Tone Clusters : The Joyce Carol Oates Discussion Group
November 1 to 15, 1997



From: composer2@juno.com
To:  jco@usfca.edu
 Date:  Sat, 1 Nov 1997 00:30:43 -0500
Subject: Academic Writers & Halloween!

All university writers, that is, good popular authors, inevitably end up
writing something about or relating to the collegiate setting, and it
appears throughout their work, either blatantly or shaded in allegory. 
This is especially true of JCO -- I mean, ZOMBIE, THEM, and a host of
others center in some way around a college campus.  Other writers
"guilty" of this are: Stuart Dybek (Western Michigan U); Reynolds Price
(Duke); Stephen Dobyns (Syracuse); Pinckney Benedict (Princeton; Hope);
Jane Smiley (Iowa); to name just a few.  These are all writers who teach
AND make a career of writing.  I thought this was an interesting
observation, sparked by Cyrano's mention of student/professor relations.

Warm regards for a "Happy Halloween"--
DAVID

p.s. -  How many people will costume themselves as the serial monster
from ZOMBIE this season?  Or do we all already wear that mask??? 
Oooo......


Date: Sat, 1 Nov 97 10:36:49 CST From: "Frank Malgesini" fmalgesi@uachih.uach.mx To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Academic Writers & Halloween! In reference to the comment about writers in universities using the university in their writing, the principal example in Oates works, of course, is the satire, Unholy Loves, which although it may not be among Oates` most important works is certainly one of the funniest. For me it also included some of the most memorable characters and incidents from among her contemporary novels. I think it must also have been entertaining to write. Frank Malgesini Facultad de Filosofia y Letras Universidad Autonoma de Chihuahua
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 17:06:06 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Academic Writers & Halloween! Hi, Frank. Of course the university setting goes way back in Oates's works. "Archways" in UPON THE SWEEPING FLOOD is an early one, and in THEM there is a humorous scene of university faculty sitting around a tavern during the 1967 Detroit riots plotting revolution; Jules meets a "Professor Piercy," who may be a sly reference to Marge Piercy, who also hails from Michigan -- Ann Arbor for grad school and, I think, Detroit before that. And let's not forget that mid-1970s story collection HUNGRY GHOSTS, which I believe is entirely university-based stories, some so nasty and sardonic that the book got panned, as I recall, in the NYT by some other college prof. I remember JCO's answer to that pan review in the NYTBR letter's column the following week: something to the effect that her book may offend those readers who put the ego ahead of all else. A lot of those stories are set in a ficticious Canadian university and no doubt draw on JCO's observations at the University of Windsor as well as Detroit College and Syracuse. UNHOLY LOVES was a lot of fun, compared to the heavier works preceding it. When I read it, I was particularly struck by the playful scene at the end where the college-teacher heroine and the man she's in a love-hate romance with pause a moment in their endless argument to watch her cat playing on the rug -- it was such a light-hearted moment that it sticks in my mind, and I think it was JCO's first use of cats (which she apparently loves) in her fiction. I myself am a bird-lover, which is why I must put in a plug for Rosamond Smith's NEMESIS, in which canaries play a major role and enjoy a happy ending. Cyrano
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 06:38:59 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: You Must remember this Hi, Heather. I reviewed YOU MUST REMEMBER THIS for newspapers in Boston and Baltimore when it first came out. It's quite a sexy book: Enid motel-hopping with Uncle Felix. Wasn't the ending funny! The successful lovers in the novel turn out to be good old Mom and Dad. Now there's an ending you rarely see in contemporary fiction. I've often noted that in a lot of novels the young heroine's mother is usually deceased before the action begins: it's as if a woman can't be a heroine unless Mom's safely out of the picture. Which Morrison novel are you planning to discuss with YOU MUST REMEMBER THIS? You know both authors teach at Princeton. I'm not up to date on Morrison, but I believe she's still teaching there. Cyrano
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Morrison @ Princeton From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 12:16:59 EST Morrison, according to my sources at Princeton, is still teaching there. But, does anyone know the history of Morrison's formal training? David
Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 13:10:21 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Morrison @ Princeton she is definitely still teaching at princeton. i dont know much about her background - i know she was born in lorain, ohio as chloe anthony wofford in 1931. she attended harvard and then cornell where she wrote her thesis on virginia woolf and william faulkner. since then, shes won the pulitzer (1988) the nat'l book critics circle award (1978) and the nobel (1993). - jen "perhaps nature builds into us and into the world a sense of amnesia, and maybe this is our saving grace as humans, our ability to seemingly forget on cue." - the amazing douglas coupland On Sun, 2 Nov 1997, David C. Chaudoir wrote: > Morrison, according to my sources at Princeton, is still teaching there. > But, does anyone know the history of Morrison's formal training? > > David >
