From One of the 20 Writers Under 40

Did you ever consider not becoming a writer?

There were plenty of dark moments. After I finished college, I got a job on Wall Street as a derivatives trader, but after a couple years of it I was calling in sick in order to work on my novel. By then, I’d been writing seriously for seven years. My second novel was nearly finished, and I figured it would take a year or two, at most, to become a published author. So I walked away from the bank and my cushy job. Two years later, after pouring everything I had into that second novel, I was broke, back in debt, and the book had been rejected by almost every literary agent in America. I moved back to Baltimore, into my parents’ basement, and took jobs in construction and drove an ambulance. It was a pretty depressing couple of years. I’d turned thirty, but I was living with my parents, doing manual labor, and making the same wages I had made as a teen-ager. Nothing I’d done in the intervening decade—getting into Cornell, my job in banking—mattered anymore. I had taken an enormous risk, and, as far as everyone could tell, I had failed miserably. Meanwhile, I continued to fail—the first year I lived with my parents, I applied to a bunch of M.F.A. programs and was rejected by all of them. Now, by this time, I’d written two novels—not things I’d dashed off and stuck in a drawer but books I’d painstakingly revised and rewritten, labored over for years. I didn’t consider myself a hobbyist. But, anyway—no, I never questioned that I was a writer. In fact, strange as it might sound, I never questioned that I was a good writer. I did, however, begin to seriously question my writing. It occurred to me that I couldn’t even define literature—not even to myself. I could give very erudite and intimidating answers to other people, the sort of bullshit that anyone with an English degree can throw up as a smokescreen, but I didn’t have a substantive answer that I believed in. I didn’t know why I liked the books I liked. So I decided I would throw everything away, everything I’d heard in college and everything else. I decided I would trust only myself—what I really believed and felt to be true. Which, of course, didn’t exactly occur overnight: it probably took the better part of 2004. But it was a very conscious effort. That was when things began to change. I think of it as year zero, though it was actually year ten. The cynical part of me says, Well, maybe it could have happened some other way—maybe you could have kept the cushy job and kept writing. But I really don’t think so. I think you really have to stare down the demons. You really have to know what making art is worth to you.

-Philipp Meyer, whose story “What You Do Out Here, When You’re Alone,” appeared in The New Yorker Summer Fiction: 20 Under 40 issue. It’s always good to hear that success doesn’t come easy, even to successful people.

Long Term Goals

Now that we’re not graduating from something every couple of years, it’s hard to feel any real sense of accomplishment. This, to me, accounts for the popularity of slow runners participating in long distance races.

For example, if someone were to ask what’s going on with me, I could answer with the fact that I’m training for the Brooklyn Half Marathon. And after May 22, I’ll have a t-shirt that proves that I’ve done something with myself. To be honest, running a half marathon is a very manageable goal. There are some unpleasant long runs involved, but you can prepare for one in like three months and you don’t need to carry water bottles on a belt as you go. Still, it’s a distance that takes some preparation, and with marathon in the title, people are impressed.

In other long term goals news, I think I finished my book. Or, I’m starting to give it to people who didn’t go to college with me. I started this project as a 2008 New Year’s resolution with a blind certainty that I would finish it. And that plan worked out. Weird.

With running a half marathon, the whole accomplishment is doing it. Unless you’re an elite runner, your time doesn’t really matter. In my last half marathon, my time was 14 seconds away from my goal, and so what?

I’m trying to embrace the accomplishment of setting a long term goal like writing book and completing it. My whole New Year’s resolution writing plan was based on the fact that I’d rather fail at publishing a novel than not try. Well, I’ve done that. But what comes next, other than 13.1 miles next Saturday, I’m not as sure about.

In John Paul News

So now that we’re about to go through a whole Supreme Court nomination process, I was reminded of when the Pope John Paul died, and I asked my dad what would happen. And he was, “Oh, you’ve never experienced it. There’s smoke that comes out of the Vatican and it’s a whole big deal.” I was 22 when Benedict became the new Pope, and while I hadn’t paid for my own health insurance, signed a lease or found a gray hair (which happened today), I thought I had experienced almost most every news cycle. And the way my dad said it, it was as if there were something innocent about not knowing how the Vatican went about picking new popes. Well anyway. Aging.

