Alex Kudera's Blog, page 59
December 19, 2020
10/20/68: On Lionel Trilling
"[Lionel] Trilling. I thought that my own feelings were bad enough, but it turns out that his animus against me is even worse. And what has it been about all these years? T[rilling] cannot stand my temperament—he cannot stand the ghetto Jew in me—he cannot stand my vitality. L.T., the would-be gentleman—the little gentleman."
~~ from Alfred Kazin's Journals, Selected and Edited by Richard M. Cook
December 15, 2020
2020: Good Writing from a Bad Year
December 13, 2020
12/20/1963: Christmas in New York
"All those new office buildings of glass were lit up. [Park] Avenue was sparkling with Christmas lights, and the effect was stunning in its brilliance—as if the heart of the city, the imperial avenue was literally made of light. . . . Christmas in New York with all the nostalgic old-American gestures toward the star and the tree, is really [the] celebration of the city's wealth. And this Friday evening before Xmas on Park Avenue, this wealth is experienced in light. Every window gleamed as a showpiece. . . . If a native is so astonished, a stranger would be blinded."
~~ from Alfred Kazin's Journals, Selected and Edited by Richard M. Cook
Christmas in New York
"All those new office buildings of glass were lit up. [Park] Avenue was sparkling with Christmas lights, and the effect was stunning in its brilliance—as if the heart of the city, the imperial avenue was literally made of light. . . . Christmas in New York with all the nostalgic old-American gestures toward the star and the tree, is really [the] celebration of the city's wealth. And this Friday evening before Xmas on Park Avenue, this wealth is experienced in light. Every window gleamed as a showpiece. . . . If a native is so astonished, a stranger would be blinded."
~~ from Alfred Kazin's Journals, Selected and Edited by Richard M. Cook
December 12, 2020
I've never felt like an American
"But no one can tell me that Edmund Wilson feels like an immigrant's son. Bill Gibson and his wife asked people at the Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s house the other day—have you always felt like an American? And I said—I've never felt like an American. But that's because I've given up trying to feel like an American. The lack of tradition is the lack of familiarity in many basic associations—and I know that I am outside them, trying to figure out what to do and what to think in relation to many basic American traditions. . . Yet meanwhile the 'Americans' feel deprived of what they all had. They feel that it's no longer their country."
~~ from Alfred Kazin's Journals, Selected and Edited by Richard M. Cook
December 9, 2020
good critics
"All good critics are frustrated writers. They are frustrated about the skill they are able to suggest so well because they work close to it without being of it. They are parallel to it and hence can see it in the most marvelous detail without being of it. I understand why Edmund [Wilson] works so hard at his journals. They are his living novel, his unending book of life."
~~ from Alfred Kazin's Journals, Selected and Edited by Richard M. Cook
December 5, 2020
Kazin on 14th Street
"This old-fashioned house. Studios. Man downstairs playing Bach. Only on the bottom, on greasy, broken down 14th Street are people at home on Memorial Day playing Bach. Like something out of Willa Cather's Stories of Washington Square."
~~ from Alfred Kazin's Journals, Selected and Edited by Richard M. Cook
December 4, 2020
Kazin on JFK
~~ from Alfred Kazin's Journals , Selected and Edited by Richard M. Cook
November 30, 2020
eyes, nose, and mouth
"I feel that discussing story-writing in terms of plot, character, and theme is like trying to describe the expression of a face by saying where the eyes, nose, and mouth are."
~~ from "Writing Short Stories" by Flannery O'Connor
*as quoted in "The Infallible Continuum" by James P. Blaylock,
Poets & Writers, Nov/Dec 2020
November 25, 2020
Author of Literature
Sagging Meniscus's Guillermo Stitch, author of Literature (2018), earned a favorable review in The New York Times for his summer 2020 release, Lake of Urine. In sadder news in experimental literary arts, Dalkey Archive's founder John O'Brien passed on to the next chapter.