Alex Kudera's Blog, page 92
July 27, 2018
Don "Sauce" Cain, R.I.P.
Only a few days ago, Ultimate college champion, Maximum Time Aloft record-holder, and all-around great guy Donald "Sauce" Cain passed on too young at age 62. Here's a ten-minute clip of Don talking about his Ultimate Frisbee past, including a detailed account of his world-setting MTA throw.
Published on July 27, 2018 07:59
a footnote from the Atlas
* More than forty years on, I could tell you the brand of cigarette that my intellectual heroes smoked: Clement Greenberg, unfiltered Camels; Harold Rosenberg, Pall Malls, Lowell, the short-lived Trues. It's hard to recall now, as cigarettes are being phased out of American life--some brands no longer exist--and smoking is often seen as a marker of mental illness, that in those days almost everyone smoked.
This tangent reminds me of my family lore, that my mother's father died from "smoking unfiltered Camels and eating red meat late at night." Certainly it's true, I've taught entire sections of college English in which there is hardly a smoker in the room, yet the habit may remain more pervasive than we realize. Although the N + 1 and Jacobin intellectuals may have traded in their daily pack for exercise machines, there are still plenty of smokers around. We find them outside of campus buildings and bars, or in designated smoking areas. Go abroad, and you can see the habit remains much more pervasive, or at least, there are fewer restrictions as to where one might partake. At current prices in the U.S., it's amazing to think how much smokers could save if they could quit. Anyway, if you're interested in 20th-century literature and the biographies of writers, I highly recommend James Atlas's book.
This tangent reminds me of my family lore, that my mother's father died from "smoking unfiltered Camels and eating red meat late at night." Certainly it's true, I've taught entire sections of college English in which there is hardly a smoker in the room, yet the habit may remain more pervasive than we realize. Although the N + 1 and Jacobin intellectuals may have traded in their daily pack for exercise machines, there are still plenty of smokers around. We find them outside of campus buildings and bars, or in designated smoking areas. Go abroad, and you can see the habit remains much more pervasive, or at least, there are fewer restrictions as to where one might partake. At current prices in the U.S., it's amazing to think how much smokers could save if they could quit. Anyway, if you're interested in 20th-century literature and the biographies of writers, I highly recommend James Atlas's book.
Published on July 27, 2018 07:49
July 24, 2018
James Atlas On Biography
I'm a hundred pages into James Atlas's The Shadow in the Garden, his memoir about his life writing biography, and I'm greatly enjoying it. Although his principle subjects, Delmore Schwartz and Saul Bellow, figure prominently in the narrative, there is so much more on various writers, biographers, and writer-biographers. Some of the footnotes are extremely detailed or hilarious as well. Thomas Carlyle, Virginia Woolf, Alfred Kazin, Samuel Johnson, and Jean Stafford are only a handful of writers who are included in the narrative.
Published on July 24, 2018 10:54
July 21, 2018
Ken Ingunas
I recommend Ken Ilgunas's two travel narratives Walden on Wheels and
Trespassing Across America
. Both have strong elements of memoir, often self-reflective comedy, and heartfelt views of what we are doing to the planet as well as each other and why we might want to change our ways. Partly because they are interesting books and partly because I so rarely read three books by the same author within a couple months, I may try to interview Ilgunas about these two along with his more polemical
This Land is Our Land
although I'm momentarily so deep in the weeds with my own problems and concerns that for now this blog is the best I can do on Ken's behalf. Please see Goodreads for my other recent reads.
Published on July 21, 2018 12:00
July 8, 2018
László Krasznahorkai, The Art of Fiction No. 240
"Because they couldn't publish their own work under the Communist regime, the greatest writers and poets became translators. That's why we had wonderful translations of Shakespeare, Dante, Homer, and of every great American writer from Faulkner onward. The first translation of Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow was really marvelous."
~~ The Paris Review, Summer 2018
~~ The Paris Review, Summer 2018

Published on July 08, 2018 17:37
July 4, 2018
Independence Day, 2018
On my way to tweeting "The Bicentennial with Grandpa Andy," I came across an excerpt from Auggie's Revenge.
Stay safe and sober, America.
For old times' sake, "The Bicentennial with Grandpa Andy," a July 4th memoir excerpt: https://t.co/Pyg6LE3zEh— Alex Kudera (@kudera) July 4, 2018
For July 4th, I shared "The Bicentennial with Grandpa Andy," and that led me to this #excerpt from Auggie's Revenge: #gig #economy #comic #crime #novel https://t.co/9tweV2SgCp https://t.co/IR7iEtF8Hg— Alex Kudera (@kudera) July 4, 2018
Stay safe and sober, America.
Published on July 04, 2018 07:23
July 1, 2018
Roses Are Red and We Run Bad
New indie fiction titles
We Run Bad
and Roses are Red, Violets are stealing loose change from my pockets while I sleep are out and about.
Published on July 01, 2018 08:12
June 29, 2018
Congratulations to Amy Long!
Congratulations to Amy Long for winning the Cleveland State University Poetry Center book competition for her Codependence: A Novel in Essays (selected by Brian Blanchfield). It was one of three titles selected from nearly eleven hundred entries and will be published in the fall of 2019.
Published on June 29, 2018 06:28
June 28, 2018
Philadelphia reading this afternoon
As scheduled, I will be reading today at 4:30 p.m. at the 40th Street Branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia (40th and Walnut), and will likely include the opening scene from the sequel to
Fight for Your Long Day
as well as an excerpt from Auggie's Revenge.
Published on June 28, 2018 04:44
June 4, 2018
June 28 Reading at Free Library of Philadelphia
I'll be reading from
Fight for Your Long Day
,
Auggie's Revenge
, and "Frade Killed Ellen" on Thursday, June 28 from 4:30 to 5:45 p.m. at the 40th Street Branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia (on the corner of 40th and Walnut). This is the public library I visited most often as a child, and I'm excited to return for an opportunity to share my published fiction. Please do attend if you're free!
Published on June 04, 2018 19:00