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 14:03:54 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Morrison @ Princeton Hi, David, Morrison grew up in Lorrain, Ohio, and went to undergrad school at Howard Univ. in Washington, DC. Her PhD thesis -- at Yale, I think, was on "suicide in the works of Virginia Woolf and Wm Faulkner.Cyrano
Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 14:45:04 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Morrison @ Princeton sorry..i made that typo before - cyrano, you're right - howard not harvard. - jen "perhaps nature builds into us and into the world a sense of amnesia, and maybe this is our saving grace as humans, our ability to seemingly forget on cue." - the amazing douglas coupland
Date: Mon, 3 Nov 1997 18:24:10 -0500 (EST) From: Heather L Ormiston hormisto@mission.mvnc.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: You Must remember this Yes, I guess that it is ironic that the old married couple turns out to be the lovers in the end. I am comparing it with Morrison's The Bluest Eye becasue they both deal with incest, although in very different ways. It's not completely developed yet, but I am focusing on the thread of violence that is contained within the sexuality of both novels, and how it shapes the heroines of both novels. Do you see Enid as a victim? From your phrase bed hopping it would seem that you don't, but I would be interested to hear your take on it. Heather
Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 16:05:10 +0200 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Jakob Persson jakob_p@lubio.kult.lu.se Subject: Re: You Must Remember This Heather, Thank you for bringing up You Must Remember This to discussion. I've been meaning to do it for a long time. I just finished reading You Must Remember This for the third time. I would say it's probably my favorite JCO novel. The intimate and tragic story about the Stevick family gets to me like few other stories and it's the same thing every time I read it. About a year ago I wrote a big paper where I compared You Must Remember This with the JCO novels Because It Is Bitter And Because It Is My Heart and Foxfire. All three of them are set in the 1950's, which was my starting point. I've given a lot of thought to the relationship between Felix and Enid. For me it raises the question: "What is love?" Is there love between Enid and Felix? If it is not love, then what is it? Certainly it is not only pure sexual desire. There is a strong bond between Enid and Felix that is not about sex. After all, what would the relationship be like if Felix and Enid were not relatives? Wouldn't that be love? In the novel, Enid and Felix don't know themselves what relationship they have. Enid thinks she's in love with Felix, but sometimes she hates him. She's thrown between "I can't live without you, Felix" and "I hate you, Felix". However, sometimes she seems to be in love with the concept of being in love, and the target of her love just happens to be Felix. It's Felix from the beginning so it's Felix to the end. It could have been anybody. On the other hand, maybe it's Felix just because he is forbidden and dangerous and makes Enid so much more dirty and rebellious. As for Felix, he is ahamed of the relationship and doesn't want to call it love. He tries to keep Enid at a reasonable distance. However, he is incredibly jealous and he throws gifts over Enid. It's obvious that she means a lot more to him than sex. I find it difficult to see Enid as a total victim of Felix'. Sure, at the Rideau Inn Felix steps over the limits and Enid is a victim of his sexual desires, but after that it's Enid who pursues the relationship, pursues it to the limit of suicide. By then I don't think she is a victim of Felix'. She's rather the victim of her own mind, focusing all her life on the concept of love and the concept of Felix. Felix gives in to Enid after her suicide attempt, but who is to blame? Both Enid and Felix have problems in relating to the normal world and I don't think of Enid and Felix as victims of each other, but as victims of themselves and of the surrounding society. Well, that was some of my thougths on Enid and Felix. I look forward to read other thoughts on the subject. Jakob Persson, Sweden
Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 10:46:12 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: You Must Remember This Jakob, I really think that JCO's point in YMRT is what you stated - that they are victims both of each other's minds and of the surrounding society. I think that's a theme that she develops even more in American Appetites. - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 11:50:32 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: You Must Remember This Hi, fellow Oates fans- I've been silent for a while because I've been so busy, but I've kept up with the conversations. You Must Remember This is my favorite and was my first JCO novel, and I think it's a perfect example of Oates' portrayal of passionate and usually violent love as the ultimate destroyer of souls. (this theme shows up in many of her other novels- The Rise of Life on Earth, Solstice, and Expensive People, just to name three that have always stood out in my mind) My only problem with YMRT is that I find Enid's end to be somewhat implausible- her transition from victimized (by herself, by society, by Felix, by a combination of the three), young girl and self-assured, ambitious, college woman comes too quickly and almost out of nowhere. When I think about this novel, I tend to ignore the positive ending (because I find it so utterly unrealistic) and view Enid as the perpetual victim. I'm very curious to know, does anyone else have this problem with the novel? What did you all think of Enid's end? -Lindsay
