May 212011
 

5月18日澳大利亚悉尼的作家大会上,曼布克评委会宣布美国作家菲利普·罗斯获得了第四届曼布克国际奖。曼布克国际奖是对作家一生成就的褒奖。也就是说,这个奖项是对罗斯50多年的创作生涯和成就的认可和赞扬。5月20日,罗斯接受了《电讯报》(The Telegraph)记者本杰明·泰勒(Benjamin Taylor)的专访。以下是专访的部分文字稿。《电讯报》原文配有相对完整的访谈视频。感兴趣者可以点击阅读原文,观看视频

Philip Roth: I’m not caged in by reality

Benjamin Taylor Were you one of those people who knew from childhood that you wanted to be a writer?

Philip Roth I didn’t know what a writer was, but I knew what books were because I would go to the Blanche library in our neighbourhood [of Newark, New Jersey], following the example of my brother, who would come home with half a dozen books. They were kids’ books, books about sports, books about the sea. I learnt what an author was in college. I began to read in my second year. I had entered college thinking I would study law. And I assumed I would do that. I was taking constitutional history, political science. Then I discovered literature and I was overcome. I wrote college stories to start with, which were as weak as anyone’s college stories. A few years later I was drafted and went into the army. At night when I went back to my office job I started writing stories that were OK. So [becoming a writer] wasn’t something I knew about and even when I did do it I never thought about it that much. Even when I started writing properly, I didn’t think I would make a living. Very few did make a living, and very few make a living now. I thought I needed to get a job, so I decided to teach English so I could write for those four or five months in the summer. That was my plan. Then I won a prize, the National Book award, and got a Guggenheim Award and then I was on easy street.

BT How was your stint in the army?

PR Actually I didn’t mind it. It’s fun to learn how to shoot a machine gun. Or use a bayonet. I hurt my back and wound up in hospital for two months and then eventually got discharged. My back still troubles me off and on. It might have been interesting had I been [in the army] longer. But that stint was enough. I got the idea.

BT When did history as a theme come into your writing?

PR I suppose in the mid-Eighties when I wrote The Counterlife. I don’t know what happened. It’s not so much that history was important, but place became important. I wanted to see what people were like in different places. London for one, Israel for another, Prague for a third. So place entered in and history came after. Why? Because I had gotten to be 50 or 60 and I could now look back on my life with historical perspective. You can’t do that when you’re young. It’s a mixture, then, of getting older and being enlivened by certain places that I’d been to.

BT When did you take up these themes of recent books: the Korean war, in 2008’s Indignation; or the perils of polio, in last year’s Nemesis? Do you do a lot of research or are you simply remembering?

PR I do my remembering while I’m writing. I don’t usually turn to the books until I’ve got a first draft of my story. I don’t want to be caged in by reality, as it were. I want my imagination to go wherever it wants to go. If it’s outlandish then of course I’ll get rid of it. Then, two or three drafts in, I begin to read books. Take The Plot Against America (2004): there’s a cousin in the book, I can’t remember his name, and he loses a leg in the war. He sleeps in a room with young Philip and he has a stump. So I found someone with a stump and I talked to him about how he got on living with it. He let me touch it, which was amazing. I walked on his crutches. He was a terrific fella. You may not use what the person says to you, but it stimulates you in the right direction. It launches your imagination. Or when I wrote about a kosher butcher in one of my books, Indignation, you’d think it would be easier not to consult books! But I did, I found interesting books about kosher meat. I also went to a kosher butcher in Brooklyn, went in and walked around and talked to the guys. I had been to them as a kid but I didn’t remember what it smelled like.

BT Some of the historical books have brought you poignant letters, from readers enmeshed in the events, on subjects like polio or the Korean war and so on…

PR The best come from people who want to discuss the subject of the book. And very often they have lived in a similar milieu or been through a similar hardship. Most recently, because of the publication of Nemesis [set during the Newark polio outbreak of 1944], I had gotten three or four or five or six letters from polio victims. All from men about my age because polio stopped with vaccinations of people in 1955 in America. These guys had got polio before that, as youngsters. And they’re so heartfelt and so descriptive, they made me feel validated in what I wrote.

BT Nemesis is the most recent in a series of four short novels. Can you say something about them?

PR About 10 years ago, I began to think about short novels. I had read quite a few. Saul Bellow was alive then and Saul had written three or four interesting short novels near the end of his life and I asked him how he did it. And he did what Saul [usually] did – he laughed. So I started to [write one]. It’s strange. With short stories, you’re fighting with one hand behind your back. How do you get the punch, the knock-out punch, in a short book? I had to find out. Maybe I found out. Maybe I didn’t.

BT Which writers in particular shaped you?

