE? It was published in the 1970's. I don't know whether it was just my frame of mind that night, being tired, whatever, but I just couldn't get into it. I ended up trading the book for something else. What did anyone think of these stories? Are they utter crap or should I give it another chance? *****************belljar@ptdprolog.net************ "Be master of your will and the slave of your conscience." ~Hasidic saying
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 20:16:09 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Solstice I'm definitely a fan of the Sigourney Weaver idea.
Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 00:46:26 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Marie Keller belljar@ptdprolog.net Subject: Re: belljar At 04:34 PM 11/23/97 EST, David wrote: >I like the e-mail address, "belljar" that is somewhat creative, very >"plath-ian." speaking of sylvia plath, how is ted hughes doing? it >seems has been producing a steady body of work and is more respected as a >poet now as ever. It is Plath-ian. I chose the name in honor of the book that motivated me to write again. I had some years of discouragement, and then, I picked up this book and pulled me back in my writing mode again. Don't know much about Ted Hughes, except what I've read about him in her biographies. I know they're mostly biased against him. I se his name pop up from time to time in Poets & Writers. He just won an award for something. *****************belljar@ptdprolog.net************ "Be master of your will and the slave of your conscience." ~Hasidic saying
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 08:34:37 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: belljar David, I am a grad student at the University of SOuth Carolina where Dickey was stationed, so to speak, and would be glad to send you a copy of "Anilham" which I can never spell. My Email address is ehaggar@aol.com. Around here you can't get away from that damn book! Best, Ellen Haggar
Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 10:54:40 -0500 (EST) From: Matthew A Cheney macheney@cisunix.unh.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: them's cover Cheesiness of covers is actually a subject I've been curious about for a long time -- what is up with the vampire ladies on the first mass market of "Solstice"?! Even worse, though -- and one of the all-time worst covers I've ever seen -- is "Marya". I'm very fond of that novel, but I haven't found an affordable hardcover of it yet, so what I've got is the swampwoman mass-market. Don't judge a book by its cover, but that one inflicts pain! It's time for Penguin to reprint all of JCO's work (since so much is out of print) in a uniform edition, kind of like what's happening now with Updike and Vonnegut and all the male writers of her generation. Matthew Cheney
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 11:36:48 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: them's cover Just to be a little more positive, one cover I actually like is The Rise of Life on Earth- the one with the painting (I forget who it's by) of the volumptuous woman standing nude in front of a window. I thought that was a very appropriate cover. -Lindsay
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 11:42:23 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Nightside Nightside's got a lot of good work. "The Widow" is an interesting pre-SOLSTICE story. "The Dungeon" is one of her intense inner-monologues, narrated by a gay man -- it gets lively discussions in my classes. I've always liked "Giant Woman," because it's one of those childhood-in-Eden-County pieces that I find fascinating, having grown up in the same region. And "The Snowstorm" is another univerity story -- about a teacher who is overwhelmed by her women-students problems with the downside of the sexual revolution in the 1970s -- a good companion to that movie "Ice Storm" that everyone's talking about now. Which story/stories did you read in Nightside that struck you as not-so-hot? Cyrano
Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 11:55:23 -0500 To: jco@usfca.edu From: cliff cliffb@pop.iquest.net Subject: Re: Alnilam >REQUEST: I am trying to get a copy of James Dickey's 1987-88 book >"Alnilham." Can anyone help!? It doesn't seem to be in print anywhere. Volk & Iiams, Booksellers, in Sacramento (916-392-0498) has a copy of "Alnilam" for $10.00. Tell them it is book # 1955 from the Advanced Book Exchange on the web. They accept visa, mastercard and personal checks. Shipping is an additional $3.50. It is a first edition used copy in very good condition. Cliff
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Reprints From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 12:47:00 EST Look for Vintage to reprint all of Norman Mailer's work soon, beginning with The Fight, I believe. I talked to Mailer last May about this very issue of reprints, and he said Vintage was reprinting all of his stuff. I know he has a collection of some sort, hardcover, that is coming out this spring also. It sickens me to pay for trade paperbacks though. I am glad I built up my Updike library before they switched to trade, and I proudly own the whole Rabbit tetraology in original hardcover. Paul Theroux has also been switched to the uniformed trade paperback, as is Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Lately, Oates's paperbacks are being published with the same covers as the hardcover editions, save Zombie which was totally different. Wonderland, Expensive People, and some others are exclusively printed through her own Ontario Review press now, too (as is her fledgling author's, Pinckney Benedict, original work, Town Smokes). Many times, we must wait until several years after an author's death to get a nice set of their work (like I am hoping will happen with my beloved James Dickey), but then again, if Barbara Kingsolver can get published in uniform, nice editions right now, why can't Oates???????????? David P.S. -- think about it, those of us with extensive Oates collections have some of the most colorful bookshelves!!
Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 14:09:12 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: them's cover The cover of the rise by Hopper is also so appropriate because so often he deals with the themes of human isolation and solitude. - jen "...it must be that the soul has some secret, sufficient way of knowing that it is immortal, that its vast, encompassing circle can take in all, can accomplish all..." - jorge luis borges
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 18:27:55 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Thalia look-alike Correction, correction. It's US Magazine, not People Magazine, on the cover of which Winona Rider appears in her Alien role, looking lethal and demure enough to be a dead ringer for Thalia in WHAT I LIVED FOR. Cyrano
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 00:26:40 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Reprints and Kingsolver may well be one of the world's most overrated writers now.....
Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 01:59:01 -0500 (EST) From: Matthew A Cheney macheney@christa.unh.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: "The Dungeon" I got a copy of NIGHT SIDE just a few days ago, and after seeing a recent message mentioning it, I read the story "The Dungeon". Then I reread "Life After High School" in WILL YOU ALWAYS LOVE ME. Interesting comparison... >From my point of view -- having been born probably about a year before "The Dungeon" was first published -- the story seemed a little, well, quaint. At the end it began to push some of my (perhaps hypersensitive) PC buttons, because the characterization was so broad that I couldn't help feel that the story was implying that repressed gay men are misogynists. What are we to make of that line at the end, "You failed me. Like all women. Might have 'saved' -- baptized -- me. Be no: too selfish." But I reminded myself that the story was published in the late seventies. And that made it all the more frustrating, because I think the general culture has become more tolerant since then, more open, and so if the story were published today I would give the author more credit than I was giving Oates, and I would think, "Of course this is just a portrait of one sick, repressed, obsessive, confused guy. A singularity, not a universal." So I began to think that I wasn't giving Oates enough credit at all, and I was just reacting in standard knee-jerk fashion, and what the hell do I know about culture in the '70s, anyway? So I reread "Life After High School", a story I had first read a few months ago and had very positive memories of. On rereading, I agreed with my months-younger self's opinion (a rare thing!), and found the story even more complex and profound on a second, closer reading. A reading informed by "The Dungeon". For in Zachary we have a very similar character to the narrator of the earlier story, but we see him from a distance, we never get into his mind, and he remains an enigma. For me, the story is so much more haunting, so much closer to truth, so less provocative in knee-jerk ways and more provocative in terms of the character and situation. Certainly it's nice to see an author progressing over time, and I wonder if, perhaps, Oates hadn't quite figured out the best way to tell this particular story -- or express this particular character -- when she wrote "The Dungeon", but found it decades later with "Life After High School". Or is it even fair to so closely link such different tales? Matthew Cheney
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 09:50:52 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Dungeon & Life After High School Hi, Matthew. I'm going to re-read "High School;" I'm intrigued by your linking those two . I read Dungeon when it first came out. I read it to mean that gay men, like straight men, can be misogynist, not that gay men are misogynist. Like Oates' story Up >From Slavery in HUNGRY GHOSTS -- which depicts the rude awakening a college teacher gets when she discovers that the black male colleague whom she thought was her ally actually dispises her as a meddling white women and has taken steps to get her fired. Way back in the seventies, there was a theory that gays, women & blacks were all allies. JCO's stories challenge this wishful thinking by showing how people are simply people before they are women, blacks, & gays -- individuals with very powerful ids & egos who are struggling to get their own needs met. Dungeon does show that Darrell, the hero, is angry and confused at least in part because of the police harrassment that he has suffered and the heterosexist public policies and attitudes that force him to keep his true sexual feelings hidden. No wonder he resents his co-workers and his female "friend" so much: he's afraid -- and with good reason --of the comtempt he might receive should he be honest with them. The woman whom he's reproaching in that line you quote might have become a good friend to Darrell, but thanks to homophobia and mutual mistrust, their friendship turned into bitter enmity -- they as well as society stuck in a dungeon. Cyrano.