Recurring Dream Sequences

I have two dreams that come up with alarming frequency:

The first is that I’m driving, and I can’t break in time to make the light. I hit the breaks, but they just don’t work. Fortunately, I make it through the intersection without getting hit.

The second is about this guy I went to high school with. We’re Facebook friends now, but we never interacted with each other except for the fact that we had all of our classes together. You know how high school is. Anyway, this guy was really good at tests. Standardized, essay form, whatever. Now at life, he seems to be doing well. Or at least, he’s followed a defined road to success since the day he graduated high school, and now he’s successful.

A friend—one Facebook suggests I reconnect with, but I actually travel with and see regularly—says my dreams are like parodies. I hate driving and sometimes my life feels out of control. And as for the Subconscious Guest Star: I’m jealous that he seems, at least from the tagged photos, so certain of his straight path.

I miss high school math more than I thought I would. I was all right at math—not good enough to do anything with it and certainly worse than my Subconscious Guest Star—but good enough that I understood how proportions and angles work. Lately, I’ve been helping high school kids with math. There’s a real part of me that wants to steal their textbook, and do some geometry whenever I get stressed out. I guess I’ll have to settle for the math sections in Ten Real SATS.

Raronauer Rings Blog

 

As anyone who knew me 2008 may remember, I was mad for the Beijing Olympics. The conflux of sport and politics! Michael Phelps! All those New York Times articles about efforts to curb spitting Beijing!

I’m not as crazy about the winter Olympics, though I still appreciate the existential absurdity of athletes who spend their whole lives training for obscure sports. I also like the passive-aggressive commentating on figure skating.

This year’s Olympics being in Canada as brought Canada to the forefront. There’s that the commercial, and also Canada’s desire to actually win gold this time.

I’ve always found Canadian identity interesting. They seem to have all of the freedom of America with none of the aggression, plus parts are bilingual. If it weren’t for the cold weather, it would be an ideal place to live. For more on this subject, I recommend this episode of This American Life, Who’s a Canadian?

No Way to Say “Manhattan”

The other day, I was in the mood to enjoy Woody Allen, and there’s no better way to enjoy him than Manhattan.

There’s so much to love about this movie, and the opening sequence, though missing the repartee and emotional complexities of the rest of the movie, is one of my favorite parts.

The cinematography is great. But, duh, obviously. Along with the shots of crowded streets and New York under fresh snow, there’s Woody Allen, trying to explain Manhattan. It takes him about a half dozen tries. But even in the version he settles on, with the George Gershwin bubbling up underneath, he isn’t able to fully capture the city.

Woody Allen could have created one introduction to Manhattan, and one a lot tighter than what he uses. But that’s not the point of the tiered start. Sort of like Moby-Dick, what Woody Allen is getting at is there no way to explain New York, and what it means to the people who live there. These introductions aren’t meant to sum up New York because there’s no way to.

It’s Either Writing A Book Or Going To Target


The day Haruki Murakami realized he could write a novel was April 1, 1978. He was at the season opener of Yakult Swallows baseball team, and after an American player made a double, Murakami thought, “You know what? I could try writing a novel.” I can remember the day I decided to write a book too. It was November 3, 2007. I went to the Liberty Science Center in New Jersey with some friends for an afternoon of goofiness and fun with static electricity.

About two months before, I had switched jobs from a reporter at a trade magazine to a blogger at a mid-level website. I was still excited about the transition, but I was working ten hours a day to make hyperlinks. And a month before, my mother sent me a postcard with the Pablo Picasso quote, “Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working.” I had been pretend interested in writing a book all my life, but I never really did anything about it.

