Monday, March 17, 2008
Ethan Canin, M.D.
"I am an accountant, that calling of exactitude and scruple, and my crime was small."
Damn. That is one of the best first lines I've ever read. Simple and perfect. Of course now you want to know what the crime is. Go read all of the collection. Apparently the title story has been made into a film starring Kevin Kline (it's all over the cover of the most recent edition of the book), but I've neither seen it nor heard of it before I picked up the book. Needless to say, I can't vouch for the film.
Canin is also a remarkable interviewee. Check that out here.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Richard Ford, Leaving For Kenosha
"It was the anniversary of the disaster. Walter Hobbes was on his way uptown to pick up his daughter, Louise, at Trinity. She had the dentist at four. Then the two of them were going for a hilariously early dinner at the place Louise liked—Papa Andre’s—out on the Chef Highway, a roadhouse on stilts that the flood had missed. Then they were going back to his condo for her homework and a Bill Murray movie. This was New Orleans.
"It was their day. Betsy, Louise’s mother, was driving out to appraise some subdivision plats in Mississippi, then was staying at Mitch Daigle’s, across the lake. Which meant double whiskey sours and maybe a joint and some boiled shrimp. Walter and Betsy had been divorced for a year. Betsy had fallen in love with Mitch while she was showing him a house—a present he had planned for his wife for their twentieth anniversary. An anniversary that didn’t quite come off...."
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Dwight Howard 2007 slam dunk contest
I'm glad he won tonight. He should have won for this. I don't care if he is 6'11''.
Thursday, February 07, 2008
I Talked To A Blind Guy; or The Dreams of the Blind
Friday, February 01, 2008
Gary Smith Is The Best Sportswriter In America
In the most recent Sports Illustrated, Smith has a great profile of Gene Upshaw, head the NFL Player's Association, and his role in the league's lack of assistance for former players. We recommend that you read it now. And then maybe donate five bucks to the Gridiron Greats when you're done.
You should also contrast this article with ESPN blogger Bill Simmons' recent contribution to ESPN The Magazine, where Simmons gets to the real problem of the Roger Clemens steroids scandal: his own sacred post-college memories are ruined.
We like both writers, but for different purposes. A lot of people on the Internets, especially over at Dead Spin, despise Simmons for his hacktastic articles and probably his popularity. Some people even go as far to compare Gary Smith with Bill Simmons in order to devalue Simmons' worth as a sportswriter. But we'll be the first to admit it's a bogus comparison. It's like comparing Clifford J. Levy to Perez Hilton. Both are reporters in that they "report" on what can liberally be termed "news," but Levy actually investigates his articles, interviews people and focuses on social issues, whereas Hilton relies on second-hand celebrity gossip and publishes unverified reports accompanied by defaced photos. It's essentially the same with Simmons and Smith: Both are writers who deal in the realm of "sports," but Simmons writes about sports from his LA mansion, obtaining his limited insight primarily from television, an occasional conversation with one his ESPN cronies and (rarely) an interview. In fact, Simmons doesn't really write stories; he writes comparison articles ('86 Celtics vs. '07 Patriots) and perfunctory pop culture hackjobs ([So and so] is similar to [80s movie character]).
On the other hand, Smith's reporting (I know nothing of the man's life, unlike Simmons) hints at a veracity that teeters on the edge of obssession. He first and foremost writes about people, as evidenced by the broad array people he interviews and the way in which he uses the first person to deftly illuminate his subject. Smith's articles take on a literary quality that extends beyond sports. Against the odds, Smith manages to achieve a level of introspection in a field that resists going beyond the sheen and the sparkle of the game.
If we were forced to analogize, we'd put it this way: Simmons is the Rush Limbaugh of sportswriters, and Smith has taken up the throne David Halberstam left vacant. That works best because you can't really compare the two. They serve different purposes. One's writing centers on the writer, the other's writing centers on the subject. One has an ideology, the other investigates the ideology of the subject. One is self-absorbed, the other is absorbed in the subject.
That's the difference between the two. And Simmons never pretended to care about his subject more than his own glib thoughts about the subject. That, in a sense, is the essence of blogging.
UPDATE: We're late to the Gary Smith coronation game.
Sunday, January 27, 2008
We Are Envious of Derrick Rose's Jumping Ability
This past Saturday number-one ranked Memphis rocked Gonzaga, and Derrick Rose nearly had a triple double (19-9-8). (He also had a ridiculous buzzer beating tip dunk off a Joey Dorsey missed lay-up to end the first half - look it up - someone must have put it on youtube by now). Rose has been the catalyst for his team all year, and let me be the first to say it: he's the reason Memphis will WIN the NCAA tournament.
He's better than O.J. Mayo, Eric Gordon, Kevin Love and Michael Beasley. He's the best freshman in America, and the first player, if we were picking, to be taken in the 2008 NBA Draft. So far, the odds are in the favor of the Miami Heat winning that ignominious distinction. Can you imagine a back court of Rose and Dwayne Wade? It would be sick, with the added bonus that they're both Chicago boys. I bet Pat Reilly wouldn't flake out on that squad.