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Reprints From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 11:40:18 EST Yes, that's true... but she is better than Michael Crichton, John Grisham, Tami Hoag, and on and on of the "supermarket" genre On Tue, 25 Nov 1997 00:26:40 -0500 (EST) Ehaggar@aol.com writes: >and Kingsolver may well be one of the world's most overrated writers >now..... >
From: Shmoopak@aol.com Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 15:05:00 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: starting conversation... I saw the play Heat in the basement of a small cafe in Chicago. Here is the write up taken from the Chicago Reader: Critics' Choices HEAT A single voice telling a single story might not sound like a pleasant hour's entertainment, even if the story is an account of a grisly child murder on an oppressively hot day. But this story is authored by Joyce Carol Oates, who rejects lurid speculation on the facts of the case to describe, in meticulous detail, the many ancillary personalities affected by the event. Penlight Theater director Eric Ziegenhagen likewise allows the material, which is read verbatim, central focus. Narrator Sarah Phemister makes no attempt to mimic the personalities she describes but offers her testimony with a stone-faced impassivity that masks the carefully crafted phrases. Punctuating her words with carousel-projector slides (included only for the sake of stage business--the slides are blank), she evokes a smothering sultriness--no easy task in Voltaire's gloomy basement only an hour before midnight--to create a simmering portrait of small-town horror. Voltaire, 3231 N. Clark, 312-409-2674. Through November 22: Fridays-Saturdays, 11 PM. $7. -- Mary Shen Barnidge It was a very small production in the basement of a cafe, but it was truly frightening. I went alone, since I couldn't convince anyone to go with me, and the el ride home alone at midnight was probably one of the spookiest I'd ever taken. The one woman narration worked really well, in light of the newspaper like account of the story itself. Yet just as in the book, the narrator allows herself to get "upset" during certain scenes. For example, when she imagines the twin - Rhoda, waiting for her sister Rhea to come out of the killer's room. And the frustration, anger and absolute terror she must feel upon entering that room herself. But then the narrator goes back to being a newspaper narrator again. In the play, she is presenting a slideshow, but all you see is the projector. You never see the "screen" onto which she is supposed to be projecting pictures of Rhea, Rhoda, the killer, and the families. The scene where she narrates what happens to the twins is absolutely chilling, specifically because of what she doesn't tell the audience. Just like the book, we are forced to "see" what happened that day by ourselves. And of course, what we imagine is far grislier than anything even JCO could come right out and tell us. I know a one-woman one act play might sound really boring, but this one really spooked me.
Date: Tue, 25 Nov 97 14:28:31 CDT From: "Nancy Hunter" nhunter@fsc.follett.com To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re[2]: starting conversation... Is this play going to be re-run elsewhere? I am very interested in seeing this! Please let me know. Nancy
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 19:01:21 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Reprints An "aesthetically standardized" set of JCO paperbacks is in the works from Dutton/Plume. I have no info at the moment on what the design(s) will be. Greg
Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 21:25:54 -0500 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Reprints RJohn713@aol.com wrote: > > An "aesthetically standardized" set of JCO paperbacks is in the works from > Dutton/Plume. I have no info at the moment on what the design(s) will be. > > Greg Any information on which books they intent to reprint? Ralf A. Engeldinger
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Wed, 26 Nov 1997 18:02:52 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Reprints Sorry, I'm not sure--but only post-1980, Dutton titles will be included, I gather. Greg
From: Shmoopak@aol.com Date: Wed, 26 Nov 1997 22:16:47 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Re[2]: starting conversation... I'm not sure if this play is being run elsewhere. I think it was a very small local production. if I hear otherwise though, I'll let you know.
