Tone Clusters : The Joyce Carol Oates Discussion Group
July 1 to 31, 1997



Date: Tue, 01 Jul 1997 16:27:40 +1030
From:John Foyster foyster@ntmrc.ncver.edu.au
Subject: The Pentateuch
To: jco@usfca.edu

Way back in February when this list was just beginning, Greg Johnson
wrote:

> I hate to throw cold water on the idea of THE CROSSWICKS HORROR being
> published, but the possibility seems increasingly remote.  The remaining two
> novels of the quintet were written and revised (more than once) over a decade
> ago, and it appears likely that they won't be published at all, since they
> have many times been superseded by more recent, more "realistic," and more
> marketable books by JCO.

In the last week there have been several responses to an initial
revisiting of this theme by "Donald Barthel".
I happen to think that the novels in the quintet are central to JCO's
work, and JCO must once (at least) have thought the same thing, when she
wrote in an afterword which appeared in only some editions of MYSTERIES
OF WINTERTHURN:

"To choose idiosyncratic but not distracting 'narrators' to recite the
histories; to organize the voluminous materials in patterns alien to my
customary way of thinking and writing; to 'see' the world in terms of
heredity and family destiny and the vicissitudes of Time (for all five
novels are secretly fables of the American family); to explore
historically authentic crimes against women, children, and the poor; to
create, and to identify with, heroes and heroines whose existence would
be problematic in the clinical, unkind, and one might almost say,
fluorescent-lit atmosphere of present-day fiction - these factors proved
irresistible. The opportunity might not be granted me again, I thought,
to create a highly complex structure in which individual novels
(themselves complex, made up of 'books') functioned as chapters or units
in an immense design: America as viewed through the prismatic lens of
its most popular genres." (etc.etc.)

It seems that the opportunity is not at present being granted in any
full sense, although obviously there are SOME people around who believe
in the desirability of getting the whole quintet into print.

John Foyster
Adelaide
SOUTH AUSTRALIA


From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 15:47:49 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Double Delight Has anyone noted the similarities of Terrence's ordeal with that of poor old Edwin in Oates' 1979 novel Cybele? (Greg J., I'll bet you're one of the few folks in this room who has read Cybele).
From: smancin1@ix.netcom.com Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 16:52:44 -0500 (CDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Double Delight On 07/02/97 15:47:49 you wrote: > >Has anyone noted the similarities of Terrence's ordeal with that of poor old >Edwin in Oates' 1979 novel Cybele? (Greg J., I'll bet you're one of the few >folks in this room who has read Cybele). > > Count me in as a Cybele reader. I read it in the late seventies. Would you care to refresh my memory by making some comparisons? smb
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 20:05:38 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: oates on enemies I read the math professor's 6/19/97 note with interest. I too have had disappointing work experiences (in which I fancied myself a character in a Joyce Carol Oates story). Was I discovering new enemies, or was it simply time to move on? Regarding your situation: your colleagues might have admired your impartiality, but impartiality, & fairness might not have been the qualities they sought in a department chair. It's only human that each side might have wanted an ally to head the math department, and it doesn't sound like you were taking sides. It's always good, when reading Oates, to note who is saying those pithy sayings: they may not represent the author's point of view. Did anyone read that terrific Oates story "Faithless" in the Kenyon Review last winter? It blew my socks off, and I'm going to use it in my adult ed. course on Oates next month. Cyrano of Boston Cyrano
To: jco@usfca.edu From: Gary Couzens Gjcouzens@btinternet.com Subject: Cybele Date:Thu, 03 Jul 97 07:25:37 +0100 ( + ) Cybele is to me the least memorable of those of JCO's novels that I've read. Literally so - I know for a fact I've read it (it's in my bookshelf) but I can't remember anything of it! Even the novels I liked less than others - e.g. Angel of Light (which somehow fell flat for me) and Childwold - I can still remember some scenes, characters etc. even years later. Gary Couzens
Date: Thu, 03 Jul 1997 06:54:13 -0400 From: "Dr. Cynthia J. Hallett" challett@jax-inter.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Faithless" I, for one, have not read it---YET! But I've already made a note to go to the campus library on Monday (after holiday) and do so! thanks for the suggestion; "Faithless" sounds like the sort of story I relish reading and using in a classroom. -- Cynthia ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dr. Cynthia J. Hallett challett@jax.inter.net http://www.fccj.cc.fl.us/~challett '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' Whoever undertakes to set him[her]self up as a judge of Truth and Knowledge is shipwrecked by the laughter of the gods. -Albert Einstein
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Thu, 3 Jul 1997 09:37:40 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Double Delight Yes, I've read CYBELE, though not in more than a decade.... Yes, Terence's obsession not only resembles Edwin's, but also Ian's in AMERICAN APPETITES, Corky's in WHAT I LIVE FOR, Jesse's in WONDERLAND (re. Reva Denk), Jules's in THEM (re. Nadine Greene), and that of countless heroes in JCO's short stories. Male obsession with a female love/sex object is one of those repeated themes in her work. In DOUBLE DELIGHT, I found it less convincing than in the past works; compared to the amazing erotic scenes about Jules and Nadine or Jesse and Reva, the "obsessive" passages seem to have been written with far less passion or conviction. Or so I felt. Greg J.
