Up in the air
Interview with Israeli author Etgar keret
Bulgakov
Converso
Goy
The Wire and Jimmy McNulty
requiem for a dream
I have never heard of Etgar Keret before. Its always refreshing to read books from other nations. 'The Seven Good Years' is a collection of flash stories with personal meandering about flight experience (where I began questioning if that fits in the memoir genre, where we want the writing to be about an experience more as a feeling than as a thought). Its a very quick read in the genre of 'I was told there'd be cake' by Sloane Crosley and work by Jane Borden. But there's another side to it, fostered by the author's uprooted past. He is a biblio nomad, who is doing book tours all around the world.
Every page of the book has some unexpected element in it. Right with the beginning interview by Miranda July (We think Alone project where some selected authors are to share an email on a selected topic), where his mom's independent childhood translated to non-over bearing upbringing, you never know whats going to happen next.
When by an error, he is double booked on a plane seat and ask to get off the plane by the flight crew. His reply is ".. If there arent enough seats on the plane, you can get off yourself. I'll serve the food to the passengers."
People either love or hate babies but the author for the purpose of the writing, sees his baby as 'a midget with a cable hanging from his belly button..' and as Chucky from Child's play.
Fictional Book signings for fiction.
War and peace. The local conditions are at unease to imagine peace and feel 'just like in the old days' if war starts.
Some stories have a pattern like the four fingered hand waving at Euro Disney which starts with a man losing his finger trying to reach for his watch that has fallen in a machine. The stories tie back to the beginning.
While looking up the author's works, I found that there is another side to his writing of thought experiments - "Kneller's Happy Campers" novel which inspired Wristcutter's story. In it, every dies by suicide. "Crazy Glue" where everything is glued.
Its hearty to know that finally he gets a house built in Poland, his real homeland.
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