Friday Find: Emily Barton’s Advice for Writers

MFA advice! Publishing advice! Jobs advice! “General Words of Wisdom.” You’ll find it all on Emily Barton’s website. Emily is a novelist and writing professor, and she knows her stuff. Check out her website’s excellent “advice for writers” page, freshly updated to address “How Can I Improve My Chances of Being Accepted to an Undergraduate Workshop?” and “How Do I Ask a Professor for a Letter of Reference?”.

Have a good weekend, everyone. See you back here on Monday.

Jewish Literary Links for Shabbat

Photo Credit: Reut Miryam Cohen
  • This week brought us the April Jewish Book Carnival, an assortment of book-focused blog links from a multiple contributors. Many thanks to April’s host, Amy Meltzer and her terrific Homeshuling blog.
  • An extensive (and salty) interview with U.S. Poet Laureate Philip Levine, complemented by several poems, on Tablet.
  • My friend B.J. Epstein is a scholar of children’s literature (among her other areas of expertise). This week, she shared some thoughts on “No Happy Endings: Holocaust Memorial Day and Children.”
  • In case you missed the post earlier this week, author Ellen Cassedy anticipated Yom HaShoah with reflections on Eva Hoffman’s inspirational After Such Knowledge.
  • Also on the Holocaust theme: my enthusiastic review of Laurent Binet’s HHhH (translated by Sam Taylor).
  • And an item from my Practicing Writing blog, about Yom HaShoah and my short story collection, Quiet Americans.
  • Shabbat shalom.

    Thursday’s Work in Progress: Remembrance Day

    Today is Yom HaShoah, otherwise known as Holocaust Remembrance Day. And since my collection of short stories, Quiet Americans, is so connected to the Holocaust and its reverberations, this week has brought additional opportunities to focus on the very real history, global and familial, behind the book.

    Last Sunday, I was invited to speak with the members of the City Congregation for Humanistic Judaism here in New York. The title of my talk was “My German-Jewish Grandparents and Third-Generation Preoccupations: History, Healing, and Happily Ever After?” I assembled a presentation that included brief readings from three of the stories in my book. The group was fabulous–full of people with their own related family stories and thoughtful questions/reflections. I’m so grateful to Ellen Meeropol for bringing Quiet Americans to the attention of Rabbi Peter Schweitzer, and to Rabbi Peter for the invitation to speak. (I also want to thank him for the generous shout-out that he gave My Machberet, which is the blog that I maintain to focus on matters of specifically Jewish literary [and cultural and political] interest.)

    Next Monday, I’ll have the privilege of visiting with a class at Baruch College. The course is titled “Representing the Holocaust.” I have to admit that it’s a bit overwhelming to see my name on a syllabus alongside those of Saul Friedlander, Aharon Appelfeld, Charlotte Delbo, Primo Levi, Cynthia Ozick, Deborah Lipstadt and others. The class will have read two of the stories in my book: “Lebensraum” and “The Quiet American, Or How to Be a Good Guest.” This will be my first visit with a college group, and I’m so eager to hear what the students have to say.

    It seems appropriate to take a moment today to thank all of you who have already supported Quiet Americans with purchases. As you may know, I’m making quarterly donations based on the book sales to The Blue Card, which supports U.S.-based survivors of Nazi persecution and their families. Since the book was released last January, your purchases have allowed me to donate $845. And I thank you for that.

    I’d love to break the $1,000 mark sooner rather than later (and to keep going from there). Every sale counts, so anything you can do to encourage friends, family members, book groups, librarians, and anyone else to help make that possible–even simply sharing this post on Twitter or Facebook–will be deeply appreciated. Especially today.

    Yom HaShoah Reflections on Eva Hoffman’s AFTER SUCH KNOWLEDGE (A Guest Post by Ellen Cassedy)

    As we approach Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), author Ellen Cassedy shares reflections on an influential book in this guest post.

    Remembering the Holocaust with Eva Hoffman

    by Ellen Cassedy

    “What meanings does the Holocaust hold for us today – and how are we going to pass on those meanings to subsequent generations?” These are the questions Eva Hoffman poses in her courageous book, After Such Knowledge: Memory, History, and the Legacy of the Holocaust.

    Hoffman’s acclaimed memoir, Lost in Translation, recounts her emigration from Poland at age 13 with her parents, who were Holocaust survivors, and her struggles to adjust to her new home in Canada. Published 15 years later, in 2004, After Such Knowledge is less well-known, but it made a deep impression on me when I first read it. As we observe Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, I’ve been rereading it and finding it as provocative and valuable as ever.

    The book is a multi-faceted meditation. It draws on Hoffman’s personal experiences and those of other children of survivors; her extensive reading in the fields of psychology, culture, and politics; and her years of conversations with Poles and Germans of all ages.

    I discovered the book at the exact moment that I myself was embarking on a journey to the Old World – to Lithuania, the land of my Jewish forebears. (more…)

    The Wednesday Web Browser for Writers

    Midweek means that it’s time for me to share with you a few of this week’s online discoveries (so far!).

  • Let’s begin with an issue that is – ahem – not unfamiliar to me: the question of whether writers should discuss politics online, as raised by Tracy Hahn-Burkett for Beyond the Margins. (Oh, so complicated!)
  • On a not-unrelated note: If you haven’t yet read it, I’ve shared some views (and posed some questions) concerning “Günter Grass, My Book & Me” over on my other blog.
  • Any of you taking part in Robert Lee Brewer’s April Platform Challenge? I’ve been following along. It’s thanks to that challenge that you can now subscribe to Practicing Writing (and to the aforementioned “other blog,” My Machberet) by email. Just look to the right side of the screen for the nifty subscription boxes.
  • A few choice writing lessons from Constance Hale, on The New York Times Opinionator blog.
  • In case you haven’t heard, Fiction lost out big time at the Pulitzers this week. For those of us who don’t know much about how winners are chosen, Laura Miller provides some information.