Ben Tanzer's Blog, page 169

December 4, 2011

December 3, 2011

You Can Make Him Like You is The Cult's Book Club selection for the month of December. Join us won't you?

The Cult being the official Chuck Palahniuk website. Yes that Chuck Palahniuk. So, join us yes, we'll talk book, we'll change lives, and you if you don't want to use the soap there, no one will be offended, for real.  
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Published on December 03, 2011 10:47

December 2, 2011

December 1, 2011

This Zine Will Change Your Life has been Beach Sloth'd. Let the wild rumpus begin!

Too freakishly excited we are? We think not. Big thanks to the Beach Sloth for this most excellent This Zine Will Change Your Life shout-out. Rock on Slothers. And drinks on us for sure when next we meet. Now, how about some excerpt? Cool.

"I think this zine did change my life. Located in America's poetic capital, Chicago, it has been working tirelessly over the past three years to bring life-changing pieces of literature, YouTube videos, and blog posts to an internet near you. Some of these touched me in places I've never been touched before; parts of my soul I didn't even know existed were made stronger. Knowing my life had been changed and for the better this time made me happy. Plus they include sweet songs into the posts from time to time. Music and literature should always go together."  
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Published on December 01, 2011 18:33

November 30, 2011

November 29, 2011

The new edition of This Zine Will Change Your Life is live. All full of shock. And Wawrzaszek.

DSCN5942

The new edition of This Zine Will Change Your Life is live. We have a story Aftershock by the John Wawrzaszek, which we are way excited about, and, (almost) as always, photo action from Adam Lawrence, music curation from Jason Behrends and student  Black Friday prose love from Pete Anderson. We hope you enjoy this edition and we appreciate all shout-outs and links. Finally, please note, we are hoping more of you will submit comix, and music, novel excerpts, and art, and video, yes, video, and combinations there of. And most finally, Happy (post) Thanksgiving.
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Published on November 29, 2011 20:57

November 28, 2011

November 27, 2011

November 26, 2011

This Book Will Change Your Life, Part Two - Carry Each His Burden by James Goertel.

Not work. Travel. Read. Drink Gin & Tonics. More read. Goertel. As in Carry Each His Burden by James Goertel. If a shiny, unused heart and In Great Company which we were riffing on earlier today are all about thought and words and torrents of language coming at you in an overwhelmingness of language, Carry Each His Burden is something else all together different, a series of semi-not so short, short stories, that are all muscle and brine, stories about artists as thieves and hunters, meth heads and blue collar guys all of whose mistakes and poor decisions compound on one another inviting not just further mistakes and poor decisions, but revenge, and death, always death by someone's hand other than their own, but not always that either, not totally. These are stories about loss and being men, though not good men certainly. These men are id and ego, roughness, and reminiscent of the men Andre Dubus the elder, definitely, and maybe even the III as well, we need to read some of his work, sketched so well and in such a nuanced way. Carry Each His Burden is Goertel's debut and it is lived-in and alive and we greatly look forward for what is to come. We should add here, that we are heavily talking dudes and dude writers here today, something we are most cognizant of, so please note that we will next be moving onto B-Sides and Brokenhearts by Caryn Rose and Solace in So Many Words, edited by Ellen Wade Beals, because some balance is most definitely most required post haste and hence will be rectified shortly.     
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Published on November 26, 2011 16:44

These Books Will Change Your Life, Part One - a shiny, unused heart by J.A. Tyler and In Great Company by Michael Seidlinger.

Travel. Not work. Read. Read more. And so we did. Read. More. A rush of words. Endless words. A deluge. Which seems especially appropriate when discussing a shiny, unused heart by old friend and This Zine Will Change Your Life contributor J.A. Tyler and In Great Company by much newer friend Michael Seidlinger. Both are about the feeling, and taste and impact of being overwhelmed and in part accomplish just how off-balance we can feel when overwhelmed by slamming the reader with a language beat-down, a torrent of words, piling on top of one another and challenging you to even just try and breathe. But that's where the similarities stop, sort of, maybe, because Tyler is hitting old themes, paranoia and confusion and relationships and parenting, and hitting them in the language warping ways few do as well as Tyler, and yes, we know, its supposed to look like the protagonist of the story is losing his mind, but as we read it we thought, is this losing one's mind, or is what we're reading an effort to capture and describe all the craziness that can accompany the fear of responsibility and feeling of being trapped by marriage and parenting, and all the fantasies and craziness that can accompany the desire to just escape all that when we know we don't totally mean it and true escape is not a possibility because we will never allow it to be so? 


Seidlinger on the other hand, is creating a voice, a dominant voice, or internet presence, that is here to remind us that we are just pawns before its awesome powers - and yes, for the record, and ironically at that, this is a relationship that started on Facebook - and that we are prisoners of its all-consuming domination of our lives, directing our decisions, knowing us better than we know ourselves, and ultimately not caring all so much how we feel about it, if we in fact feel anything at all about any of this. Yet, as we read it we thought not unlike Tyler, and so yes, they may not be so different after all, that's what happening on paper, that's what we are expected to react to, but is there something else going on here, because though maybe like with Tyler, we are merely filtering all of these words through our own world view, is it also possible that Seidlinger is ultimately talking to the artist in all of us and condemning, even mocking, our ability to tune out the clutter and just create? We think so. We do. Really. So there you go, clutter, deluge and craziness. And words, so many words.
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Published on November 26, 2011 10:52