From: Ivan139@aol.com Date: Sat, 29 Nov 1997 03:08:02 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: We Were the Mulvaneys Granted, it is my first time reading JCO. I am not, so far, that impressed with Mulvaneys, but surfing this site has made me feel I should be so. So what's the big deal? Anyone care to innundate me with JCO's views on Christianity/Spirituality? I cannot understand how the tragedy of the rape so upsets the balance of the Mulvaneys. If they were not Christians but turned so for deliverance from their perils, that I could accept (though still not entirely agree with.) The rapidity of the tragedy leads me to surmise the Mulvaneys are fragile, too fragile; any pride in themselves is lost immediately, which means it must have been barely there to begin with. Everyone supposedly thought the Mulvaneys were so hot -- except the Mulvaneys. But I can't accept this from JCO! I need enlightenment! (Sure I should finish the book, and will this weekend, but it is hard to continue reading about such a foolish and fragile family.) Please help!
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: We Were the Mulvaneys From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sat, 29 Nov 1997 12:12:04 EST Granted, Mulvaneys is not JCO's best book, but it's not bad! It's much better than MAN CRAZY. Look at a lot of the trash that is being published nowadays, and you'll see that wow! We Were the Mulvaneys is great... David
From: Ivan139@aol.com Date: Sat, 29 Nov 1997 13:30:27 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Re: We Were the Mulvaneys David, that wasn't much consolation. :{( Like I said, I haven't read any other JCO. I'm not finding the book that bad, I just feel a profound lack of sympathy for the family for not having much of a back bone, if any at all. So what are you implying, that JCO is the best of the trash? Ironically, I had just read The Jolly Roger's manifesto, and they outright mention JCO (I believe the only author so honored). I didn't much agree with the manifesto, in fact I cringed in places, but your response triggers a sudden apt-ness. I'm sure their further publications will make me cringe, but so does JCO at times. Isn't there any end to the cringing at modern literature?
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sat, 29 Nov 1997 16:15:11 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: cringing Mulvaneys Hi, Ivan. It looks like the M's Christianity wasn't as deep as we'd first thought. If you're interested in JCO's take on religion, you might want to consult a book entitled CONFIRMATION or CONFIRMATIONS (I don't have the editor's name with me; let me know if you need it). It's a collection of authors' writings on the Bible in their lives. JCO, in her essay, defines herself as "a nonreligious observer of religion" and tells how reading the Bible (as a collection of fascinating narratives, not as gospel truth) has always been a part of her life; and she gives an interesting account of how she attended both Methodist and Catholic churches before she left home for college. In Mulvaney's I was not convinced by Marianne's abandonment of religion: she doesn't so much rebel and reject it as she simply drifts away from it after her rape. You might say that her total lack of bitterness toward her assilant may be some residual religion, but she's not the vocal Christian she was when the book started. When I interviewed JCO about the book for a local newspaper, I tried to find out exactly what the Christian counselor says to Marianne right after the rape becomes public knowledge. JCO said that the counselor said what you would expect a Christian counselor to say. I didn't belabor the subject. I suppose such a counselor would advise that one forgive the rapist and get on with one's life. This turns out to be pretty much what Marianne does, although it's a long process and she drifts in dangerous directions before she meets up with the animal doctor, a good understanding man who eventually coaxes M. back into normal human relations. I liked the way JCO has M. reject several people who love her because she doesn't trust anyone who loves her. As for her parents, father's downfall to booze and rage was not surprising, considering that those two forces were part of his youthful background. A happy marriage saved him for a while, but it wasn't enough to get him through the crisis of his daughter's rape and the community's condoning of that rape. I was very moved by the scene where his wife tells him what happened and the poor man nearly has a stroke on the spot. Mulvaneys may not be your cup of tea. I always suggest that readers new to JCO begin with her stories. The collection WILL YOU ALWAYS LOVE ME? is superb. One of the stories in it -- "Is There Life After High School?" -- has a heroine like Marianne: a rather glib and very vocal Christian who gets an unpleasant surprise (not rape) when an eccentric local boy gets a crush on her, and she thinks she's winning a soul for Jesus. Cyrano
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sat, 29 Nov 1997 16:41:15 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: cringing Mulvaneys, part 2 Hi, Ivan and everybody. I checked that reference I just mentioned. The essay about JCO and religion "Genesis (Eden) and John," is in a book entitled COMMUNION: CONTEMPORARY WRITERS REVEAL THE BIBLE IN THEIR LIVES, edited by David Rosenberg. It's a very interesting JCO first-person article. Cyrano
