I never knew that films had been made of Shirley Jackson’s classic June 26, 1948 story, “The Lottery“. Turns out you can view a classic 1969 short based on the story right now on the blog we saw that…, via the magic of YouTube. (But if you’ve never read the story, do that first!)
The dialogue in the film is a bit wooden (as it is in the story, frankly), and it moves very slowly by today’s standards, but when the climax comes, it’s remarkably shocking even if you know what’s coming. Be sure to unwind with Paul Morris’ Wavy Rule cartoon, in which he gives the story a softer ending.
Author Archives: Emdashes
Take the New Yorker Digital Edition Out for a Test Drive!
_For a more thorough look at the Digital Edition, look “here”:http://emdashes.com/2008/11/the-new-yorker-digital-edition.php. —M.C.S._
I just received a message in my in-box announcing that “the first issue of _The New Yorker_’s digital edition is now available.” This feature is available to anyone who has a subscription, so if you want to check it out, you should hasten to “register”:https://admin.buysub.com/pubs/N3/NYR/entry.jsp?cds_page_id=3638&cds_mag_code=NYR&id=1225745193819&lsid=83081446338013005&vid=1 at the _New Yorker_’s subscription fulfillment website.
It doesn’t seem possible, but apparently anyone with a subscription not only can read the current or recent issues in the digital reader but can also “access any issue”:http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/digitaledition/faq/ from the magazine’s 83 illustrious years of existence. Now that’s what I call added value! If that isn’t a powerful incentive to subscribe, I don’t know what is. _The New Yorker_ is, of course, now well past its four-thousandth issue.
For those of us who bought _The Complete New Yorker_ when it first came out, it’s almost not comprehensible to see the entire archive so prettily available in my browser—but I’ll get used to it! And the reader application does look very snazzy.
More on the interface and accessability as we learn more about it. In the meantime, we congratulate _The New Yorker_ on this bold new era!
And Then He Said, “The Loser Standing Small”: Adventures in Misused Idiom
I’m watching _Zeit im Bild,_ the national nightly news in Austria, and the American correspondent is describing the electoral college used in the United States, and he keeps referring to “winner takes it all” rules. It’s driving my mom up the wall. I think he’s unduly influenced by “ABBA”:http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/4362/.
Hertzberg and Toobin on Final Pre-Election “Campaign Trail”
Just under the wire, Dorothy Wickenden and her insightful colleagues have contributed their last (I assume) “edition”:http://www.newyorker.com/online/2008/11/03/081030on_audio_campaign of the “Campaign Trail” podcast before the bulk of the votes are cast tomorrow (absentee voters, of which I am one, still have about a week to get their ballots in). It’s an unusually loose session, and a lot of fun: it emerges that the trio has a common history at _The New Republic_ during the Reagan-Bush years. (Hertzberg was editor, Wickenden managing editor, and Toobin frequent contributor.)
Which leaves us with a question: Wickenden closes out the podcast with a reference to a post-election episode of the podcast—I should hope so!—but what is the fate of the series once the “campaign” part of the title ceases to apply? Will it revert to a more mellow podcast devoted to politics in general, or will they pack it up until late 2011? (Or perhaps late 2010, for the midterms.) I could see merit in either decision (while selfishly contending that the process of laying down the foundations of the post-Bush era demands as much, if not more, attention by our nation’s podcasters). We’ll find out soon enough!
Does Garry Wills on Nixon Lend Insight into Obama’s Mojo? Indeed!
For those of you who have OD’d on political commentary and yet crave more—my Google Reader is dry as a bone!!—The New York Review of Books has assembled its “usual cast of smarties”:http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22017 to weigh in on Indecision ’08.
Seems a good a place as any to mention the best book on politics I have ever read, _Nixon Agonistes: The Crisis of the Self-Made Man,_ by Garry Wills. For those of you preemptively weary of Watergate and the twitchy Nixon of the second term, fear not: the book was written in 1969, before all of that.
I particularly recommend chapter 6, “The Hero,” which is a defense of Nixon’s old boss, Dwight Eisenhower. The chapter is a compelling brief for the political virtues of charisma, shrewdness, and moderation; much to my astonishment, it (the chapter) is available in full at “Google Books”:http://books.google.com/books?id=5cVKKLSC788C&printsec=frontcover&dq=nixon+agonistes&ei=aaULSd-8HZbMzQTvxvTsAw#PPA115,M1. (Actually, looking at it again, it’s probably necessary to read the previous chapter, “Checkers,” too; it’s also very good.)
This recommendation does not arise purely by chance. You see, I see a lot of Barack Obama in Wills’s description of Eisenhower, which could be a very good sign indeed. Wills emphasized Ike’s uncanny ability to win political battles deftly, with a minimum of overt conflict. What the pundits and the pols sometimes forget about politics is that winning isn’t the only thing; one must win _well,_ win and leave the other players involved devoid of rancor. I think Obama has this quality.
