Tag: Writing (Page 1 of 2)

More Literature and Art Pairings from Olyn

This month’s pairing is among my favorites for sheer visceral values. 


FEVER DREAM by Samanta Schweblin

 pairs perfectly with 

STATUES by Damian Hirst 


If Argentinian author Samanta Schweblin and British artist Damian Hirst ever get together for drinks and conversation, I want to be at the next table eavesdropping.  

These two imaginative creators have muses that arrive from the same dark cave. Each presents commentary steeped in strongly-felt and unsettling visions, and both embrace deep and darkly wrought observations. 


The Cover Photo of Novel Fever Dream by Samanta Schweblin

Fever Dream by Samanta Schweblin came as a gripping surprise to me. I had no idea what I was in for when I picked up this dark and troubling impressionistic novel. And now that I’m done, I’m not sure what the heck just happened to me. I devoured the book compulsively; with mouth open, one hand gripping my chest. 

This is a mind-bending story, as frightening and dark as it is lyrically rendered and filled with tender writing and compassionate commentary. Reading this work is a bit like watching a frightening accident unfolding, you can’t watch but can’t tear yourself away. I can honestly say I had no idea what was happening through much of the book, but that didn’t stop me from absorbing aghast, every bit of the dialogue that was used exclusively to tell the tale. 

Toward the book’s end, pieces of understanding came slowly together through the dread-ridden fog that had been gathering in my consciousness. I recognized that the book’s puzzle involved a confused mother filled with love and dread for her child, but understood much more was embedded just under the surface—I just couldn’t see it yet. 

Why, for instance, did she fear the child she loved so much? What was with the worms? Who was this boy David by her hospital bed—someone she knew but did not know? And how were his questions going to save her? 

The entire book reads, not like a mystery, more as a puzzle. Written entirely in unbroken dialogue with no narration outside the voices of David and Amanda, it is experimental and overwhelming. If part of the purpose of this book is to provoke visceral unease, it is a complete success. However, there is much more happening here. Concern for the environment, for instance. And commentary on relationships, neighbours, family, motherhood. I finished this book cowering into the corner of my couch. Can someone help me up please? 

Pairs Perfectly with:

The raw enormity of British artist Damian Hirst’s statues, both from his exhibition Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable presented at the 57th Venice Biennale, and various public works, underscores their ability to be both awe inspiring and terrifying. 

These deeply unsettling and often controversial bronze behemoths evoke horror, or disgust, of the can’t-turn-away variety. Exquisitely wrought with lavish technical ability—the bronzes cast by a foundry in western England and the marbles carved in the Carrara region of Italy—they are at once audacious and indisputably compelling. Their ability to evoke viscerally disturbing thoughts and emotions have cast Hirst by his critics as both a creator of “bloated folly” and a “triumphant” artist. Whichever tack you want to take, the depth of Hirst’s message is so similar to many in Fever Dream it is fittingly spooky. 

The New Yorker describes Fever Dream as Ecological Horror—which Hirst’s Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable indisputably is also. The New Yorker describes Fever Dream as “A vision of maternal love as something alienating and surreal.” Looking in dread at Hirst’s Pregnant Lady, I can’t believe the two haven’t collaborated in some way, which of course they have not. 

The two present works extremely similar in tone, inspiration, technique, message and shock value. If Schweblin receives attention from her critics that is more sympathetic than the input Hirt receives by his, I wonder if it is because the genre blending currently being embraced in the literary world, is lagging in the world of fine art. 

Don’t mention the Pandemic

by Olyn Ozbick

As you know I have spent heaps of time since March 11 sitting in on Zoom calls, teaching Zoom classes, meeting with colleagues on Zoom, and taking Zoom courses myself. The reason I am certain you know this, is because I am as certain that you, yourself, have had the exact same experience in your own connections with the world. 

And it’s all been great, right? A refreshing learning curve at first. A chance to see other faces during lockdown – my daughters for instance—finally. My writing colleagues—hallelujah. My students—hello again, yahoo! 

