Professor Dumbledore’s outing has actually received some thoughtful consideration around the internet. Some reactions you may have missed:
- At Salon, Rebecca Traister says that J.K. Rowling needs to shut up and let the books speak for themselves, “…from a literary perspective, she’s out of control here.” (Thanks for the link, Frank.)
- At JewishyIrishy, Laurel Snyder thinks that Rowling missed an opportunity by not making the revelation in her books, “I feel like Rowling missed her shot. But I’m glad she’s outing him now.”
- At The Onion, a “man on the street interview” finds someone not caught up in the hoopla: “Wow. I hadn’t heard that. I’ve been really busy lately not caring about the sexual preferences of fictional people.”
The NYT Book Review interviews Marjane Satrapi, author of Persepolis (film version comes out in the US on Dec 25!). Is it me, or is Satrapi one crabby lady? When was the last time you heard someone throw out “bourgeoisie” in a conversation?
Callie at the CounterBalance blog has been on a roll:
- Part 1 of a recap of a Junot Diaz reading in L.A.
- An interview with Mark Z. Danielewski
- Another reason to love 90 year-old first time author Millard Kaufman
The Millions blog dreams up a hilarious list of the top 10 most anticipated books.
La Bloga interviews Junot Diaz (that guy is everywhere).
The Coen Brothers talk to Carmac McCarthy: “If it were a reality show it would be called Eccentric Genius Island.”
October 30th, 2007 at 3:04 pm
I’m a little late on this one, and by no means have I had a shot at reading all of the information linked to above, but my question–
Since when are we supposed to trust authors when they’re talking about their own work? Seems like they’d be some of the least trustworthy folks out there.
That said, listen to authors all you want (especially that Brock Clarke!), but have faith in what they tell you? No thanks.
October 30th, 2007 at 3:13 pm
I’m just glad to see that my Gay Dumbledore costume, which I’ve worn for the last five Halloweens, has finally been legitimized.