Date: Thu, 3 Jul 1997 10:26:32 -0400 (EDT) From: Karen Gaffney kgaffney@odin.english.udel.edu To: jco discussion group jco@usfca.edu Subject: today's ny times hi. i just wanted to mention that jco has a piece in the op-ed section of today's new york times about the tyson fight. she's quite a fan. if you're interested you can access it on the web at www.nytimes.com you just need to think of a login name and a password that no one else has. :) karen
Date: Thu, 3 Jul 1997 12:09:08 -0400 To: jco@usfca.edu From: cafuller@EVE.ASSUMPTION.EDU (Catherine Fuller) Subject: Re: today's ny times >hi. i just wanted to mention that jco has a piece in the op-ed section of >today's new york times about the tyson fight. she's quite a fan. > >if you're interested you can access it on the web at www.nytimes.com >you just need to think of a login name and a password that no one else has. > >:) karen Karen, thanks so much for letting us know about the Tyson article. I have it printed out. Have enjoyed your screen comments about our favorite author so far. Thanks again, Cathy Fuller
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Thu, 3 Jul 1997 14:21:45 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: new member Majordomo@lovelace.usfca.edu Hello, I've been reading JCO for 26 years but doing e-mail for a mere 14 hours. I don't know what the heck I'm doing here. Am I on? Cyrano
Subject: Re: new member Date: Thu, 3 Jul 97 23:37:19 -0400 From: t-hulslander t-hulslander@top.monad.net To: jco@usfca.edu Hi, Cyrano- We hear (read) you! You are on!
Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 09:55:19 +0200 From: Norman and Deanna Nelson To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: JCO in NYT Thank you, Karen, for the NYT tip. Has anyone ever read ON BOXING? I bought it for my husband because he boxes and is also a JCO fan. I read it and was so impressed by JCO's metaphysical insights into the sport. It was a fascinating read, made much more powerful by her strong prose. Deanna
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Subject: jco Date: Sun, 6 Jul 1997 08:08:02 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu "Cybele" was published by Black Sparrow Press, in 1979. You would probably have to check used book stores if you wanted to buy a copy now. Perhaps other members know whether Black Sparrow is still able to backorder their old titles. It's first line--"There was a lover of mine who worshipped me, and became reckless with his life, which was soon taken from him -- more abruptly than I would have wished, and more cruelly, I came to pity him in the end." -- put me very much in mind of "Double Delight" The speaker in "Cybele" is no doubt Cybele, the Roman earth goddess -- her contemporary counterpart. This dangerous lady is associated with a band of 70s radicals, who eventually set the ill-fated protagonist Edwin on fire. In DD the radicals have changed somewhat to a gang of con-artists. I found the end rather poignant: Terrence swimming to "rejoin" his lost family. I wonder whether they'll let him join their merry band, though I rather doubt it. "Snake Eyes" is still my favorite RS novel, though this one's pretty interesting. I don't know how well it will go over with general readers, however. The court and jury scenes at the beginning are pretty engaging. RS sales must do okay since books keep appearing. Terrence's attraction to the Renfrews IS pretty odd. Sort of a perverse Anne Tyler premise -- like the guy in "Accidental Tourist" who finds his true emotional connections with a gypsylike group of folks from a lower socio-economic bracket (There's even a pair of twins in Tyler's Baltimore slum setting, come to think of it, just like the twins in DD), It's great to find this d-group. Only JCO could have motivated me to get on line at this point in my life. Thanks for your patience, Randy, I feel like I've crashlanded on Jupiter, but I do believe I'm now a subscribed member. Cyrano
From: KMMANWAR@library.syr.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Mon, 7 Jul 1997 09:08:12 EDT Subject: jco on c-span I'm sure many on the list are aware of c-spanII' About Books, a weekend series of 5 hours of book programming. It airs on Saturday evening, 8 to 11, and on Sunday evening, from 9 to 11. I caught the upcoming Saturday (July 12th) schedule which includes a panel discussion, in which JCO is a participant, on teaching literature. I don't know exactly when she'll be on, but if you tune in at 8, they'll announce the schedule of events to be aired that evening. Kathleen Manwaring Syracuse University Library
