“Which game would you rather play? I’ll give you a choice of two. One. Every picture tells a story. Two. Every story tells a picture.”1 So proposes Daniel Gluck to…
Archive for May, 2022
Shifting Sands: Re-Reading Ali Smith’s Autumn
I first read Ali Smith’s Autumn in book club. Serendipity dropped me onto an Upper East Side studio couch, and for many months after, I found myself crowded in amongst a cohort…
Whose Life Is It Anyway?
“Now to sum up,” said Bernard. “Now to explain to you the meaning of my life.” — Woolf, The Waves I was reading, desultorily, the stories of Muriel Spark during a…
Ali Smith’s Poetic Attentions
We call a poet a “poet’s poet” when they’re read mostly by other poets. By implication, a poet’s poet is difficult or obscure or both. When I call certain novelists…
Here and Now
It is an incontrovertible fact that works of art age. The distance between the time when a novel is written and the time when it is read only grows wider….
How to be strange
Hi, the visitor called Charlotte says. Hi, he says. Visitor. Visitation. There seems to be a force which bodies, by their very presence, exert on each other — Ali Smith, Summer (76)…
Never Being Boring: Ali Smith’s Amends
In How to be Both, one of Ali Smith’s signature smart and snarky teenage girls, George, and her mother, an online activist-artist, have an argument about the lyrics to the Pet…
Wordsmith
If you have read anything by Ali Smith, you’ll be familiar with the grip that all things lexical have on her authorial imagination. In the final novel of the Quartet, Summer,…
Introduction: Companioning Ali Smith Now
Hello? tap-tap-tap Hello? Cara L. Lewis: Hello! Here we both are, in a virtual commons. Debra Rae Cohen: This is a virtual conclave, isn’t it — bruited on Twitter, assembled by email,…
The Gift of Epiphany
Here again it was all so natural to me and more and more complicatedly a continuous present. A continuous present is a continuous present. I made almost a thousand pages…