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 12:32:37 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: You Must Remember This Hi Lindsay, The ending of YMRT is unusual. Enid not only maintains good grades, wins a scholarship, fools her parents during her stormy relationship with Felix. She also maintains a friendly social life with her high school classmates. It's almost too much. I would have expected a girl that age to become obsessed with her illicit affair and become totally isolated by it. Sometimes, in real life, you hear about people who have amazing secret lives and somehow manage to keep all their secrets without breaking down. Perhaps Enid is one of these people. I think she will be successful in college for a while at least -- or maybe her breakdown will come later as she confronts the lonliness of college life away from her family and Felix. One wonders what kinds of new friendships she will make in school to replace the old ones at home. But, as Dostoevsky wrote at the end of Crime and Punishment, "that would make the subject of another story; our present story is ended." Cyrano
Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 10:09:38 -0800 (PST) From: Erlome erl@efn.org To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Gothic series In the afterword to "Mysteries of Winterthurn" JCO said there were two further works in the series following "Bellefleur," "Bloodsmoor," and "Winterthurn," totalling five. Does anyone know why they were never published and whether there is any intention of publishing them ?
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 13:24:25 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: You Must Remember This Hi, Jakob, I like your anaylsis of Enid and Felix being victims -- not of each other -- but of their own thinking and the times they live in. JCO has always asked that we examine the way in which her characters make their own choices and act on limited information, just as people do in real life. Do you live in Stockholm? I'll be visiting there next month. Perhaps we can discuss Oates-lore. Is there any JCO book you haven't been able to obtain in Sweden? Perhaps I could bring you a copy. Cyrano
Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 13:45:12 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: You Must Remember This linds -- hi :) it's kind of odd because i havent looked at YMRT in a long time because it was the first jco i ever read and i left it at home. but i recently read man crazy and loved it except for the ending which i found almost too simplistic. i think jco is in a difficult situation because she creates enormously complex characters and has to sustain them. at the same time, she has to appeall to the public - whenever i tell people i love jco i get comments like "oh, she's so esoteric." in that sense, she has to battle to maintain the complexity of her characters and not be too complex and esoteric. anyway, i guess i'm not really answering the question but those are my thoughts on that. - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls
Date: Tue, 4 Nov 97 14:43:43 CST From: "Frank Malgesini" fmalgesi@uachih.uach.mx To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: victims of their own minds This is the typical situation in a Joyce Carol Oates story. Characters slowly learn to control their environment but they are nearly always betrayed finally by their own minds. I remember more than twenty five years ago when I read my first book, The Wheel of Love, noticing that this sequence is repeated in nearly every story in the book. Convalescing seems to me to be a simple treatment of a process that most characters go through throughout the short story collections. In Convalescing the protagonist has amnesia but the mental collapse that he has experienced is seen over and over in characters who have no auto accidents or amnesia to blame for their transformations. The reimaginings of Kafka`s Metamorphosis that occur in different collections of her short stories also deal with the same themes. Another symbolic treatment of it is The Brain of Dr. Vicente from The Poisoned Kiss. In the first novel by Oates that I read, them, we see the process happening cyclically as the characters work their way toward some sort of balance and then collapse over and over. The Garden of Earthly Delights is another example where the protagonist slowly builds a life and then fails because of the betrayal of the mind. As Dr. Vicente learned, we can consider all the factors in our environment and we can control them but in the end we cannot control our own minds. Frank Malgesini fmalgesi@uach.mx Facultad de Filosofia y Letras Universidad Autonoma de Chihuahua