PR There are some writers who have made an indelible impression. I don’t know if they shaped me as a writer, but they shaped me as a thinker and a reader and as a literary person. When I first started out, at school, I had been steeped in Henry James and there was an “influence”, not all for the good, and there was a tone I picked up from James, that didn’t suit me at all. But it’s there in Letting Go (1962).

Kafka made a strong impression on me. His serious comedies of guilt touched me. I think Bellow, of course, has been a major figure in my mind and imagination all my life as a writer. Saul was born in 1915, so he’s 18 years older than me. Therefore he was a figure of awe for me. When I got to Chicago in 1955 to go to grad school and I read Augie March, it was my guidebook to the city. It all seemed so glamorous to me, to be in the city that nourishes the sky. I read Bellow’s books as soon as they came out.

BT Has the theatre every tempted you as it tempted writers like Henry James?

PR In the middle Sixties the Ford Foundation had a programme to try to interest novelists and poets to write plays. I got a grant from them to try to write a play. No one has written worse plays than me. Maybe Henry James. I couldn’t figure it out. Maybe there is no way to figure it out. Maybe that’s why there are very few good plays. But I couldn’t figure it out. I couldn’t get anything that resembled my mind into the plays. I did that for two or three years and it didn’t work.

BT Among your exact contemporaries was John Updike, whose career runs alongside yours. You won the National Book award; he won the Rosenfeld award. You were often contrasted.

PR John has been dead for three years. And I slightly suspect that were he alive he would be sitting here in this chair [picking up the International Booker Prize], not me. He was a great American master, surely the greatest man of letters of his period in the second half of the 20th century. He was a brilliant writer. He could write any kind sentence imaginable. You just asked and he would give it to you. His two great books to my mind, although he wrote quite a few great books, are the last two Rabbit books: Rabbit is Rich and Rabbit at Rest. He is free as a bird. He can go anywhere. He can do any kind of comedy. Any kind of description. He was always free but in those two books he is the freest he’ll ever be

May 212011
 

著作等身(经他一人之手的各种学术著作40余部)、集无数荣誉于一身的文学研究专家哈罗德·布罗姆(Harold Bloom)已经80高龄了。耄耋之年的布罗姆老人在推新作《影响的解剖:文学是一种生活方式》(The Anatomy of Influence: Literature as a Way Life)。这是老人意在概括其一生的文学研究理念、纵横畅论文学精粹的鸿篇巨著。正如老人本人所言,这是他最后的天鹅之歌(virtual swan song)。所以这部作品肯定是文学研究者的必读书之一。

虽然我说得热闹,其实我只是看到了《纽约时报》上的一篇书评而已。这篇书评一方面简要概括了布罗姆先生研究生涯,同时扼要简介了布罗姆新书中的一些主要观点。有兴趣者,也可以点击后面这个文章标题来看看:“Harold Bloom:An Uncommon Reader”。

May 192011
 

5月18日,在澳大利亚悉尼作家大会的新闻发布会上,布克国际文学奖评审委员会宣布美国作家菲利普·罗斯获得了第四届布克国际文学奖。正如评委会主席里克·格科斯基所言:“五十多年来,菲利普·罗斯的书一直在刺激着读者的兴趣、激发着读者的思考、愉悦着读者的生活。这是一个庞大的读者群,而且还在不断扩大”。正式的颁奖仪式将于6月28日在伦敦举行。奖金是6万英镑。

布克国际文学奖每两年颁发一次。此前的三次分别颁给了伊斯迈尔·卡戴尔(Ismail Kadare,2005)、奇努阿·阿切贝(Chinua Achebe,2007)和爱丽丝·门罗(Alice Munro,2009)。

以下资料来自BBC NEWS:

Philip Roth wins the Man Booker International Prize

Philip Roth has been described as one of the most prolific and controversial writers in the world

US writer Philip Roth has been announced as the winner of the fourth Man Booker International Prize.

The award and £60,000 prize money is presented to a writer for their “achievement in fiction on the world stage”, organisers said.

Roth, 78, said: “This is a great honour and I’m delighted to receive it.”

His body of work includes the 1997 novel American Pastoral, for which he received the Pulitzer Prize. At 26, he wrote his first book Goodbye, Columbus.

‘Esteemed prize’

The announcement was made at a press conference in Australia, during the Sydney Writers’ Festival.

The award will be presented at a formal dinner in London on 28 June, however a spokeswoman said Roth would be unable to attend.

Born in Newark, New Jersey in 1933, Roth’s controversial 1969 novel Portnoy’s Complaint brought him worldwide attention for its graphic depiction of sexuality.

Time magazine included the work in a list of the best novels of the 20th century.

His 2000 book The Human Stain was adapted for the screen, starring Sir Anthony Hopkins and Oscar-winner Nicole Kidman.

