Matt Snee's Blog, page 57
August 6, 2021
Exorcism

Closing the door on the past. She’s haunted me long enough. It’d be impossible to burn this book, to let the words hiss into the air, not in this digital world. But I am letting these words go in a different way, they are free now, no longer mine, I no longer carry them, they are burning.
August 5, 2021
Evil Summer
I’ve decided to (slowly) release my poetry chapbook “Evil Summer” on my new Substack in the section entitled Poetry Pill. It can be found here:
https://mattsnee.substack.com/s/poetry-pill
This is a very personal book for me, documenting a very fragile time in my life around 2008-2009, where I was actually recovering from a more fragile time, between 2004-2007. But it’s been some time now since I wrote it, and while I only vaguely recognize the emotions, I feel the poetry itself is quite good.
Currently reading.

Currently reading – Meander Spiral Explode, by Jane Alison. Reading this for second time. If you’re tired of the salty, bitter taste of Aristotle’s triangular plot structure, THIS is the book for you.
August 4, 2021
Substack
Hello my dear, beloved, loyal readers. I’m making changes around this hot town, and I created a Substack you can find here:
https://mattsnee.substack.com/
I hope to update it on weekdays, and I’m polishing up some of the old reviews and stuff I posted here to post on there in a more readable format. My plan is to eventually create an adjacent section with serialized fiction, but that’s going to take some time for me to clean up some old work.
As always, thanks for reading. You brighten my life.
August 3, 2021
William Gass’s Life Sentences

I don’t usually gush about books, but this one is fantastic, and it even motivated me to post about books again. I have never actually read any of Gass’s fiction, and I’m not sure what attracted me to this book, other than my insatiable thirst for deep criticism of literature. This book is mostly Gass’s essays on various author biographies.
The “climax” of the book is Gass’s lecture on the genealogy of abstract ideas in early Greek thought, leading to the concepts of forms (from basic geometric shapes like triangles, to the ideal chair), and the idea of a perfect, immaterial, and eternal world that exists separate from this one. To be honest, I’ve never liked this idea, probably because it’s one of the foundations of the Christian religion, and I went to Catholic school. But Gass traces how this idea was born of philosophers using pebbles to count out numbers in shapes: 1 as a single point, 2 as a line, 3 as a triangle, and 4 as a square, etc. From here, it was not a long trek to the first abstract ideas in Western thought: Numbers existed even if there was nothing to count.
So if numbers existed perfectly, what else did? Philosophers experimented with geometry. However, good old Zeno of Elea (490-430 BC) pointed out that a perfect triangle can’t exist in the physical world, the sides can never perfectly equal to each other like they can be in a two-dimensional vacuum, they would always be off by at least a molecule. Okay, so the material world isn’t perfect. Who is? Well, even though man or woman (especially not woman, according to the Greeks) cannot be perfect, they are inspired by a perfect form of an ideal human, which belongs to humans alone, and no other creature or thing. And, of course, everything has its ideal form in this mysterious ether, whether it be a chicken or even feces. But, embodied as they are in physical reality, material objects and life will never be as perfect as their forms, which, unlike life and objects, are eternal and immaculate, persisting beyond infinity, forever condemning us material things to a fallen, gross representation of a better world.
I’m sure you can see how this idea has affected Western culture. Although, I must ask myself: Isn’t this blog a representation of Gass’s book?
July 29, 2021
Currently reading.

Currently reading – Life Sentences: Literary Judgments and Accounts, by William H. Gass.
July 27, 2021
July 19, 2021
Currently reading

Currently reading – The Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights, by John Steinbeck. Yes, Steinbeck wrote a book of Arthurian tales. But did you know Mark Twain wrote a somber, beautiful novel about Joan of Arc?
July 16, 2021
Currently reading.

Currently reading – Strategies of Fantasy, by Brian Attebery. This book is a little heavy on the Tolkien analysis, but it’s also the most insightful book of criticism on fantasy literature that I have read.
July 11, 2021
?

What is wrong with meandering? Why do stories need a “pay off?” Why do we feel we need to accomplish something? What’s wrong with art, with stories – with life – for its own sake?