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 18:14:24 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: You Must Remember This lins, the ending of MAN CRAZY was perplexing because we don't know a thing about Ingrid's new boy friend. Is he a compassionate, gentle man? Or is he another version of her mean father? When she goes to visit her mother Chloe in the last chapter, she's driving a borrowed car -- possibly her boy friend's car. MAN CRAZY seems to be about how the heroine's messed-up family warps her own life. Has she somehow worked through that handicap and found a decent partner to make a new life with? JCO leaves that a mystery: we have to take Ingrid's word for it that she's going to marry her former therapist. I wonder whether the main issue in MAN CRAZY isn't really Ingrid's relationship with her mother? The concluding image of the tree that continues to grow even though it has been knocked down, suggests that whether Ingrid's new life is one we'd approve of or not approve of ... she will continue to strive for the light, for the balance in her life that Frank was talking about just now. Cyrano
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 1997 18:16:44 +0200 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Jakob Persson jakob_p@lubio.kult.lu.se Subject: Re: You Must Remember This Hi Lindsay, I have a few thoughts about the ending of YMRT. I used to think that to leave Port Oriskany and go to college would be like a new life for Enid, she would forget the past, Felix and everything, just like she wants to. Although I'd like to imagine a young and strong and happy Enid,I agree that it is an ending that feels unrealistic. Now I have another theory, which I myself find much more plausible (although not as uplifting): Enid's happiness in the end is just for the moment. On the surface, the change in her does seem great, but has she really changed as much as she wants to imagine? She seems to be very happy during her visit at the college, but she is also haunted by thoughts like "Murderer, you don't deserve this". It's clear that Felix and the abortion isn't out of her head yet and somehow I find it difficult to believe that they ever will be. To leave Port Oriskany physically is not equal to leave it mentally. I've read an article (I've forgotten by whom) arguing that Enid could go on only if she kept all memories instead of suppressing them. Suppressing them would be impossible. This also gives a new meaning to the title of the book: it's not only the title of a song, but an encouragement to Enid: to live, she must remember the things that have happened. Considering the way she thinks and acts in the novel, I think one way for Enid to deal with the memories is to keep them while at the same time thinking of herself as a another Enid completely detached from the teen-age Port Oriskany Enid. But even that trick of the mind is not enough to get Enid 'free'. I can imagine a grown-up Enid in a lot of different ways, but it is always a woman with a never-disappearing sorrow hidden deep inside her. Jakob
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Man Crazy From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Wed, 05 Nov 1997 12:32:18 EST I did not think MAN CRAZY was good at all. I could barely get through it -- but still, it was Oates, and it is better than half of the trash being published daily. David
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 97 13:05:03 CST From: "Frank Malgesini" fmalgesi@uachih.uach.mx To: jco@usfca.edu Many years ago I read a story from an Oates collection about an elderly lady who had been in a coma since the 1920s I think. She has just awakened and is remembering a boating accident that had caused her coma and other circumstances of her prior life. She wants to attract the attention of a doctor or nurse but no one pays attention to her. Somebody says something about coma patients sometimes regaining consciousness just before they die and someone else answers that with this one its been too long and then they leave the room. I can`t find the story in any of my collections of Oates stories so I must have checked the book out from a library. Does anyone know the story? If so can you tell me what collection it is included in? Thank you for your help. Frank Malgesini fmalgesi@uach.mx Facultad de Filosofia y Letras Universidad Autonoma de Chihuahua
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 1997 14:12:54 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Man Crazy david, i'm curious - why didn't you like man crazy? for me, the book was really enjoyable until the ending.... - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls On Wed, 5 Nov 1997, David C. Chaudoir wrote: > I did not think MAN CRAZY was good at all. I could barely get through it > -- but still, it was Oates, and it is better than half of the trash being > published daily. > > David >
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 1997 17:46:28 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: The Rise of Life on Earth Hi all, I just finished reading The Rise of Life on Earth - I am completely blown away and still sorting it out in my own mind. I am curious about what others thought about the book and the title. I relate it to Zombie. Zombie, because once again, JCO locks the reader into the thought process of someone else, the intense vulnerability of Kathleen is evident. A few days ago, someone posted how Oates' characters are victims of the society that surrounds them, and their own minds. I definitely feel that way about this book. I would love to hear how others reacted to this novel. - jen "it feels so funny to be free." - indigo girls
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Man Crazy From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Wed, 05 Nov 1997 20:52:05 EST most everything I didn't like -- i thought, when reading it, that oates had been down this road before. this wasn't new territory, she wasn't breaking ground -- it was a rut. david