Date: Sat, 29 Nov 1997 19:32:41 -0600 From: David Kodeski To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: cringing Mulvaneys We are the Mulvaney's was my first JCO. I'm now reading Bellefleur (loving it!) I grew up in the same region as JCO - I know the people she wrote about in that book. I was pulled into the story and believed implicitly Marianne's drifting from religion - and trying to find it again on the co-op farm... I've been told We Were The Mulvaney's has one of JCO's most upbeat endings. True? --
From: Ivan139@aol.com Date: Sun, 30 Nov 1997 00:41:59 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Re: cringing Mulvaneys I'm just in the middle of Mulvaneys, so am unable to discuss the quality of the ending. Sorry. I am reading it with our book club (meeting is next week) and as it is our first JCO, I thought I would do a little research. Little did I know I find a web page solely devoted to her. As to Marianne's drifting from religion: my wife is a little behind where I'm at and she is supposing Marianne becomes a nun. I guess I supposed so too. Knowing that she drifts from religion relieves me, but leaves me more and more confused about JCO. I am not what you would call a Christian, though my whole family is, so I am a little sensitive to it (and probably base my expectations on that). I am literally stunned by the overt references to christianity in Mulvaneys, and the casting of the family as such. And more and more I am surprised by the rapidity with which the tragedy overtakes and disintegrates the family. On the web page I read the JCO interview regarding Mulvaneys, and I find JCO's remark that the path of the family could have gone differently had the father not fell apart so completely rather flippant. I feel the undoing of the father a little exaggerated and a lot unbeleivable. Perhaps my own ignorance? To date I find the Mulvaneys weak, weak, weak. That they do not endeavor to change the outcome of their fall, and in fact ship Marianne off, is even more unbelievable. There is a victim mentality at work which I find hard to accept. It is not pride I'm wanting, it is strength and determination and resolution. Back bone. Character. Where is it? I'm sure it comes later, but that still doesn't satisfy me. What region did JCO (and yourself) grow up in, and what people did she write about? Am very curious to know. Thanks for the response. Take care.
From: JonWendell@webtv.net (John Eggers) Date: Sun, 30 Nov 1997 08:49:24 -0600 To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Re: cringing Mulvaneys I think it is important to remember that the rape takes place in the 70's. This is before "date rape" even had a name or was discussed openly and in the media. I think Mulvaney's confronts the myth of "the american family" i.e. strong , patriotic, devoutly religious. Corrine is actually the strongest personality in the book, Michael is the weakest. Matriarchal family instead of patriarchal. What is acceptable by societies standards? How does one family deal with societies values? That is what the novel is addressing. Ivan, by the way, the Jolly Roger has a personal vendetta against JCO. Also Toni Morrison and Russell Banks. (All three are professors at Princeton, the university he attended)
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 30 Nov 1997 10:22:11 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Again, Mulvaneys Hi, Ivan. I think you'll really get a lot of insight into JCO's religious orientation when you get that book COMMUNIONS by David Rosenberg. John's comment that "date rape" was not yet a public concept is very important. Marianne has no name for what's happened to her ... a fact very poignantly demonstrated in the novel. Michael Mulvaney's background, which it sounds like you haven't reached yet, may help illuminate why he falls apart over his daughter's crisis. My religion? Hardly any, except a couple of stints in "nondenominational" bible club camps in late childhood, a very positive experience during which -- like Woody Allen -- I was beaten up by youths of all races and creeds. (And learned how to make a bed, much to Mom's delight.) Cyrano
Date: Sun, 30 Nov 1997 20:12:16 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu what book is "the turn of the screw" from? thanks, - jen "...it must be that the soul has some secret, sufficient way of knowing that it is immortal, that its vast, encompassing circle can take in all, can accomplish all..." - jorge luis borges
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: turn of screw From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 30 Nov 1997 21:55:35 EST i know it can be found in the collection, 'where are you going, where have you been? collected early stories' by jco. it is a pretty avant-garde story for the time it was written! and an interesting one at that! David
From: Ehaggar Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Mon, 1 Dec 1997 00:18:30 EST To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: It is the name of a short novella byHenry James
From: Ehaggar Date: Mon, 1 Dec 1997 00:21:00 EST To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: turn of screw JCO's Turn of the Screw is a deliberate turn on James story--you actually need to read both in order to "get" JCO's story---but I promise that James is worth it! Ellen Haggar
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