The American author said he was grateful to the judges for awarding him the “esteemed prize”.

He added: “One of the particular pleasures I’ve had as a writer is to have my work read internationally despite all the heartaches of translation that that entails.

“I hope the prize will bring me to the attention of readers around the world who are not familiar with my work. This is a great honour and I’m delighted to receive it.”

The judging panel was chaired by writer, academic and rare-book dealer Dr Rick Gekoski.

“For more than 50 years Philip Roth’s books have stimulated, provoked and amused an enormous, and still expanding, audience,” he said.

“His imagination has not only recast our idea of Jewish identity, it has also reanimated fiction, and not just American fiction, generally.”

Gekoski was joined on the panel by writer and critic Carmen Callil and award-winning novelist Justin Cartwright.

In March British thriller writer John Le Carre asked judges to withdraw his name from the shortlist.

The author said he was “enormously flattered” but added: “I do not compete for literary prizes.”

His Dark Materials author Philip Pullman and Rohinton Mistry had also been up for the award.

The Man Booker International Prize, which is presented every two years, has previously been awarded to Ismail Kadare in 2005, Chinua Achebe in 2007 and Alice Munro in 2009.

May 012011
 

玛格丽特·乔治(Margaret George)是英国历史题材小说舞台上的一位重磅角色。她已经出版的历史小说包括《玛丽》(Mary)、《苏格兰女王》(Queen of Scots)、《亨利八世》(Henry VIII)和《克里奥派特拉回忆录》(Memoirs of Cleopatra),等。最近,玛格丽特·乔治又推出了一部新作,《伊丽莎白一世》(Elizabeth I)。

Any novelist who deals with Elizabeth I has two problems: a surfeit of detail and a paucity of motive. It’s reasonably easy to find out about the trivia of daily life and to trace the actions of important people; much less easy to figure out why anyone did what they did.

Elizabeth herself left little material that would tell us what lay behind her actions. George made two clever decisions in handling this dilemma: telling the story from two viewpoints — those of Elizabeth and her look-alike younger cousin, Lettice Knollys; and beginning the story not during the perilous years before Elizabeth’s accession but in her late middle age.

——Diana Gabaldon

有关伊丽莎白一世的历史题材小说并非空白。而玛格丽特·乔治的这部作品被认为是超越了前人的一部杰作。书评家们指出“《伊丽莎白一世》不仅仅是又一部有关那位条顿女王的小说”。同样拥有历史小说作家身份的作家戴安娜·嘉宝顿(Diana Gabaldon)的重点推荐理由更是直接,“如果是玛格丽特·乔治的作品那就值得一读”。

May 012011
 

Carson McCullers Talks about Love(卡森·麦卡勒斯谈爱情)是一部正在上演的音乐剧。由苏珊娜·维嘉(Suzanne Vega)创作并担当主演。表达了对于美国南方哥特小说创作的代表人物卡森·麦卡勒斯的热爱和敬仰。

Carson McCullers

苏珊娜·维嘉的卡森·麦卡勒斯情结只是因为大约30年前的一次偶然:那个时候的苏珊娜在书店看到了一本麦卡勒斯传记。她当时并没有去购买阅读这本书。但是封面给她留下了深刻的印象。据说因为她们长得非常像。从此,她对麦卡勒斯的热爱日渐加深,成了麦卡勒斯的忠实拥趸。她反复阅读了卡森·麦卡勒斯的《心灵是孤独的捕手》(The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter)、《婚礼成员》(The Member of the Wedding)等等。她的很多歌曲灵感都来源于麦卡勒斯的作品。而要为麦卡勒斯创作一部音乐剧的设想也在她的头脑里盘旋了20多年了。现在,她的愿望终于实现。

根据苏珊娜·维嘉的介绍,音乐剧Carson McCullers Talks about Love(卡森·麦卡勒斯谈爱情)的全部歌词都来源于卡森·麦卡勒斯的小说。

Suzanne Vega

苏珊娜·维嘉是美国著名的词曲作家、歌唱家。曾经7次获得格莱美奖提名,已经销售了700多万张唱片。

点击阅读英文介绍

Apr 282011
 

近两周来,小说《亚瑟的悲剧》(Tragedy of Arthur)的受关注度极高。以下是来自《纽约时报》的书评文章:

Fake Memoir With Bogus Shakespeare

By MICHIKO KAKUTANI

Author of Tragedy of Arthur

“The Tragedy of Arthur” is a novel about the discovery of what is reputed to be a lost Shakespeare play, and with it Arthur Phillips has found the perfect vehicle for his cerebral talents: his ingenuity; his bright, elastic prose; and, most notably, his penchant for pastiche — for pouring his copious literary gifts into old vessels and reinventing familiar genres.