From: diamond@math.wvu.edu (Harvey Diamond) Subject: Re: Cybele To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Mon, 7 Jul 1997 12:36:05 -0400 (EDT) I found several parts of Cybele memorable and which I still remember after at least a decade, such as 1) The opening (JCO often has very memorable opening paragraphs/pages) "Edwin Locke, whose story, accelerating as it does..." that word accelerating! Perfect! - have you all not had periods of your life when things begin to "accelerate", perhaps in an alarming way? that last business in the opening where he is observed looking down by a secretary who opines that perhaps his death was casting a shadow back, and as we sink into the sentimentality we are brought up short (enjoyably of course) by the narrator who coldly (boasting?) informs us "no, at that very moment he was thinking of me". By the way, who is the "me" is who is talking here? (One of the billion things in JCO that I never "got") 2) The whole chapter where he is struggling to get from the airport to meet his lover in a large hotel. Lots of confusion, anticipation, longing, and amusement here! The latter part of the book was a little bit too ugly, as he "accelerates" into degredation and then death. Harvey Diamond
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Tue, 8 Jul 1997 20:00:51 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: JCO on C-Span 2 Since Kathleen kindly informed us of the panel discussion on C-Span 2 scheduled for this coming weekend, I've discovered that C-Span 2 isn't available in Atlanta. If anyone on the list lives in a more cable-ready environment and plans to tape the panel discussion, I would appreciate your contacting me. I would like to borrow the tape from you and of course will pay for postage, etc. Thanks very much-- Greg J.
Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 10:34:29 -0400 To: jco@usfca.edu From: cafuller@EVE.ASSUMPTION.EDU (Catherine Fuller) Subject:Tyson article Just wanted to alert the group that there is an intriguing article in this week's New Yorker on Tyson. Not by our author, but interesting in that it expands on some of the same points JCO made in the recent N.Y. Times piece. Thanks.
Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 21:55:00 -0700 From: Tom & Sandy Fasano To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Tyson article Catherine Fuller wrote: > > Just wanted to alert the group that there is an intriguing article > in this week's New Yorker on Tyson. I got halfway through the damn thing and had to "throw in the towel." In the end, this guy isn't worth the time reading about. If he couldn't throw a punch (a dubious gift by any standard) what would he be? Another street punk? Gangbanger? An inmate (he does belong in prison)? Then again, some folks are interested in J. Dahmer or Dahmer spin-offs (ZOMBIE). Whatever....
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 1997 09:32:18 -0400 To: jco@usfca.edu From: cafuller@EVE.ASSUMPTION.EDU (Catherine Fuller) Subject: Re: Tyson article >Catherine Fuller wrote: >> >> Just wanted to alert the group that there is an intriguing article >> in this week's New Yorker on Tyson. > >I got halfway through the damn thing and had to "throw in the towel." In >the end, this guy isn't worth the time reading about. If he couldn't >throw a punch (a dubious gift by any standard) what would he be? Another >street punk? Gangbanger? An inmate (he does belong in prison)? Then >again, some folks are interested in J. Dahmer or Dahmer spin-offs >(ZOMBIE). Whatever.... Catherine Fuller replies: Iron Mike Tyson has brought interest to the sport of boxing since the salad sixties days of Cassius Clay/Liston. He is packaged excitement, and if you are not boxing fans, it may be hard to understand,,,,
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 1997 09:38:05 -0400 To: jco@usfca.edu From: cafuller@EVE.ASSUMPTION.EDU (Catherine Fuller) Subject: "ROCKY" JUST A MOVIE To any JCO fans who share her enthusiasm for boxing, hope you enjoyed the New Yorker article on Mike Tyson. Somewhat biased against him, for sure, but interesting pictures drawn of fight and night life in Las Vegas.