During a 3-D movie about sun spots at the Liberty Science Center, I realized I didn’t have any real ambition for blogging. What I really wanted to do was write, and it wasn’t going to happen until I started working. In that way, it became my 2008 New Year’s resolution to write a book.

I started working on it on weekends, and in April, 2008, I ended up losing my blogging job. But this was a stroke of luck because it meant I could work on the book full-time.

More than two years later, I wonder why I hadn’t started smaller, like with short stories or serious essays on Murakami’s use of cats. But I set out to write a book, and now I mostly have a book. The whole thing is written, but it needs to be rewritten with a more defined narrative voice.

But I’m not going to work on that for the next few weeks. For the next few weeks, inspiration will find me at Target, where I’ll be doing errands and taking a break.

Never Read James Wood on Philip Roth While Trying to Write a Book

In fact, in this later, plainer work Roth often makes subtle poetry by using ordinary words in unexpected ways, or by mobilizing cliché, but he slips these phrases past us conversationally, almost before we have noticed them. … [In Exit Ghost,] Zuckerman reflects that he cannot defeat a much younger man, a literary journalist named Richard Kliman, who is ‘savage with health and armed to the teeth with time.’ It is wonderful to take the cliché 'armed to the teeth’ and combine it with the abstract word 'time,’ producing a hovering suggestion of a second cliché, this one having to do with old age, being 'long in the tooth.’ In this novel, and in this phrase, short in the tooth meets long in the tooth.
link Coming up with an expression like “armed to the teeth” is easy compared with fitting it into the style and narrative of a whole book. Of course, this isn’t a problem for P. Roth.

Missing Tapered Jeans and Crime Bills

The other day I was watching The American President. What I like best about the movie is the 90s version of political drama. Like my high school 90s experience, everything in the movie is way melodramatic for what’s actually happening.

Michael Douglas is trying to pass a crime bill. If only hand guns were our big problem! And Annette Bening is lobbying for environmental reform. (Well I guess that’s still an issue.) And the best part of the movie is when Michael Douglas finally speaks up for his girlfriend—who Richard Dreyfus as Cheney before we knew who Cheny was has called a whore—and he’s like, “this country has real problems,” when the only problems are vague crime bill legislation.

This is all to say I don’t envy the security/terrorism/civil liberty mess that Obama is in.

Year in Read, 2009

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I spent most of this year rereading or reading books I should have read a long time ago. Key: ® – Reread @ - Aronauer seal of approval

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz - @, ®

Earlier: Brief and Wondrous Dreams, ‘Your Adoring Audience Is Clamoring For More Heavy-Handed Sarcastic Wit And Cynicism.’

Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe

Earlier: You Know That Book Everyone Was Talking About Twenty Years Ago? I Just Read It

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald - @, ®

Additional recommendation: Slate’s audio book club podcast on The Great Gatsby

Netherland, Joseph O'Neill - @, ®

Additional recommendation: Slate’s audio book club podcast on Netherland Earlier: Cricket Writing

Diana by Tina Brown

Brooklyn Follies by Paul Auster

Lost City of Z by David Gramm - @

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro - @

Blood Dark Track by Joseph O'Neill

Mrs. Dallaway by Virgina Woolf

Exit Ghost by Philip Roth

King of the World by David Remnick

Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro

Sag Harbor by Colson Whitehead

Brooklyn by Colm Toibin

Sex and the City by Candace Bushnell - @

I know a lot of SATC fans who hate the book, but I thought it was fantastic. Bushnell’s integration of the Carrie “character” as a stand-in for herself is well done, and she is very perspective about the fears and doubts women have about monogomy and motherhood.

The Shadow Club by Neal Shusterman - ®

So funny story: I reread some YA for research for my book.

Anatomy Lesson by Philip Roth

Woe Is I by Patricia O'Conner - @, ®

The Silent Woman by Janet Malcolm - @

How Fiction Works by James Woods

My Mortal Enemy by Willa Cather - ®

My Life in France by Julia Child - @

Earlier: Before That Movie Comes Out Also, the book is way better than the movie.