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Wed, 05 Nov 1997 21:49:35 EST Jen-- I am trying to place that book in my mind -- is it rather short with a naked woman on the cover? Titles are running through my head and I cannot keep them straight. David
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 1997 22:10:48 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth david, yeah, short book with a picture by hopper.... i know, i can't keep titles straight either. - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Oates' Obsessions From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Wed, 05 Nov 1997 22:56:21 EST Yeah -- the hopper picture. She is big on art, Oates is. It sees she gets obsessive about thing like that -- boxing led to ON BOXING and art led to GEORGE BELLOWS, so who know what her next obsession will be? (let's not forget cats -- she and Daniel Halpern, the wonderful poet, edited an anthology on CATS). David
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 1997 23:26:38 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Oates' Obsessions david, i think that's really interesting - i think the choice of hopper for the cover of the rise of life on earth is really fascinating because hopper's paintings usually deal with the themes of human isolation and he usually uses that greenish glow to symbolize that (ie. his famous painting nighthawks) - thats really cool! - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls
From: Doozer411@aol.com Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 11:14:48 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth Jen- :) Hi! So you've finally read The Rise. (that was in my focus paper, you know- along with YMRT and Solstice) Anyway, after finishing The Rise, I had to remain seated in my room for around ten minutes, I was so blown away by Kathleen's final actions. I found this book to be another example of one of Oates' typical isolated and "hungry" women. It's really very sad when you think about it. I mean, here's a woman who craves human contact so deeply that she's willing to accept whatever form of it is given to her- even if it's violent and meaningless. She accepts being kissed and then called "Cow Cunt" all in the same breath because she's been deprived of love and affection her whole life. This book, though shorter than most of Oates', gave me the chills. -Lindsay
Date: Thu, 06 Nov 97 10:57:17 CDT From: "Nancy Hunter" nhunter@fsc.follett.com To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re[2]: The Rise of Life on Earth Hello- I usually read this list without participating, but this time I had to reply. I have read a few stories and novels by JCO, The Rise being one of them. I find (so far) that I have to "take a break" and let it all "sink in" after reading anything by JCO. Her work really does give me the chills. I think, for me at least, it is the way she takes you inside the heads of her characters. You begin to think like them, to understand them, to rationalize like them, so when you finally finish, you have to take a breath and shake off the characters identity. I'm not much of a writer, so, I,m having trouble decribing the emotions she brings out when I read her work. It's just nice to know I'm not the only one who has to take a breather after finishing one of her novels. Nancy
Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 14:06:31 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Re[2]: The Rise of Life on Earth nancy - i totally agree -- after reading the rise i sat in my room, shaking, because jco puts you in kathleen's head, you possess her hungers, her longings, her desires, and it is so scary when you turn to the last page and are suddenly thrown back into reality forcing to grapple with the way in which you have just seen the world. - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls
Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 14:11:51 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth Linds, The same idea goes for Foxfire too (I'm stretching the meory here -- so if if I mix up names, I'm sorry), Legs has been denied any sort of true family love and stability her entire life hence her intense hunger and longing for various kinds of revenge. I hope all is well with you, Lindsay. Write soon. - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 18:23:07 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth This is kind of a general statement----I truly disliked RISE OF LIFE ON EARTH for many of the same reasons that I disliked ZOMBIE---both books get two thirds of their materials from already published handbooks, one on abortions, another on brain surgery. A few pages of each is all that is needed to establish the realism if that is what is needed---Oates is WAY too good a writer to be doing that sort of thing. Ellen Haggar
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 18:32:24 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Oates' Obsessions Re the book edited by Halpern and Oates on CATS---one of her best short stories is in included, called "The White Cat"----I predict cat lovers AND cat haters will be crazy about it---let me know what you think of it! Ellen Haggar
Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 18:55:48 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth ellen, i think jco does borrow a lot from handbooks etc but i think what makes her an incredible writer is how she integrates them into the text both to add a sense of reality and to help the reader get into the thought process of the protagonist. the way kathleen recites nursing procedures and then integrates other thoughts helps the reader engross himself/herself in kathleen's thought process. it also gives the characters a sort of three dimensionality, that their minds function as ours do. i also think other authors use this technique to help the reader get a glimpse of how the speaker's mind functions - like faulkner in as i lay dying with cash. i actually think it's a really effective technique which has purposes beyond simply establishing the realism of the text. i'd love to know what everyone else thinks of my somewhat rambly thoughts :) - jen "i'm working through the grammar of my fears." - indigo girls
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 21:48:27 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Gothic series JCO is currently revising one of the remaining Gothic novels, 'MY HEART LAID BARE,' for possible (not definite) 1998 publication. Greg
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Thu, 6 Nov 1997 22:23:11 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth I've always classified RISE OF LIFE ON EARTH with ZOMBIE and a mid-1970s work TRIUMPH OF THE SPIDER MONKEY in that they are relatively brief, intense, inside looks at a sociopath who has been brutalized in childhood and has consequently developed a brutal system of getting along in life. (The violence in the ZOMBIE protagonist's family background is more subtle than that of the other two novels.) In all three cases, the protagonist "gets away" with his or her crimes during the course of the novel: homocide as a coping strategy. It's a disturbing trio of books, not my favorites but vital to getting a handle on JCO's worldview. Cyrano
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sat, 8 Nov 1997 07:54:13 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Greg's JCO biography Hi, Greg. Thanks for that welcome news about MY HEART LAID BARE. It won't be long until your biography of JCO will be on the stands. What I'm most curious to read about is her teen-age years. That and information about her family. I heard a strange rumor several years ago, which I hope your book will resolve. I was at a party and was introduced to a woman who was a secretary in one of the academic departments at Princeton. I asked whether she knew any good JCO stories. Her reply was that there really wasn't much gossip because JCO leads a quiet life and lives near campus with her husband and son. I said --- whoa! -- JCO has always said in interview that she has no children. The secretary -- who wasn't a fan and only knew JCO as one of the major figures connected with Princeton -- said Well, all she knew was that JCO's son attended Princeton, as an undergraduate. She was so matter-of-fact about it that I decided either she had JCO mixed up with some other Princeton notable or ... there's a whole part of her life that JCO has decided to withhold from her reading public for reasons of her own. JCO 's fiction often deals with the subject of rumors and misinformation -- how they are a kind of communal form of fiction-writing. Perhaps she would be amused by this one. Cyrano
Date: Sat, 08 Nov 1997 21:33:27 -0500 From: "Thomas A. Hulslander" t-hulslander@top.monad.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Greg's JCO biography I can't wait to read the JCO bio., either. That rumor about a son is a first, for me, anyway!
From: di@fishnet.net Date: Sun, 09 Nov 1997 18:45:21 -0700 To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Where are you going... Does anybody have an idea about what song JCO makes reference to in "Where are You Going, Where Have You Been?" The line is, "...the echo of a song from last year, about a girl rushing into her boyfriend's arms and coming home again-" Just curious.
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Sun, 9 Nov 1997 22:47:05 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Where are you going... Re the song referred to in the JCO Oates "Where are you going, etc" --- I think she is talking about a song called "Ebb Tide" which has lyrics about the sea rushing to the shore and ends up "So I rush/To your arms/ " and ends up "I'm home". It is very moony, very corny---someone like Connie would have loved it! Cheers Ellen Haggar
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: JCO's SON From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 09 Nov 1997 23:36:25 EST Why wouldn't JCO have a son? Perhaps it she just never shared it with the general public-- I mean, after all, the paparazzi don't follow her around and who really cares about authors is most people's attitudes (not ours, obviously) and also none of her jacket blurbs say she lives w/her husband Raymond Smith, they just say she teaches at Princeton. She is not the only major figure there -- Morrison is there, too, and others. I am trying to think of what writers are at what colleges presently: New York University has = EL Doctorow, Sharon Olds Univ. of Miami Ohio has = Gerald Early (I think) Syracuse Un used to have (? now) = Stephen Dobyns Pinckney Benedict (former JCO spawn) = Hope College (MI) Western Michigan U has = Stuart Dybek Iowa = Jane Smiley can anyone help me out here with more... thnx. David
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Ebb Tide From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 09 Nov 1997 23:36:25 EST EBB TIDE could be it... I didn't know JCO's biographer was on w/us now. I've been across the country to Seattle on business, and haven't been keeping up. What's goin' on? David