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 1997 06:59:56 +0000 From: Francie Schwartz fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "ROCKY" JUST A MOVIE Catherine Fuller wrote: > > To any JCO fans who share her enthusiasm for boxing, hope you > enjoyed the New Yorker article on Mike Tyson. Somewhat biased against him, > for sure, but interesting pictures drawn of fight and night life in Las > Vegas. Agreed, Tyson brought more "fans" - but I seriously doubt very many of these people perceive the sport on anywhere near the level of jco. Also agree with the gentleman who said Tyson is not worth reading about... New Yorker has published a fairly entertaining piece on a very boring young man in need of a good psychiatrist and a better press agent. I much preferred jco's Op-Ed piece. If you remember Marciano, Sugar Ray, Ali, and the other classic guys, you know Tyson is definitely not in their class, never was, and richly deserves the obscurity that is sure to envelope him, and soon. Unless he becomes a commentator, in which case we'll all have to mute our TVs in order to avoid his scrambled brain droppings (credit George Carlin). Francie
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 1997 10:08:23 -0400 To: jco@usfca.edu From: cafuller@EVE.ASSUMPTION.EDU (Catherine Fuller) Subject: Re: "ROCKY" JUST A MOVIE OK, Tyson foes, maybe we should all just wait for the Great White Hope. Your boxes will be "mute" for quite a while, I am afraid. >Catherine Fuller wrote: >> >> To any JCO fans who share her enthusiasm for boxing, hope you >> enjoyed the New Yorker article on Mike Tyson. Somewhat biased against him, >> for sure, but interesting pictures drawn of fight and night life in Las >> Vegas. > >Agreed, Tyson brought more "fans" - but I seriously doubt very many of >these people perceive the sport on anywhere near the level of jco. >Also agree with the gentleman who said Tyson is not worth reading >about... New Yorker has published a fairly entertaining piece on a >very boring young man in need of a good psychiatrist and a better >press agent. I much preferred jco's Op-Ed piece. > >If you remember Marciano, Sugar Ray, Ali, and the other classic guys, >you know Tyson is definitely not in their class, never was, and richly >deserves the obscurity that is sure to envelope him, and soon. Unless >he becomes a commentator, in which case we'll all have to mute our TVs >in order to avoid his scrambled brain droppings (credit George >Carlin). > >Francie
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 1997 10:39:09 -0400 (EDT) From: Richard Ressmyer ressmyrr@wvlc.wvnet.edu Subject: Re: "ROCKY" JUST A MOVIE To: jco@usfca.edu One TV interview after the BITE had someone use the cliche-- "When MONEY TALKS, CHARACTER WALKS!" As a teenager I spoke to Jack Dempsey in front of his Broadway club, I saw Ali interviewed in Harlem. But the last boxing to really draw my attention was Sugar Ray Leonard's olympic achievements. Did anyone see the recent re-broadcast of Requiem for a Heavyweight? Serlings masterful, early teleplay with Pleasance and the Winns dug deep into "classic" boxing long before these mega-million, international neo-gladiator events were imagined by marketing gurus. Richard in Charleston
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 1997 09:07:11 -0800 From: Randy Souther Randy Souther To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Tyson article Tom & Sandy Fasano wrote: > > Catherine Fuller wrote: > > > > Just wanted to alert the group that there is an intriguing article > > in this week's New Yorker on Tyson. > > I got halfway through the damn thing and had to "throw in the towel." In > the end, this guy isn't worth the time reading about. If he couldn't > throw a punch (a dubious gift by any standard) what would he be? Another > street punk? Gangbanger? An inmate (he does belong in prison)? Then > again, some folks are interested in J. Dahmer or Dahmer spin-offs > (ZOMBIE). Whatever.... Well, but J.Dahmer *is* interesting--he's also horrifying and sickening, and it's perfectly justifiable to erase him from consciousness--but it's the extremes of human behavior that to me *are* the most "interesting." Maybe Mike Tyson would have been a "common" criminal if not for his extraordinary talent--but is that the point? What would any of us "be" if not for those talents or qualities that we feel set us apart from everyone else? Tyson, though certainly not a fictional character, is an emblematic figure--at least in the hands of JCO. How often has a character in her fiction surprised us with some act of grotesque violence? With that in