The Ice Storm by Rick Moody

The Believers by Zoë Heller

Varieties of Exile by Mavis Gallant

Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas by Gertrude Stein

Smiles on Washington Square by Raymond Federman

The Complete Stories of Flannery O'Connor by Flannery O'Connor

Earlier: Flannery O'Connor Short Story Recipe

The Writing Life by Annie Dillard

The Cost of Living by Mavis Gallant - @

This was the only book I paid retail for all year. Gallant was a major influence for Jhumpa Lahiri, and after hearing Lahiri read one of the stories, I couldn’t help but support the publishing industry. I liked this collection more than Varieties of Exile.

102 Minutes by Jim Dwyer and Kevin Flynn

The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway - @

When I wrote about this book earlier, I did a lousy job of explaining why it’s so great. I’ll try again: Sentence for sentence, it’s hard to argue with the genius of Hemingway. The characters in this book are living a glamorous post-WWI life, but their relationships are meaningless. Over the course of the novel, the vapidness of their lifestyles becomes almost painful. Even afcion, the the one thing that drives the narrative and Jake, is lost to thse empty friendships.

When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguro

Cheever Stories by John Cheever - @

After my inevitable move to the suburbs, I’m going to make a self-aware and pretentious joke and name my dog Cheever. This guy understands America (“Clementina”), the craft of short story writing (“The Day the Pig Fell Down the Well”) and is very honest with American man’s confusion with the women’s movement (“An Educated American Woman”). If you’re interested in the origins of modern American literature, you should read Cheever.

Personal Days by Ed Park

Previously read:  2008, 2007, 2006

No Obituaries for Dentists

Careful visitors to my site will notice that my banner comes from a sketch Christo made for The Gates. Careful chroniclers of my life will know that I was obsessed with the Gates. And now Jeanne-Claude, Christo’s wife and collaborator, is dead. One of the reasons I was so into the Gates was this piece in the New Yorker, where Jeanne-Claude said,

I was not an artist when I married Christo, but I became one … If Christo had been a dentist, I would have become a dentist
I don’t have anything larger to say about that quote or this death, but I still think the Gates were pretty awesome.

In Which My Blog Becomes a Place for Pull Quotes from Classic Literature

Aficion means passion. An aficionado is one who is passionate about bull-fights. All the good bull-fighters stayed at Montoya’s hotel that is, those with aficion stayed there. … We never talked for very long at a time. It was simply the pleasure of discovering what we each felt. Men would come in from distant towns and before they left Pamplona stop and talk for a few minutes with Montoya about bulls. These men were aficionados. Those who were aficionados could always get rooms even when the hotel was full. Montoya introduced me to some of them. They were always very polite at first, and it amused them very much that I should be an American. Somehow it was taken for granted that an American could not have aficion. … When they saw that I had aficion, and there was no password, no set questions that could bring it out, rather it was a sort of oral spiritual examination with questions always a little on the defensive and never apparent, there was this same embarrassed putting the hand on the should, or a “Buen hombre.” But nearly always there was the actual touching. It seemed as though they wanted to touch you to make it certain.

-The Sun Also Rises To me, an aficion is something that makes you happy without help from anyone else. To me, that’s ice cream and running. (Writing and reading are both too fraught with disappointment to count as an aficion.) I feel very lucky that there are so many people in my life who have aficion; passionate people usually have interesting things to say. The Sun Also Rises also served as a reminder (to me) to revisit this Madonna video. 

(Dirty) Blonde Redhead

Two months ago, after a cranky day, I went for a walk in my neighborhood and ended up at Unnamable Books on Vanderbilt. In some ways, opening a book store is more optimistic than writing a book. Anyway, I bought Beginner’s Greek, which had been recommended by The Times and after reading two pages, seemed like it would eventually be highly recommended by me. It was one of those gorgeous pre-fall days were the sun and the clouds are really working together, so I went to the park and started reading. After ten more pages, I knew how everything would happen. I was kind of annoyed, especially when I saw the discussion questions in the back. I love reading, but I hate when publishers encourage me to get drunk with friends and talk about obvious symbolism. And that day, I hit my breaking point with commercial literary fiction.