Now of course, it’s all simply, day-in-a-life stuff, post 3/11. 

Very recently I had a great Zoom opportunity, along with a group of writing colleagues, to meet a person who is legendary in the publishing word—because, wow, the connections we can now make via Zoom and internet. Ordinarily I would be chuffed to name this person, except that I’m going to disagree with them in this bit, so, you know… writerly self-preservation and all….

This legend, whom I continue to be super impressed with and would love to work with some day (just saying!) offered the following advice: Don’t write about COVID. 

Wait just a second.

Whaaat?

Back up, back up!

How is that possible?

How do we writers move forward and NOT WRITE ABOUT COVID?  

As I left the call thinking about this advice, what I could decipher was that it just was a bit of very well-intentioned business advice, not fully conceived.

Let me skip to a writing exercise I recently gave to my (Zoom) Creative Writing Class. John Gardner (another legend) in his book The Art of Fiction, offers up a fun little exercise:

Describe a lake as seen by someone who has just committed a murder and do not mention the murder. 

Not possible, right? Not the tiniest bit possible to write a picture of a lake without injecting the emotion, the perspective, the reality of the Point of View Character having committed murder into every bit of every scene, every inuendo, mood, description, and emotion. If you know the POV character has committed murder it is THERE. Whether you name it or not.  It happened, and so it pervades everything. 

I actually offered my class the following homework assignment, inspired by Gardner’s exercise, even before having received the pronouncement from that well-meaning literary legend. Maybe give it a try yourself. 

Describe a lake as seen by a character sitting at the water’s edge. 

Photo two chairs at lakeside

Now try this. 

Describe the lake as seen by a character sitting at that same lake during or post the COVID pandemic and don’t mention the pandemic.

See if you will ever be able to write anything that isn’t about the COVID pandemic again. 

How To Be A Writer

By Olyn Ozbick

1) Take yourself as an author very seriously. To do this, you will have to quit all other work. It’s important to get in touch with the transcendence of your particular creative genius.

You can’t do that standing behind a till, budgeting or planning conferences. Get real about your creativity – embrace your true being. Your manager has never understood your creative abilities, face it, she never will.

2) Now that you have no job, revel in that exciting leap you just took. Celebrate your new literary freedom by sleeping in. Creative genius needs time – particularly morning time. 

3) Don’t bother getting dressed. PJ’s are comfy – that’s why you wear them to bed. Why would you approach your creative endeavours in anything but the most freeing of attire?

4) Drink. No not milk. It could take a little time to get up to speed. Start slowly with a little Bailey’s in your morning coffee, wine at lunch and wine also at dinner. Once you get the hang of it you can start fortifying your wine drinking with a splash of scotch on ice. Soon you will be a true author, quaffing only whiskey morning noon and night. Well done! 

5) If you’ve been taking writing classes, now’s the time to drop them. Don’t call the instructor to explain, you are too serious about your writing to waste time with petty scheduling issues, just stop showing up. If you have writer friends and colleagues, drop them too. You don’t need their annoying input, they are completely wrong about your work – always have been! 

6) Stay in. Now that you are drinking day and night in your PJ’s and have no jobs, friends or commitments, you are a true reclusive writer, well done! Keep it up!

7) Hone impatience. Real writers aren’t patient, writers are driven. Get that first draft of your novel out the door as soon as possible. Don’t wait until it’s finished, it’s brilliant – you know it, and the agent will know it as soon as it hits her in-box. If it needs a little work, she’ll do it. 

8) If the agent doesn’t get back to you immediately, don’t worry, she’s probably trying to tie down your three-book deal first. 

Don’t be afraid to call her and introduce yourself, she’ll be delighted, after all, you are a brilliant writer and her career will skyrocket once she signs you, she’s probably a bit intimidated to approach you first. 

9) Now’s the time to leave the house. Celebrate with dinner at an expensive restaurant. Don’t worry about the cost, put it on your visa! Soon your advance will arrive and later you will be rolling in royalty cheques. 

Congratulations, and welcome to the wonderful world of Authoring!

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