Narrative Magazine’s Friday Feature: Barry Gifford’s ‘The Age of Fable’

Poet, author, and screenwriter Barry Gifford has been called the master of the dark side of American reality. His stories take star-crossed, sex-driven characters, set them in maddening worlds, and track their tales with humor and insight. In the short short “Age of Fable,” Gifford lets his reader loose in Roy’s eleven-year-old mind as he discovers the blending of fantasy and reality that goes into fable.

The Age of Fable

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Mary Roach, Amitava Kumar: Book Review Roundup

Did you miss this weekend’s big book reviews? Catch up with the buzz on Mary Roach’s latest and more with the highlights below.

“Packing For Mars,” Mary Roach
The New York Times

Her fluffily lightweight style is at its most substantial — and most hilarious — in the zero-gravity realm that “Packing for Mars” explores. Here’s why: The topic of astronauts’ bodily functions provides as good an excuse to ask rude questions as you’ll find on this planet or any other.

“A Foreigner Carrying in the Crook of His Arm a Tiny Bomb,” Amitava Kumar
The New York Times

At its heart, however, “A Foreigner Carrying in the Crook of His Arm a Tiny Bomb” — the excellent title is a riff on the title of Edmond Jabès’s 1993 book, “A Foreigner Carrying in the Crook of His Arm a Tiny Book” — is about the ordinary men and women, brown-skinned in general and Muslim in particular, who have had their lives upended by America’s enraged security apparatus. Mr. Kumar calls them the “small people,” and to them he extends his own impressive and trembling moral imagination.

“Mentor: A Memoir,” Tom Grimes
The New York Times

What “Mentor” is really about, though, is the slow-motion derailment of Mr. Grimes’s own once promising literary career, a process that took his pride before it took his sanity. This is a book about striding up to the brink of success, only to have success disembowel you with a dull steak knife, bow, and then skip away, cackling.

“The Glass Rainbow,” James Lee Burke
The Los Angeles Times

“The Glass Rainbow” offers much that is familiar, from the brilliant lyrical wordscapes that capture bayou locations to the incomparably ruthless men and women of low or no conscience who wield power over others and threaten the way of life in Robicheaux’s small corner of the world. The detective and his cohort Clete Purcell are as heroic, honorable and flawed as always.

“Death to the Dictator!” Afsaneh Moqadam
The Los Angeles Times

Though flawed nonfiction, “Death to the Dictator!” will shape the image of Iran for the billions who don’t live there. Iranian authorities dismiss such tomes at their own peril.

“Overexposed,” Susan Shapiro
The San Francisco Chronicle

Shapiro’s genius is that she draws characters so unlikable, yet so compelling, that the reader has no choice but to engage with one after another of them, with great hopes for the transformation of each. Once thusly hooked, it’s a hop, skip and a handstand to tryouts for Shapiro’s cheering squad.

“Three Sisters,” Bi Feiyu
The San Francisco Chronicle

Bi’s compelling and unsentimental book tackles myriad subjects, such as power and corruption, love and betrayal, civil duty and personal sacrifice, and conflict between the rural and urban worlds. It draws a meticulous picture of a transitioning village in ’70s China, and in so doing, Bi has created memorable characters: not just the three sisters, but also the villagers and townspeople.

“The Five-Year Party,” Craig Brandon
The Wall Street Journal

If you have a child in college, or are planning to send one there soon, Craig Brandon has a message for you: Be afraid. Be very afraid.”The Five-Year Party” provides the most vivid portrait of college life since Tom Wolfe’s 2004 novel, “I Am Charlotte Simmons.” The difference is that it isn’t fiction. The alcohol-soaked, sex-saturated, drug-infested campuses that Mr. Brandon writes about are real.

“Merchants of Doubt,” Naomi Oreskes and Erik M Conway
The Guardian

The far right in America, in its quest to ensure the perpetuation of the free market, is now hell-bent on destroying the cause of environmentalism. According to this distorted view of life, environmentalists are watermelons – green on the outside, red on the inside – who want to impose regulation, “the slippery slope to socialism”, on the use of tobacco, ozone-destroying chemicals and greenhouse gases.

“Living in the End Times,” Slavoj Zizek
Telegraph

Slavoj Žižek may well be the last great thinker of our time. In an era when lighting on one half-formed notion – “the end of history”, “the third way”, “Islamo-fascism” – is enough to get one hailed as a public intellectual to rival Russell or Sartre, the Slovenian philosopher puts all conceptual comers to shame.



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Daily News Plagiarism? Kate Winslet Article Closely Resembles Daily Mail Article

An article about Kate Winslet that appeared in Sunday’s New York Daily News very closely mirrors one that appeared last month in the UK’s Daily Mail.

Both articles focus on Winslet’s divorce from director Sam Mendes and the ex-couple’s well-managed morning routine. And the Daily News article, written by staff writer Jacob Osterhout, even quotes directly from the Daily Mail article — although Osterhout credits the quote to an “observer,” and not the Daily Mail.

The ledes of the two articles are near-identical.

Daily Mail, July 22:

Late afternoon in Chelsea, New York, and a scruffy-looking man, prematurely greying and carrying bundles of scripts, hurries from an apartment block. Accompanied by a two female assistants, he leaves in a black car.