I was reminded of this trait of Obama’s during that brief interlude about a week after the Republican convention, when McCain, riding a wave of Palin-mania, managed to eke his way into the lead. Ever the optimist, I made two bets that week, one with a McCain supporter and another with a nervous Obama supporter, on the premise that Obama’s good times were far from over. There were many such bets to be made at that moment.
We forget it now, but there was ample discussion to the effect that McCain’s momentum had definitively established that Obama was too recessive, was not sufficiently capable of attack, and—naturally—should have chosen Hillary Clinton to be his VP. In one of his two-handers with John McWhorter that made 2008 such a delight, perpetual Obama skeptic Glenn Loury “expressed this view”:http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/14432 (start at about 29 minutes in) on a bloggingheads.tv “diavlog” recorded on September 14.
Loury made reference to the “knife fight” Obama had suddenly found himself in and observed that the Clintons would surely be mighty helpful in such a context. A few moments later, Loury used the words “elegant, articulate, intelligent” to describe Obama and generally left behind the impression that Obama might be too much of a Nancy boy for big-time politics.
Allow me expand on that: the person Loury was describing in such terms had very recently waged a six-month battle with the accepted heir apparent to the Democratic nomination—a battle that ended, of course, in his own triumph. It was this person that Loury could profess to describe as somehow weak or lacking steel or nerve.
It is useful in politics to win knife fights; it is even more useful in politics to emerge from tense confrontations with one’s adversaries and not leave all of the other players feeling as if a knife fight has just occurred. To describe a political … _warrior_ like Obama in such terms is ridiculous; it’s like saying that Greg Maddux displayed too much finesse to be a “really” effective pitcher. Yes, the Clintons often win knife fights—do they engage in anything else? How about someone who can play the Jedi mind trick on an adversary and leave nobody thirsting for blood?
My view of Obama’s deftness with regard to avoiding traditional political battles—that’s straight _Nixon Agonistes,_ chapter 6. If you read it, you might even recognize a shrewd Hawaiian-born pol between the lines.
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Paul Morris: Prison is a Series of Tubes
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Will Uncle Ted Stevens, Alaska Senator, go to prison? And if so, what will he do there? Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
Read “The Wavy Rule” archive.
David Foster Wallace: The Biography
Jason Kottke called the recent _Rolling Stone_ “profile”:http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/23638511/the_lost_years__last_days_of_david_foster_wallace/print of David Foster Wallace “as close to a biography of David Foster Wallace as you’ll get,” and I think that’s exactly right.
Since that post nearly two weeks ago, I had a transatlantic flight and the article was not online in full, so I bought the issue of _Rolling Stone_ at the airport. Not only is the article, by David Lipsky, the closest thing to a biography we will get (until we get one), but it’s so thorough that it’s difficult to imagine what additional substance a book-length version of same would provide.
According to “Jason,”:http://www.kottke.org/08/10/the-lost-years-and-last-days-of-david-foster-wallace _RS_ just made the full version available online; do yourself a favor and check it out.
“With ‘Gesture’ You Know Where You Stand. But ‘Nuance’?”
Don’t look now, but James Wolcott’s been on fire lately. This “meditation”:http://www.vanityfair.com/online/wolcott/2008/10/over-at-tpm-david-kurtz.html on hellish gridlock under a President McCain is brilliant, right up to the last deliciously _weltschmerz_-soaked line. And this “reminiscence”:http://www.vanityfair.com/online/wolcott/2008/10/sheila-omalley-at-the-sheila.html of Pauline Kael’s connection to Barry Levinson’s _Diner_ really gets me where I live. I spent my college years inhaling as many of Kael’s words as I could get my hands on, and _Diner,_ which came out when I was 12, was the sort of quirky “how can this be a classic when TBS plays it every weekend?” gem that impressed me a lot during the same period. I didn’t know that she rescued the movie; more people should.
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Paul Morris: Batteries Included
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_Paul writes_: It’s not like it’s a colony on Mars, or a hair-restoring drug. Or a tree that produces croissants, or trolleys that run on sarcasm. The technology for the electric car is already here, and has been here for quite some time. The fact that it’s been quashed by the auto industry borders on the criminal. If someone killed the electric car, can it be resuscitated? For the world’s sake, I hope so.
Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
Read “The Wavy Rule” archive.
The Polite Honor the Long-Winded
We notice that “_Polite Magazine_”:http://www.politemag.com/ (love that name) recently featured a “short appreciation”:http://www.politemag.com/brennan.htm of Maeve Brennan. Much like “Emily”:http://emdashes.com/mt/mt-search.cgi?tag=pigeons&blog_id=2 here at Emdashes, Brennan was very observant and was fond of pigeons. I’ve had her collection _The Long-Winded Lady_ for a while now and I keep meaning to get to it. Soon!