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 12:36:18 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: JCO's SON Hi David Re: the JCO child thing---until very recently all of her book jackets said that she lived with her husband, Raymond Smith, etc, etc, and none of her jackets have ever mentioned a son---also none of the chronologies of her life mention children---if she does indeed have a son, that would be surprising. I wonder if the story from the secretary got confused----Oates DOES have an autistic sister about whom she is very protective........I, too, am fascinated that Greg Johnson, JCO's biographer may be online with us--what fun! Ellen Haggar
From: LoriLamb@aol.com Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 12:44:07 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: The Rise of Life on Earth In response to what Ellen wrote, I disagree. Admittedly, the sections of JCO's books that Ellen mentions do seem rather technical--at odds with the texts as a whole. However, I think that these sections are hardly included as mere "filler." To my mind, these sections provide a counterpart to the lawlessness of the characters (ex. Quentin, Kathleen). The technical sections are kind of the "rules," and I find it appropriate, if somewhat warped (which is actually fitting regarding the mentality of these characters), that these characters have the capacity to memorize these specific "rules" while the "rules" of society at large (that you don't kill people, for example) have escaped them. Also, the callousness with which they memorize these grotesque procedures (abortion, lobotomy) is also fitting. I cannot read the abortion scene in ROL without squirming--it is horrific. I agree with Jen that these kind of sections provide a kind of realism that is appropriate to the character. LL
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: JCO's SON From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 19:39:19 EST I heard JCO at very recent lecture (well, Sept.) and she actually publicly talked about her sister at length for quite a while -- I was shocked, she even read an unpublished poem about her! Ahh! But just seeing how JCO works, it seems improbable that she would in fact have a son. As great as she is, she probably has little time for kids. David
Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 11:43:40 -0500 To: jco@usfca.edu From: "CinemaSource, Inc." kpetras@cinema-source.com Subject: JCO's sister Hello David, Two years ago I hosted JCO at my college for a reading of her poetry. I had the distinct pleasure of spending several hours with her talking about publishing, James Joyce, etc. I sound like I'm bragging, but that night was truly the greatest of my life. During her reading & question and answer period, she discussed her sister at length. There was not a dry eye in the auditorium. At the time she said that she would eventually publish the poem, but she was sure. Her book of poetry that was published last year contained many of the poems from her reading, but it did not include the poem about her sister. Perhaps she decided to keep it for later publication. Karen Petras
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 10:18:47 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: JCO's sister Hello, David. I started hearing about JCO's sister about 10 years ago. Wish I'd been to the talk to hear the poem about her. I suppose it will eventually be published. Do you remember what she had to say about her sister? Cyrano
From: RJohn713@aol.com Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 10:40:14 -0500 (EST) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Greg's JCO biography If JCO does have a son, she declined to inform me. :) She called Richard Everett of EXPENSIVE PEOPLE a fantasy of motherhood who represented a good reason for having her own son remain "unborn, unconceived." She has also said that except for her love of cats, she is virtually lacking in the maternal instinct. Greg
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: JCO's sister/James Dickey's death From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 22:28:50 EST To All Inquisitors on JCO's sister: She basically spoke on the heartache of having someone who had never spoke a word in her life, and really didn't always know what was happening to her, be so similar in looks and perhaps personality as she was. It came up in the discussion about how ironic it was that JCO had gone on to be one of the most prolific writers of our century, and yet her sister never uttered a word. Very intriguing. Also, Oates mentioned that she had been asked several time to write on autism for scholarly books and periodicals and so on, but each time she started to write about it, she had to stop because it was too close to her -- just TOO personal. She made no indication that the poem would ever be published (or maybe it had been published in a literary review somewhere -- not collected in a book). I was disappointed she read so much poetry because I am not a big JCO-poetry fan; I wish she had talked more on her writing process and publishing and creativity than just reading her poems. But still, of course, it was a fabulous lecture. David p.s. -- I was just struck with horrible news today -- that my beloved poet, James Dickey, passed away in January of this year. That saddens me greatly -- I wish I would have known back then. What a master he was -- now, as I read some of his poems today, I felt almost a personal loss, an almost grieving for him. It just shows how close we get to authors, and what a personal craft writing is. DC Hope this helps any.
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