Not more than three minutes later, his estranged wife arrives, driving herself in an Audi. With her blonde hair in a pony-tail, she passes unnoticed into the building.

The woman is Oscar-winning actress Kate Winslet, and the man she has so neatly avoided is her soon-to-be ex-husband, Sam Mendes.

Daily News, August 1:

There’s a scene playing out in downtown Manhattan that has A-list celebrities, and the industry-types who manage their image, taking note.

It opens with an unremarkable-looking middle-aged man stepping out of an upscale warehouse apartment block trailed by two female assistants. The trio cross the wide, tree-lined street and disappear into a black town car, which departs briskly under the shadow of the nearby High Line Park.

A few minutes later, an Audi pulls up in front of the five-story, red-brick building and a casually dressed, pony-tailed blond alights.

Nobody looks twice at the blond (who is, of course, beautiful) as she walks by the young doorman (clad in jeans and a T-shirt) toward the elevator that whisks her to a triplex penthouse apartment topped with a roof-garden boasting a cinematic Hudson River view.

The blond is Oscar-winning actress Kate Winslet (“The Reader,” 2008) and the man she just missed on the street is her estranged husband, Oscar-winning (“American Beauty” 1999) director Sam Mendes.

And Osterhout even quotes from Daily Mail writer Alison Boshoff’s article directly, though he credits the quote to “one observer” and not the Daily Mail:

Daily Mail, July 22:

Day after day, they repeat this pattern. Their timing is so impeccable that it’s clear their entrances and exits are being stage-managed.

Daily News, August 1:

“Day after day, they repeat this pattern,” reports one observer who has been keeping a beady eye on the block between 10th and 11th Aves. since the couple split four months ago. “Their timing is so impeccable that it’s clear their entrances and exits are being stage-managed.”

“The Daily News was made aware this morning of an inadvertent omission of credit in our article about Kate Winslet in the “Your New York” Sunday section,” a spokesperson told the Huffington Post. “The article should have credited the UK Daily Mail’s Alison Boshoff for the comment that was quoted from ‘one observer.’”

Osterhout does include many facts beyond what appear in the Daily Mail account, including interviews with celebrity-watchers and details on the couple’s neighborhood and home.

But was it more than just an “inadvertent omission of credit”? Did the Daily News plagiarize the Daily Mail? Vote below.

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‘The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo’ Is All-Time Top Seller On Kindle

NEW YORK — It’s electronic milestone time for Stieg Larsson’s Millennium trilogy.

The late Swedish author’s blockbuster thrillers have sold more than 1 million copies in the e-book editions, publisher Alfred A. Knopf said Wednesday, making him at least the second author to join the e-million club. The ultra-prolific James Patterson also has more than 1 million e-book sales.

Amazon.com, the biggest player in the growing e-book market, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that Larsson’s “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” the first book in the Millennium trilogy, is the all-time top seller on the e-book reading device the Kindle. Kathryn Stockett’s novel “The Help” is No. 2.

Knopf lauded the sales of “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” about a journalist and a tattooed investigator trying to solve a decades-old disappearance.

“We are witnessing record-breaking sales for `The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’ in trade and mass market paperback as well as in audio, so it is not surprising that this trend is being mirrored with e-books,” Knopf spokesman Paul Bogaards said.

“Dragon Tattoo” has sold 500,000 e-books, Bogaards said. Sales for the trilogy in all editions top 30 million worldwide; in the U.S. alone, more than 400,000 copies are selling each week.

Bogaards also backed up a report earlier this week by Amazon that said the Internet retail giant was selling more e-books than hardcovers. Kindle sales for the most recent Larsson book, “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest,” have topped those for the hardcover, said Bogaards, who added that he did not think hardcover sales had been hurt by the less expensive e-edition.

Larsson does not top every list. A spokesman for Sony’s e-book reading device, the Sony Reader, said Wednesday that “Dragon Tattoo” was the e-device’s No. 2 all-time seller, trailing Dan Brown’s “The Lost Symbol.” Patterson’s “Alex Cross” is No. 3.

___

Alfred A. Knopf is a unit of Bertelsmann AG’s Random House Inc.

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Adobe Reader ‘Sandbox’ Boosts PDF Security

Adobe Systems Inc. announced that it will harden the next version of its popular Reader PDF viewer, a frequent target of attacks, by adding “sandboxing” technology to the software.



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watch pretty little liars episode 7

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Photoshop Gone Wild In Real Estate Photo Doctoring

This reader has done some crack digital forensics work and declares that the abuse of Photoshop in MLS listings has gone too far:



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“RuPaul's Drag Race” Rewind PartyChicago ReaderFans of the reality show can watch it projected on seven screens. Kit Kat house diva Jade, a past contestant, will make “special appearances. …

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Safari 5 release

Safari Reader removes annoying ads and other visual distractions from online articles. So you get the whole story and nothing but the story. It works like this: As you browse the web, Safari detects if you’re on a web page with an article. Click the Reader icon in the Smart Address Field, and the article appears instantly in one continuous, clutter



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Borders To Carry $120 Libre eReader

In his conference call with analysts last week, interim Borders CEO Mike Edwards said the chain would begin taking pre-orders for a second reading device this week and yesterday the chain announced it had reached an agreement with Aluratek to sell its forthcoming Libre eBook Reader Pro in its stores.

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