Running for Your Life: Barkskins, the Book

Annie Proulx puts it down. What Melville did with the thoroughly American harvest of work and souls, the whale.

She does trees. Gritty and surprising, unafraid to be slow-moving, piercing insight, breathtaking moments. Buy it, Barkskins, the Book. Or reserve it at your local library: http://bit.ly/2o9AyZn

What does it take to cook something the size and breadth of a 19th century novel, a “Moby Dick,” a “Les Miserables,” when such ambitious, glorious wonders of the human imagination are seen by number-crunching publishers as viable to the 21st century creative economy as, say, the typewriter?

Bravo to Proulx for envisioning characters like Posey Brandon, the New Brunswick hellion wench, and the soft-edged Jinot, for believing there is as much necessary art to a meditation on Indian spiritual life on Manitoulin Island, Ontario, than in Hugo’s Paris.

Just try to find the elite street in this novel, the back alley of hipster New York, the naked reach for a niche market. Nope. Not here.

Of course, she is Annie Proulx, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “The Shipping News,” the one who brought us the genre-bending short story “Brokeback Mountain,” better known as a movie. Still, she doesn’t skimp, or cut corners. She takes advantage of her star status and writes hell out of topic that others wouldn’t begin to think would be publishable. 

In the latest Paris Review, Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury tells us that in his country literature has always been safe in its marginality. That has become as much true in what I see as our increasingly authoritarian regime. Problem is, the more capitalistic the society, the less likely you’ll see literature – the kind the Khoury is talking about.

Then along comes Proulx and “Barkskins.” For folks who give a damn about literature – not just publishing – this is something to celebrate.


Next: Running for Your Life: Lee’s Miserables 

Running for Your Life: They’re OUR Zombies !

Pity the poor deep staters …  When it comes to civilian mind control, they thought their clever creation of the internet would be enough to benumb the citizenry to deeper depths of nonparticipatory democracy (yes, only 55 percent of voting-age citizens voted in 2016 http://cnn.it/2nj9KbW), promoting time-sucking entertainments that have the welcome effect of diminishing respect for such evils as government and serious news media.

Then along come the Russians. Who, during World War II, or so the CIA believed, were “engaged in a wide-ranging program of testing LSD. It genuinely thought that the Soviets might develop mind-control drugs and turn every American into an obedient, communist zombie. One CIA officer testified that he and his colleagues were ‘literally terrified’ at the prospect.” (Preceding is from a recent cover article by Time magazine, http://ti.me/2nOOcSn).

Now the Russians are at it again. Turning the free internet against us. This time, as this week’s testimony by the FBI director (you know, the guy who more than any single government official is responsible for turning the tide against Hillary in that 2016 election that drew the weakest voter turnout in twenty years) makes clear, the deep staters won’t stop until the Russians get the hell out of our internet.

I take the subway every workday in New York City. I walk the streets, see the dulled eyes of folks in their internet addiction.

Hey, Russia, back off. They’re OUR zombies.

Next: Running for Your Life: Barkskins, the Book



Running for Your Life: Snow! Snow! Snow! Snow!

It’s a storm, not a curtain call.

This winter storm (March 14) is pretty blustery and late-season record-producing in some areas. (Primarily the coastal north of New York City, although the forecast had it that we were going to be suffering like never before, ie, beware the snowpocalyse !)

Storms are not personalities. This one is called Stella ! (Exclamation mark required, especially when it comes to my family life, because of Stella, my daughter K’s adorable pitbull.)

I do my best NOT to listen to the news when it comes to severe weather. In keeping with an earlier post of mine regarding public information and ratings, there are few events more representative of just how hyped the entertainment surrounding something as natural as weather conditions can be. And don’t kid yourself. Those news folks on broadcast, cable and local stations are all about entertainment. At least that’s certainly the case here in New York City …

Meantime, if you can, take a cue from the kids and get out in the Snow! Snow! Snow! Snow! and play in it while it lasts (without staring into your phone and watching the weather entertainment shows …)

Next: Running for Your Life: Barkskins, the Book



Running for Your Life: Runner for the County

So that will be it. It is true that you can’t keep an old dog down. For reasons that I’m sure I’ll detail in a blog to come, this marathon training experience is going to be one of a kind.

Sunday, Oct. 1, the marathon in The County. That’s Prince Edward County for the uninitiated. Where the best wine in Eastern Ontario can be found. (At the vineyards –  http://bit.ly/2ngAOth full disclosure, these wine-growing folks in this link amount to my Canadian “family” – not the LCBO.)

That’s all for now. Got some training planning to get down to! On that Sunday in October I will be four days short of my 62nd birthday – 42 years since I started this whole running for your life gig.

Oh, and by the way, this gig has saved my life. This time, I’ve got some incontrovertible evidence. 

One day soon I’ll reveal all …

Next: Running for Your Life: Snow! Snow! Snow! Snow!

Running for Your Life: Vive Le Vive

There comes a time every once and a while when you encounter journalism at its best. That happens to be the case with this article (link below) by Jake Halpern in the current New Yorker.

Halpern didn’t get to Vive, a safe house in Buffalo committed to helping refugees who arrive at its door, in the days after President Trump signed the first of his executive orders that cracked down on illegal immigration. Halpern went there long before, and kept going back. He doesn’t judge the people he meets. He listens, he travels with them. He follows their lives, their ups and downs.

It’s as much about Canada, the new leader of the “free” world, as Nicholas Kristof put it in a recent column (a few blog posts ago here on “Run4YrLife”), as about the United States. It may not change your mind about immigration issues, but it’s a helluva prescient piece of reporting. What is needed.

Check it out: Vive Le Vive !


Next: Running for Your Life: Runner for The County