Craftwork S1E8: Obsession, Transgression, & the Library of Gestures w/ Maryse Meijer

Listen to Craftwork S1E8: Obsession, Transgression, & the Library of Gestures w/ Maryse Meijer.

In this interview, we chat with Maryse Meijer about metaphor, quotation marks, the dubious necessity of author photos, and so much more.

Maryse Meijer is the author of Heartbreaker, Rag, Northwood, and The Seventh Mansion. She lives in Chicago.

Books and stories mentioned in this episode:

  • Samuel Beckett: A Biography – Deirdre Bair
  • Waiting for Godot – Samuel Beckett
  • About Schmidt – Louis Begley
  • Autobiography of Red – Anne Carson
  • New Grub Street – George Gissing
  • The Children of the Dead; Greed; The Piano Teacher – Elfriede Jelinek
  • Pet Sematary – Stephen King
  • Bad Brains; The Cipher; Kink; Skin; Strange Angels – Kathe Koja
  • The Communicating Vessels – Friederike Mayröcker 
  • All the Pretty Horses – Cormac McCarthy
  • Hurricane Season; Paradais – Fernanda Melchor
  • The Defense; Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
  • Black Water; Blonde; Heat; My Sister, My Love; “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”; Zombie – Joyce Carol Oates
  • With the Animals – Noëlle Revaz
  • Snake Eyes – Rosamond Smith
  • The Custom of the Country – Edith Wharton

Author Photo Credit: Lewis McVey

“Digital Noir Prophecies in The Canyons and The Counselor” (In Review Online)

The Canyons and The Counselor represent an America unmoored from its own self-aggrandizing mythologies — the capitalist dream as nightmare of anxiety and violence. The films are haunted by symbols rather than subjects, made nowhere clearer than in McCarthy’s naming The Counselor’s title protagonist (played by Michael Fassbender) after his profession — he is a nameless intermediary, a metaphor.”

Read the full article.

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