Chapter 16
A Community of Tennessee Writers, Readers & Passersby

What's Left of Memory

In a new book of criticism, Michael Kreyling challenges perceptions of Southern identity

December 26, 2010 What is the South, and who owns its memory? At the core of the question, renewed in Michael Kreyling’s The South That Wasn’t There: Postsouthern Memory and History, is the conflict between an idealized cultural “memory” of the South as it appears in the iconic Gone With the Wind, and the grim, brutal realities of Southern history that haunt the characters of Toni Morrison’s 1987 masterpiece, Beloved.

Read more

War and Remembrance

Thomas Sanders and Veronica Kavass preserve the stories of World War II

December 2, 2010 In The Last Good War: The Faces and Voices of World War II, photographer Thomas Sanders created images of American veterans spanning all walks of life and service branches. Journalist and native Nashvillian Veronica Kevass interviewed the veterans, as well, letting them tell their stories in their own words. The resulting book is a loving thank-you note to the millions who saved the world.

Read more

Odd Duck

Roy Blount Jr.’s punsy paean to the Marx Brothers’ greatest film defies easy categorization

December 1, 2010 At first glance, Roy Blount Jr.’s Hail, Hail, Euphoria! Presenting the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup, the Greatest War Movie Ever Made appears to be an essay, perhaps for Entertainment Weekly, that got out of hand. It is 145 pages long, including photos and a page of photo credits, and they aren’t very big pages at that, barely registering eight-by-five inches. The title is almost longer than the book. The book is barely longer than the script of the 1933 farce it celebrates. But dip into the pages of all things Fredonia, and you realize you are in the presence of a profoundly gifted (Groucho) Marxist delivering his greatest lecture on (Groucho) Marxism.

Read more

Ori-Gotham-y

Kell Black’s new book is a make-your-own collection of New York icons, all entirely constructed of paper

November 30, 2010 A fold-and-glue tour of iconic Gotham architecture and scenes, Kell Black’s new book, Paper New York, is a tiny treasure trove, an architecture primer, and a sentimental postcard from The City, all wrapped up in one, slim, tasteful volume. Including simple instructions, twenty die-cut, pop-out models, and a smattering of smart, engaging information about the buildings that the book depicts—and its readers recreate—Paper New York is much more than just a crafty activity pack.

Read more

About the Naughty Bits

Adam Ross’s Mr. Peanut makes a surprising British shortlist

November 29, 2010 In Great Britain, people take their writers seriously: across the country, bookies lay odds on shortlist favorites for both the Booker Prize and the Nobel with the kind of fervor reserved in the U.S. for March Madness or the Super Bowl. But even in England, the Literary Review’s annual Bad Sex in Fiction Award inspires a different kind of excitement. Mr. Peanut, by Nashville’s own Adam Ross, is a nominee for the 2010 award, which will be announced tonight in London, and Ross has a few words for Chapter 16 on the subject.

Read more

NEA Fellowship for Falconer

November 24, 2010 The good news keeps coming for Tennessee writers. This week, Blas Falconer, associate professor of English at Austin Peay State University, received a National Endowment for the Arts 2011 Fellowship in Literature. One of forty-two poets from around the country selected, Falconer will receive $25,000 with the award.

Read more
TAKE THE SHORT READER SURVEY! CHAPTER 16 SURVEYOR SURVEYING