Mr. Phillips’s earlier novels, of course, testified to these gifts, though they also tended to point up his reluctance to delve convincingly into the inner lives of his characters. His much talked-about first novel “Prague” — about young Americans in Europe — was filled with echoes of Nabokov and James. “The Egyptologist” worked variations on old Hollywood mummy movies and H. Rider Haggard stories. “Angelica” gussied up the Victorian ghost story with some postmodern pyrotechnics. And “The Song Is You” read like a mash-up of “Sleepless in Seattle” and a cheesy stalker movie.

With “The Tragedy of Arthur” Mr. Phillips has created a wonderfully tricky Chinese puzzle box of a novel that is as entertaining as it is brainy. If its characters are a little emotionally predictable, we don’t mind all that much: we’re more interested in seeing how the author cuts and sands his puzzle pieces, assembles them into a pretty contraption and then inserts lots of mirrors and false bottoms.

Mr. Phillips — who, in addition to writing, has been a child actor, a jazz musician and a five-time “Jeopardy!” champion — begins this complicated enterprise by cunningly creating a frame story to explain the finding of the lost Shakespeare play “The Tragedy of Arthur” in which, he, Arthur Phillips, author of four novels, is a central player.

In a lengthy fake memoir that is supposed to be the “Introduction” to this Shakespeare play, Mr. Phillips pretends to be a fictional version of himself, recounting the story of how his con-man father — who is also named Arthur and who is serving jail time for forgery — came to give him “a quarto edition, dated 1597” of the lost play and how that play came to be authenticated by assorted forensic and scholarly experts and published, here, in these pages, by Random House.

The narrator — that is, the fictional Arthur Phillips — has an intense love-hate relationship with his father. He feels his dad repeatedly abandoned him and his twin sister, Dana, during their childhood because he could not resist committing petty crimes that kept getting him sent to jail. At the same time young Arthur hungers after his absent father’s approval: he wants his Shakespeare-loving father to ratify his own creative efforts as a writer.

In recounting the tale of his fictional namesake Mr. Phillips does a clever job of orchestrating well-known Shakespearian themes, like the contingency of reason and love; the rift between appearance and reality; and twins and doubles and confused identities. He makes questions of legitimacy (which percolate through the history plays) and authenticity (which underlies Shakespeare authorship debates) central to this novel.

Mr. Phillips depicts the fictional Arthur’s father, Arthur Sr., as a phony and pretender — as a sort of combination of the con-man father in Geoffrey Wolff’s memoir “The Duke of Deception” and one of the charming, prodigal fathers in John le Carré’s fiction.

Arthur Sr. has served jail time for things like forging fake grocery store coupons and scratch-off tickets for the New York Lottery. When his children were young, he even enlisted their help in creating phony crop circles as a prank. Why? “To astonish,” his son explains. “To add to the world’s store of precious possibility. To set the record crooked once and for all, so that someone’s life (some stranger’s) was not without wonder. It almost seems like a charitable act, if you subtract his ego.”

Given his father’s suspect history, why would the narrator believe for a second that “The Tragedy of Arthur” is the real thing? After all, the play is oddly filled with echoes of Phillips family history, including a dog with the same name as Arthur Sr.’s onetime pet.

Why would young Arthur lend his own reputation as a writer to another one of his father’s scams? The novel suggests hypotheses of widely varying plausibility: that for once in his life Arthur Sr. is telling the truth and has in fact stumbled across that rare and amazing thing — a new Shakespeare play, which he stole from the library of a wealthy man who didn’t know what he owned; that Arthur Sr. found a fake Shakespeare play and embellished it with some of his own imaginative embroiderings and then reprinted it on old paper with old ink; that young Arthur has himself written this phony play and pretended that his father gave it to him in order to inflate his father’s legend of shamelessness and manipulation.

How good a job does the real Mr. Phillips do of faking an early (and not very good) Shakespeare play? Well, let’s just say it’s hard to imagine that the fictional Arthur Phillips or the fictional Random House managed to find experts who would give the play their stamp of approval. The whole production feels truncated and rushed, and it’s filled with labored, lumpy poetry. On the other hand, we are supposed to suspect that “The Tragedy of Arthur” (or to be more precise, “The Most Excellent and Tragical Historie of Arthur, King of Britain”) is a fake Shakespeare play written by a Shakespeare-loving con man. So its actual quality is sort of beside the point.

Not only does Mr. Phillips have a lot of fun concocting this play, borrowing a little from “Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2,” “Henry V,” “Hamlet” and even “Macbeth” along the way, but also in writing “The Tragedy of Arthur” — the book we hold in our hands, not the play within it — he’s constructed a sly, spirited novel that deftly showcases his own versatility and shiny literary panache.