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April262005

Jonathans Are Illuminated: Smart Women, Various Choices

Filed under: Jonathans are Illuminated

Rachel Aviv's Voice essay about Nicole Krass' History of Love—and the links between Krauss' novel and her husband's (one Jonathan Safran Foer)—also mentions the art-and-life relationship between Kathryn Chetkovich and Jonathan Franzen: Written With Invisible Ink: Is Nicole Krauss's book-within-a-book 'taut as a drum'?

Speaking of Franzen, I'm sure you're following the writers' revolt against Oprahlessness:


Oprah, save us, we can't get by without you.

That's the message from a group of published and award-winning novelists in an open letter to influential television talk-show host Oprah Winfrey, begging her to resume picking new novels for members of her popular book club.

"There's a widely-held belief that the landscape of literary fiction is now a gloomy place," Word of Mouth, a loose alliance of women's authors, wrote. It said fiction sales began to plummet when the The Oprah Winfrey Book Club went off the air in 2002 and stopped featuring contemporary authors.

"Book Club members stopped buying new fiction, and this changed the face of American publishing," said the letter, which was signed by 158 authors.

Among those signing the letter were Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri and Amy Tan, author of The Joy Luck Club. Several male authors also signed.

The letter expressed thanks for Winfrey's contribution to book sales and asked her to "consider focusing, once again, on contemporary writers in your book club."

"The readers need you. And we, the writers, need you," it said. "Oprah Winfrey, we wish you'd come back."
...
The club became embroiled in controversy in 2001 when Jonathan Franzen publicly objected to the selection of his novel, The Corrections, and said he feared it might affect his reputation in literary circles. He later said he regretted voicing his reservations.

American novelists beg for Oprah's Book Club help [Houston Chronicle]
Oprah's Book Fatigue: How fiction's best friend ran out of stuff to read [Chris Lehmann, Slate]

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