All of this was going to be related to the fact that I’ve been reading a lot of Flannery O’Conner lately. But I already blogged about that. The above paragraph came from Word document I keep called “maybe blog post.” What happens in this word document is that I write a paragraph, get frustrated with myself for wasting time rearranging each word instead of working on my book, and then I quit.

My life has been filled with frustrations lately. Fortunately, not frustrations involving clean water, but frustrations with my book. I’ve been doing it for almost two years now. And while working without feedback (or a boss) has mostly been fantastic, I’m at the end of my rope. See I don’t even have anyone to call me out for using a phrase like “end of my rope.” It’s hard.

I’m just exhausted with Raronauer’ed, The Novel. I’ve come to the point where I am incapable of considering the value of passive voice without a professional’s help. So for better or worse, what I’m working on now will be my last draft before looking for an agent.

I’m sure Junot Diaz is aware that he doesn’t use footnotes evenly in Brief, Wondrous Life. And Jeffrey Eugenides must know that the end of Middlesex is anti-climactic. And both of these guys spent like a decade on each of those books. But there’s only so much you can do before you start wandering around the city in the middle of the afternoon, looking for clothes a redhead would wear so you can go as a ginger for Halloween.

Flannery O’Connor Short Story Recipe

Start with 20-something son. Often an aspiring writer, visiting or returning from home after a failed run in a city. In favor of civil rights. Pair with a racist older relative, usually female. Include a gun or a heart condition. Don’t forget a black person. Heat for about twenty to thirty pages. Serve with a death at the end.

I just spent the past month reading all of Flannery O'Connor’s short stories. And despite this formula, I like her. Her characters aren’t neurotic. There are not trying to figure out their identity or get laid. Mostly, they’re just are selfish and ignorant. Usually, Hobbesian characters don’t appeal to me. But Flannery O’Conner isn’t trying to get our sympathy. She’s just pointing out a truth.

I especially recommend “A View of the Woods.”

On The Other Side of the Avenue

For the past month, I’ve read more Craigslist than the New York Times. That’s right, I’m moving. If you don’t mind cats, aren’t around much, all your stuff can fit in your room and you don’t have a Divatitude, finding a place is easy. But for me, someone who hates cats and has a huge Divatitude, getting an apartment on the cheap near Prospect Park has been difficult.

In Crown Heights, I saw a place where the outgoing roommate wanted to sell the couch she kept in the living room. Now that’s bizarre, right? Why wouldn’t she just leave it or have the remaining roommate buy it off of her? But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that the two old roommates were scheming against the new one. The outgoing roommate didn’t want to give it away and the remaining roommate didn’t want to pay it. A mark from Craigslist would solve both of their problems by buying it. This didn’t seem like the beginning of a warm home to me.

Yesterday, I settled on a place on the Prospect Heights side of Washington Avenue. This is a huge relief to my subconscious, which has been dreaming about homelessness for the past month. For those who were curious, the cost of living in an apartment with a working buzzer and without teenagers smoking blunts in the stairwell is an extra $235 a month. And I’m finally at a point in my life where I’m willing to pay that price.

Last Dance

When I was 20, I had an internship at a literary agent. The job consisted of reading a paragraph of a proposal letter, writing no thanks, and sending it back in a SASE.

One day, the agent’s 10 year-old daughter came in because  school was off and a day where mommy works was cheaper than a babysitter where mommy doesn’t work. I ended up doing a bit of unpaid (but resume building) child caring, and she asked me if I had a boyfriend. At almost any other time in my life, the answer would have been no, but as it happened, I had just started dating my college boyfriend. When I told her I did, and I was not above relishing in the jealousy of a 10 year-old.

I always thought weddings were some version of that sentiment. Flowers, a live band and thick cream paper were an expensive announcement to friends, coworkers and cousins that someone loved you. Of course, until last week, I only went to the weddings of cousins, and it’s hard to get all joyous in front of your Aunts.