mind, it's difficult for me to see any real difference between JCO's fiction and her boxing writing--or more specifically, her writing over the years on Mike Tyson. Though she's certainly not controlling the plot, she is exploring her characteristic themes. And though I have never considered myself a boxing "fan" (though certainly not a boxing "foe"--I do recall being something of a fan of Sugar Ray Leonard), I have found JCO's boxing writing as fascinating as anything she's done--and here she even points out her themes! I have collected on the Web page JCO's Tyson articles, and I would invite everyone to read them in order. Watching JCO watch Tyson turn from a "good guy" to a "bad guy" is quite a story. http://storm.usfca.edu/~southerr/ontyson.html Randy
Date: Mon, 14 Jul 1997 15:01:47 -0400 (EDT) From: Karen Gaffney kgaffney@odin.english.udel.edu To: jco discussion group jco@usfca.edu Subject: jco on booknotes hi. just wondering if anyone saw jco on this weekend's c-span's booknotes, which someone mentioned she'd be on. i missed it but if anyone saw it, let us know what went on. thanks karen
From: smancin1@ix.netcom.com Date:Mon, 14 Jul 1997 21:19:55 -0500 (CDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Tyson article >>Catherine Fuller wrote: >>> >>> Just wanted to alert the group that there is an intriguing article >>> in this week's New Yorker on Tyson. >> Does anybody have a web address for the New Yorker? smb
Date: Tue, 15 Jul 1997 09:10:26 -0400 (EDT) From: Karen Gaffney kgaffney@odin.english.udel.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: nyer On Mon, 14 Jul 1997 smancin1@ix.netcom.com wrote: > Does anybody have a web address for the New Yorker? > > smb > I'm pretty sure the new yorker doesn't have a site. karen
Date: Tue, 15 Jul 1997 12:45:09 -0400 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@abel.math.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: nyer http://www.enews.com/magazines/new_yorker/ The New Yorker's version of a web site. :-) Hi, everbody, btw. Ralf A. Engeldinger
From: smancin1@ix.netcom.com Date: Tue, 15 Jul 1997 16:11:42 -0500 (CDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: nyer On 07/15/97 12:45:09 you wrote: > >http://www.enews.com/magazines/new_yorker/ > >The New Yorker's version of a web site. :-) > >Hi, everbody, btw. > >Ralf A. Engeldinger Thanks RAE. Duly noted and bookmarked. I found a partial rendition of the article in their archives. smb
Date: Tue, 15 Jul 1997 21:04:01 -0800 From: Randy Souther Randy Souther To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Biography A preview of Greg Johnson's biography of JCO is now up on the web site: http://storm.usfca.edu/~southerr/johnson.html (Ooh, I can't wait for the whole book!) Randy
From: marsbase@earthlink.net Date: Wed, 16 Jul 1997 02:40:24 +0100 To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: NY-er site Hi, all -- been lurking, here, for a while. unexpectedly, did get New Yorker site! -- www.enews.com/magazines/new_yorker BTW, haven't read recent JCO, but was very happy about WONDERLAND and ZOMBIE. Ms. Oates was very kind. Yrs ago, when I questioned differing endings in paper/hard vers. of WONDERLAND, she sent me an auto'd. copy of Angel Fire!! ..... alan
Date: Wed, 16 Jul 1997 16:22:24 +0200 From: Norman and Deanna Nelson To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Biography Randy, Thanks for the tip. I just returned from reading the preview, and I'm sitting over here, anxiously awaiting the book. Can we really wait that long? :D Deanna
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Fri, 18 Jul 1997 04:18:19 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: G/. Johnson's JCO bio Hi, Greg -- the preview is most intriguing. The epigraph -- where do we go to read "JCO and I" (1994)? In the early 1970's I was struck by the way she would sometimes refer to herself as "Joyce Carol Oates" -- the " " 's appealed to the Twilight Zone part of me. Cyrano
Date: Fri, 18 Jul 1997 08:26:58 -0700 From: Tom & Sandy Fasano To: jco jco@usfca.edu Subject: Man Crazy Maybe this has already been posted. Nonetheless, here goes: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ats-query/0757-2602575-429646
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Fri, 18 Jul 1997 20:01:01 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: G/. Johnson's JCO bio Thank you, Cyrano. "JCO and I" is collected in an anthology called "Who's Writing This?" (edited by Daniel Halpern, Ecco Press, 1995). It's available in paperback and probably is in most libraries. Greg J.
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