landingtree: Small person examining bottlecap (Default)
[personal profile] landingtree
This year I'm doing the Writing for the Page masters course at the Institute of Modern Letters; basically, it's a course in which ten people end up with a draft novel each by November. More on this later! But I keep not getting around to writing about the course, so here are some excerpts from the reading diary it asks students to keep. It's a rainy, windy day, thirteen degrees out, i.e. cold enough for my liking, and I just cycled home exuberantly, singing in the Mt Vic Tunnel (all the cars honk and I have to join in somehow).

~

08/03/2023

...and I've started Everything For Everyone – an oral history of the New York Commune 2052-2072, a structurally fascinating utopia. It makes the conclusion of Nothing To See jump out at me as especially pessimistic – presenting, instead of [spoilers], a period in the near future when communal action overthrows the flailing Capitalist nation-states and fixes the world. The book's authors project themselves into the future: this is a project that will be undertaken by these real people, M.E. O'Brien and Eman Ahdelhadi, in another fifty years' time. Politically the book's focus on mutual aid networks and social reproduction theory* appeals to me, though my pessimism warns that nothing will ever go this well; narratively, the conceit of the book as a scholarly introduction followed by a collection of interviews allows a beautiful collection of voices and perspectives. We'll see how this one sticks the landing, and what my Trotskyist family members think about it. (Prose-wise, in the wake of Barzun it is again the case that I want to nitpick individual words).

12/03/2023

Another chapter of Everything For Everyone today, and a really interesting conversation with my activist sister about it. She says the revolution it's depicting strikes her as plausible, for the most part: people have been saying 'One day capitalism will finally eat itself' for a while, and it hasn't happened yet, but it's still a coherent thing to imagine happening. Meanwhile, I enjoy the quality this book shares with Ada Palmer's Terra Ignota, a favourite work of mine: the future arises from the present in really weird ways. Today's trivial-seeming social club is tomorrow's only source of intercontinental communication. Also, I have heard from a lot of people,** Americans and other, who are sick of the centrality of New York in the discourse; this book is very deliberately global in scope. New York's in the title, but chapter two is about Palestine and that social club I mentioned arises from ships that circle the Indian Ocean. (I'm interested to see how this would chime with Robinson's New York 2140, which I suspect of being an active counter-inspiration, though on very little evidence).


13/03/2023

Today I read Leese Webster, by Ursula Le Guin and James Brunsman. It is a picture book about a spider living in an abandoned palace who begins to make her webs into art. I suspect it of also being about writing, but what's that Le Guin said about message versus applicability? A good fable is a multi-purpose tool like a bowl, you can put a lot of different things in it and it's still the same bowl, ready to be re-used. I read this book while looking for Michael Ende's The Neverending Story, a book whose applicability to my novel project I understood; still haven't found that book, but I went home from Victoria Library with six unrelated things none of which I'd been looking for, and having read a Le Guin story I'd never heard of. Serendipity is one of the things this course is for.






*[note: I have not actually read any social reproduction theory, but it came up in the conversation which recommended me the book, so: based on what I deduce social reproduction theory to be from the first third of this book alone, it appeals to me!]

**[note: two people. Guess I like to sound confident in this diary, huh.]

Date: 2023-03-13 07:56 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
m

Date: 2023-03-13 03:21 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
From: [personal profile] oracne
I like this reading diary idea. I mean, it's sort of like Reading Wednesday, but with more context. I am pondering if I could manage something similar.

Date: 2023-03-14 01:59 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
From: [personal profile] oracne
I use the tag even if I post on Thursday or whenever because it helps me find them (so I can re-post on my pro blog). I have too many tags about books!

Date: 2023-03-13 09:49 pm (UTC)
leaflemming: (Default)
From: [personal profile] leaflemming
For non-locals who may be curious, the tunnel Landingtree refers to may or may not harbour a ghost, but there is definitely a tradition that cars should honk their horns while driving through it, and the traditional explanation for this self-perpetuating custom is that it appeases the ghost. Since the tunnel is most of a kilometre long and has excellent acoustics, the honking can become troublesome if you're on foot or on a bike. Landingtree's singing is probably a healthier response than my usual cries of MAYBE THE GHOST LIKES SILENCE DID YOU THINK OF THAT.

Date: 2023-03-17 01:15 pm (UTC)
nnozomi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] nnozomi
(Late comment) I'm enjoying your reading diaries/accounts of your writing course so much, I appreciate your taking the time to share all this stuff with us.
and I've started Everything For Everyone – an oral history of the New York Commune 2052-2072, a structurally fascinating utopia.
Oh wow, this book is on my list now; I love oral history and I love fictional oral history, thank you so much for letting me know about it!

Date: 2023-03-18 10:27 am (UTC)
nnozomi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] nnozomi
what other fictional oral histories have you read? I think this may be my first.
You know, I'm not immediately coming up with any, not in the strict sense. Looking at my shelves, Bernardine Evaristo's Girl, Woman, Other is not specifically a fictional oral history in the sense of the book you've been reading, with fictional interviewers etc., but it feels a lot like one. And maybe that Ursula LeGuin one I haven't actually read, Always Coming Home? And I think I've read some fics that do things like it.
I really like the idea, though, and I've thought about writing one before--I always want to do something like "Studs Terkel in space" etc.

Profile

landingtree: Small person examining bottlecap (Default)
landingtree

January 2026

S M T W T F S
    12 3
45 678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 27th, 2026 08:39 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios