The Year of the Depend Adult Undergarment.

from here.

The other day I came across this interesting post on io9 concerning David Foster Wallace

from here.

Last year the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin received DFW’s archive, which apparently consists of 30 boxes and eight oversized folders. In September they opened the archive to researchers, but with that they put a few very interesting scans online, including a handwritten page from the first draft of Infinite Jest (I still have a hardy laugh at the thought that Wallace’s working title for the mammoth novel was “A Failed Entertainment”), but that’s not it.

Wallace taught a class at Pomona college, “English 102 — Literary Analysis I: Prose Fiction,” and amongst the scans that the Harry Ransom Center put up are pages from his personal copies of some of the books he taught in said class. Much loved, well worn books that include scribbles throughout. Here you’ll find…

…pages from Stephen King’s Carrie

and below is a page from C.S. Lewis’ The Lion, The Witch, And The Wardrobe:

With these pages and DFW’s forthcoming posthumous novel The Pale King, I fear that we may see the last of previously unseen material fueled into his legacy. I think he’ll stand just fine on his own, but sometimes I wish he had left just a ton of material behind to be released periodically. Like J.D. Salinger, maybe. Or Tupac.

At the gates of the animal kingdom.

Hipster puppies?

Sea Dogs” and the paragon of animals.

Iran launches rocket carrying animals into orbit.

Fuck life, now there’s thirdhand smoke!

from here.

Half-naked women protest Ukranian election.

Diffusing a bomb with an axe while 20,000 feet above Germany.

Energy, tax, budget cuts, and “lift American spirits.”

Sade soldiers on.

Borges was a neuroscientist?

J. D. Salinger: “Recluse” with an ugly history with women.

Bruce Sterling and atemporality.

Is Quentin Tarantino a great director?

Slogging and blogging.

Underdog theory debunked.

New Samuel R. Delany novel.

Zoomorphism” in science fiction.

from here.

Experiencing the void” at the Guggenheim.

Oral sex, a knight fight, and then sperm impregnated a girl.

Bugs migrate like birds.

New Spiderman device could let humans walk on walls.

from here.

“Don’t ever tell anybody anything. If you do, you start missing everybody.”

“What I was really hanging around for, I was trying to feel some kind of a good-by. I mean I’ve left schools and places I didn’t even know I was leaving them. I hate that. I don’t care if it’s a sad good-by or a bad good-by, but when I leave a place I like to know I’m leaving it. If you don’t, you feel even worse.”

from here.

“That’s the whole trouble. You can’t ever find a place that’s nice and peaceful, because there isn’t any. You may think there is, but once you get there, when you’re not looking, somebody’ll sneak up and write ‘Fuck you’ right under your nose. Try it sometime. I think, even, if I ever die, and they stick me in a cemetery, and I have a tombstone and all, it’ll say ‘Holden Caulfield’ on it, and then what year I was born and what year I died, and then right under that it’ll say ‘Fuck you.’ I’m positive, in fact.”

RIP J. D. Salinger, 91 year old reclusive author of 1951′s The Catcher In The Rye, which is almost universally and immortally beloved, and several other books, including his collection, Nine Stories, featuring the fantastic short story, “A Perfect Day For Bananafish.” And, you can find more of his short stories here. He’s been on the run from fame and possibly the rest of society since 1965, being both a hater of the world of phonies and drawing inspiration from it. Salinger is a writer that loved the art of writing, but just for himself, and it’s said that he’s written as many as 15 books since he stepped away from the public eye.

from here.

“I hope to hell that when I do die somebody has the sense to just dump me in the river or something. Anything except sticking me in a goddamn cemetery. People coming and putting a bunch of flowers on your stomach on Sunday, and all that crap. Who wants flowers when you’re dead? Nobody.”

Nobody wants flowers when they’re dead.

“What really knocks me out is a book that, when you’re all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it. That doesn’t happen much, though.”

-from chapter 3 of Catcher In The Rye.

I’ll resume howling at the moon tomorrow probably, but today I just wanted to share a chuckle with you not only that someone is attempting a “sequel” to J. D. Salinger’s Catcher In The Rye, but that Salinger himself is coming out of his intense decades long seclusion to try and fight it.

Here’s the description of the sequel from Gawker:

60 Years Later, by a mysterious guy living in Sweden (!) named John David California, imagines Holden Caufield as a 76-year-old escapee from a retirement home wandering the streets of New York City. Salinger’s lawyers argue that “the sequel is not a parody and it does not comment upon or criticise the original. It is a ripoff pure and simple.”

Wow. That sounds like a very special kind of bad. Way to go, John David California. Also, your nom de plume is a bad “homage” to Jerome David, but also sounds like the lamest porn name ever. But it leaves me amazed, thinking about it, that someone hasn’t crossed that uncrossable line and bastardized a movie version of the classic book. I guess I’m pleased that some things are still sacred?

On the internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.

It’s Wednesday, the middle of the week, and it’s pouring down rain where I am. I just watched Wanted and The X-Files: I Want To Believe, so my brain is an absolute mish mash of bad logic, amazingly uncharismatic acting, and poorly manipulated visuals. Oh, and I just read this quote from William Gibson: “The NET is a waste of time, and that’s exactly what’s right about it,” and right now, I could not agree more, y’know?

If you’re having a bad day: Lesbian Vampire Killers!

Speaking of lesbians, I guess The L Word is going to kill off one of their characters and the show will become a kind of murder mystery? That’s interesting, but what’s more interesting is that the show is still on.

Also speaking of lesbians, remember Topanga from Boy Meets World? Yeah, you do.

Mark Romanek and Alex Garland are going to adapt Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go.

Gabriel Garcia Marquez is working on a new book.

J. D. Salinger’s women.

How stem cells are finally starting to deliver.

Swedish scientists create “body swapping” illusion.

Flying penis interrupts Gary Kasparov’s speech. Suck on that, Deep Blue.

Beer is good for you?

Amazon.com deliveries are way behind this year. Take that, holiday shopping.

Jay Leno is heading to prime time after he finally surrenders The Tonight Show, which makes a very sad kind of sense, and The Roots are going to be Jimmy (ugh) Fallon’s house band, if you didn’t know that already. “So, ?uestlove, how about that game last night?” Why would the Roots do this to themselves?

Somebody microwaved a cell phone? Yes, somebody did. I’m sad to say that I watched this because it’s… like watching an inanimate object coming to life and mutating into a hideous alien creature complete with creepy death squeal. It’s pretty cool.

Hawkeyes fan says bathroom sex scandal “ruined my life.”

On The Internet, Nobody Knows You’re A Dog by Peter Steiner from the July 5, 1993 issue of The New Yorker.

Is it possible that we’re actually getting smarter and not stupider? Or, is it just a little of both?

I was celibate for 15 years.

I believe that religion is far more of a lifestyle choice than sexuality is.” -Jon Stewart having to welcome Mike Huckabee to the human race in the year 2008. And today is Call In Gay day, right?

How much do you think this kickass drawing of a spider is worth?

The Donkey Punch, as explained to you by your good friends at Fox News.

Adorable animals: Big fat bunny! And incest-bred tiger! Awww. And, of course, there’s always this:

“Twenty years ago no one could have imagined the effects the internet would have: entire relationships flourish, friendships prosper… There’s a vast new intimacy and accidental poetry, not to mention the weirdest porn. The entire human existence seems to unveil itself like the surface of a new planet.” -J. G. Ballard in an interview with The Guardian a few years ago.

Band Of Horses – Lamb On The Lam (In The City)(mp3)

Low – Monkey (mp3)

Department Of Eagles – Romo-Goth (mp3)

Until next time, playas.

Chinese Democracy vs. Chinese democracy.

Chinese FUCKING Democracy!

Is this real? Is this a thing that could actually be? Could this seriously be coming out in five days? Or are they just using my illusion against me?

But no, nooooo, this may actually be real. This time next week, I could actually be holding the damn near mythical, fabled and long awaited album by Axl Rose (Yes, it’s Guns N’ Roses, but I mean, really, that’s just been Axl for decades now). There’s even a Chuck Klosterman review out there to prove it. Fuck, there’s even tribute albums out there to it. We may actually be that Dr. Pepper after all.

The wikipedia article for this album is fascinating and quite possibly the longest I’ve ever seen for an album that has’t come out yet. There’s even a fascinating offshoot article about just the timeline of the album’s production, or lack of production, that is very detailed (though lacking details such as the fact that when Axl compiled one of his line ups for the new GNR, the one with Buckethead, that he took the time to have them re-record Appetite For Destruction so they’d know what it feels like to record a great Guns N’ Roses album) and interesting. Hell, someone even went to the trouble of compiling the history of all the leaks of the album over the years.

A short list of the people who’ve worked on the album over the years includes: Axl Rose, Buckethead, Bumblefoot, Andy Wallace, Bob Ezrin, Josh Freese, Dizzy Reed, Tommy Stinson, Sebastian Bach (who says that Chinese Democracy is merely the first of a trilogy of albums, with the third destined to drop in 2012, just in time for the end of the world), Marco Beltrami, Paul Buckmaster, Robin Finck, Richard Fortus, and Roy Thomas Baker. Oh, and Shaq, who apparently rapped on a track, which may or may not have survived to the actual album itself. And Moby and Youth apparently turned down an offer to do some production at one point.

Do you remember when “Oh My God” came out way back when on the End Of Days soundtrack and everyone was like, “Whoa, Chinese Democracy is going to sound like some kind of weird Nine Inch Nails thing?” Well, that may not be exactly how you worded it, but you were probably thinking it. I’m amazed that Trent Reznor wasn’t offered work on this behemoth.

Originally I was going to do this post on Chinese Democracy the album versus democracy in China and which we’d actually see first…

…Because I fully assumed that this whole exclusive Best Buy deal would have fallen apart by now. But somehow it hasn’t. Somehow, as far as I know, this album is still coming out this coming Sunday. And because we’ll probably never see democracy in China. I mean… Come on. It’s fucking China.

But instead, we’re facing an even bigger versus issue. The crazy, long built up and heavily anticipated ideal of Chinese Democracy, an epic Homeric poem set to music in our wildest fantasies versus the actual thing. The album that you can buy at Best Buy and unwrap and take home and listen to and wonder WTF is this shit? It took fifteen years to put this out?

It’s like the ending to Lost, which will have to be epic, but will we like it. Look at the endings to Seinfeld and The Sopranos, hated by all except the hardcore fans (personally, I’d call the ending to Seinfeld beyond brilliant and couldn’t give two shits about The Sopranos in the first place). It’s like the ending to The Shield next week, which will have to be huge. It’s probably why Salinger never stopped writing after Catcher In The Rye, he just stopped releasing books. Even for a perfectionist who’s name is an anagram for oral sex, the hype will kill your ass.

Well, good, bad, or whatever, I’ll get the fucking thing this weekend. Rain or shine, in fact. Actually, no, I hope it rains. I can’t think of anything better than picking this monster up in the cold November rain.