On Sunday, I went to my first peer wedding. Based on Facebook, going to the weddings of friends seems a bit like prom, with all the fanciness and disregard for the local authority figures. I didn’t really know anyone outside of my date. But there was an open bar and the reception hall was kept at 60 degrees. Dancing like crazy was my only option.

Maybe it was the couple, my newness to weddings or how, as Gloria Estefan would have wanted, the rhythm got me, but for the first time, I saw weddings as more than a One Perfect Day multi-billion dollar industry. To bride, groom and their parents, the wedding was a day—and not a perfect one (there was rain)—to celebrate love and the unions of their families. The stuffed animal the groom used to propose to his wife was out on the dance floor, and no one thought that was anything but sweet.

I don’t think everyone can be as unself-conscious about their relationship, or even aspires to be. But for those who can, Mazel Tov.

I’ve Just Seen A Face

I woke up with that Beatles song in my head, which reminded me of “On Seeing the 100% Perfect Girl,” a Haruki Murakami’s short story.

Something I don’t love is The Believers by Zoë Heller. Many publications and people have recommended the book, but it was my mom who went so far as to buy me a copy. Her basic endorsement was that she couldn’t put it down. And I can’t either. I started it yesterday, and I’m more than half way. More to the point, I took a local train to keep reading it. But I can’t recommend it the way I recommend “On Seeing The 100% Perfect Girl.” It’s silly to compare a fable-like short story to a novel, but I can see that Heller’s writing is quicker and her characters are more drawn than Murakami’s. But despite her technical deftness, her main characters are awful people. And while I get that The Believers is a well done book, I already deal with enough jerks in my life.

Before That Movie Comes Out

Read My Life in France. Julia Child is an inspiration.

When she was just a cooking naïf, she spent weeks finding the perfect mayonnaise recipe, only to find that none of her friends or family really cared. Even though I don’t really like mayonnaise, I can relate. Writing this book, I’m obsessed with phrases and character descriptions. Of course, in the end, no one should know that practically every word was difficult to choose, just like Julia Child never told her guests about what went wrong in the kitchen.

The great success that became of Julia didn’t come naturally. She worked very hard, and for a long time, it didn’t seem that Mastering the Art of French Cooking would even get published. As she received rejection letters, she decided making the cookbook was worth it, if only because she loved making perfect recipes so much.

Toward the end of the book, she and her husband Paul are building a second home in France. She mentions that they had their own bedrooms because she was a snorer and her husband was an insomniac. But her husband had a full bed so they could cuddle in the morning. To me, this is a great lesson on love and compromise.

And before he blows up, I’m saying now that I love the actor playing Julie Powell’s wife in the movie. His name is Chris Messina. You may remember him from Vicky Christina Barcelona and the last season of Six Feet Under. Or maybe not. I doubt he’s ever been linked to Jennifer Aniston. Still, he’s one of my favorite actors.

Link Bait

I hate how effective internet slide shows are. I just gave Slate 11 clicks for their mindless slide show on weird Google logos. Meanwhile, William Finnegan’s excellent profile of Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio gets one click because there’s only an excerpt online. Which I guess is the whole problem with the internet economy: effort and financial reward are not related at all.

But read that piece. If you don’t subscribe and you’re cheap, go to a Barnes

I Think I’m Getting Worse At Talking

Because I don’t do it that often. My word retrieval and pronunciation are just terrible.

Anyway, I’m going to post here more. For a while, I made too much of an effort to make every post perfect, and I came to realize that was blowing my load, creatively speaking. But I’m going to stop with my perfectionist act and just write.

My apartment is not getting mail right now. The mailman doesn’t have a mailbox key. Coming down my stairs on Saturday, there was a dead roach and a piece of banana. “Which is grosser,” I asked Jason. “Well, the banana is going to attract flies,” he replied.

This is why people pay more in rent, I suppose. To get their mail and not to have to chose between dead bugs and rotting fruit.