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Saturday, May 3, 2014

What's special about this sentence? (A Facebook conversation)

What's special about this sentence?
"Pack my box with
five dozen liquor jugs."

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Meet the Norwegian writer who has become an international literary sensation with a 3,500-word autobiography

Reading this profile in The Economist of the new international literary sensation Karl Ove Knausgaard was enough to make me rush over to Amazon and order the first volume of the Norwegian writer's 3,500-word autobiography, which has been hailed as the most exhaustive account of a modern life ever written:


Read the profile here: "Northern light".
  • Amazon delivered My Struggle-1 last week and I have been devouring it page by delectable page like a man possessed every night before hitting the sack. There is something hypnotic about the writing that draws you in and keeps you engaged. As The Economist notes:
Knausgaard devotes pages to buying beer as a teenager, or pushing a pram as a new father. But he is saved from being boring by four things.

The first is the energy of his writing: what it lacks in polish it makes up for in immediacy.

The second is his willingness to “put everything into a book”, as he describes it. He not only dwells on things that other writers might consider to be beneath consideration. He dares to be politically incorrect: to reveal, for example, how humiliating it is for a hulking man to take his children to play groups.

The third element is the sense of transcendence: “My Struggle” is full of quasi-religious moments when the author sees something bigger lurking beneath the surface of events.

The fourth and most important thread is Mr Knausgaard’s father, a figure who provides the book with both its narrative drive and its all-enveloping sense of menace.

The Economist is not the only publication to lavish praise on Knausgaard and his magnum opus:

“Powerfully alive . . . Knausgaard is intense and utterly honest, unafraid to voice universal anxieties . . . He wants us to inhabit the ordinariness of life, which is sometimes visionary, sometimes banal, and sometimes momentous, but all of it perforce ordinary because it happens in the course of a life, and happens, in different forms, to everyone . . . There is something ceaselessly compelling about Knausgaard’s book.” — James Wood, The New Yorker (selected as one of the Books of the Year)

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“A fantastic novel . . . I cannot say anything other than that I am looking forward desperately to the rest of it.” — Dagsavisen (Norway)

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“Knausgaard’s thinking is magnificently unbridled.” — Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Germany)

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“Between Proust and the woods . . . Like granite, precise and forceful. More real than reality.” — La Repubblica (Italy)

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“I can’t stop, I want to stop, I can’t stop, just one more page, then I will cook dinner, just one more page . . .” — Västerbottens-kuriren (Sweden)

Sunday, April 27, 2014

PR, Advertising, and Journalism go to a party...

March 9, 2011 at 3:27pm
Samarpita Samaddar (Class of 2010)
Public Relations: At a party, you see a gorgeous girl. You get up n straighten your tie; you walk up to her, pour her a drink. You open the door for her,offer her a ride, and then say,"By the way, I'm rich. Will you marry me?"

Advertising: You're at a party with a bunch of friends and you see a gorgeous girl. One of your friends goes up to her, points at you and says, "He's rich. Marry him."

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Ramesh Prabhu
Journalism: As you join the party, you see PR and Advertising quarrelling over the prettiest girl there. You swing by, give her the look, throw her a line (or your byline -- you're a journalist, after all!). And she says, "Marry me."
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