A to Z challenge: JT Leroy & Anne Lamott

I couldn’t think of two more different writers if I tried, but both JT Leroy and Anne Lamott are influential for me.

Anne Lamott is, perhaps, obvious. She’s the author of Bird By Bird, which most writers have read. (And if you haven’t, you should.) It’s part memoir, part instructions on how to be a writer, and definitely helpful for anyone who is stuck or staring at the blank page beating herself up.

After years of pretty notebooks being given to me by well-meaning relatives, I had a fear of “ruining” the pages with my words, and Lamott had something extremely useful to say on the subject: don’t buy pretty notebooks, because first drafts are always shitty.

It’s why I favor the black and white composition books that no real schoolchildren ever use (also apparently the favorite of Harriet the Spy), as well as the super-cheapo 70-sheet spirals with green covers. You have to let yourself be messy in order to get anything good, so I buy the cheapest notebooks possible and let my mind run wild. They’re not for public consumption, so who cares what they look like on the outside?

JT Leroy, on the other hand, is not about inspiring so much as destroying. Or, perhaps more correctly, revealing difficult truths. Though Leroy originally claimed to be “a teenage hustler who’d been pimped out as a cross-dressed prostitute by his mother at truck stops throughout the South,” it was eventually revealed that this was a character created by writer Laura Albert and portrayed by Savannah Knoop.

The literary hoax caused quite the furor, as Leroy had a lot of celebrity admirers who felt duped. But guess what? I don’t give a damn about any of that. I’m interested in the writing behind the author, and that writing is really good.

If you haven’t read Sarah and The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things, go grab a copy of each right now. (And don’t cheat and watch the Asia Argento movie version of the latter, dammit.) They’re disturbing, but they’re meant to be. And it doesn’t matter if they’re true stories or not; they’re just damn good ones. Sad ones, too.

As Albert says in this interview with the Paris Review:

Everything you need to know about me is in my books, in ways that I don’t even understand. I think some people take it for granted to be acknowledged and not overlooked. My experience was to be completely ignored and disregarded and disdained. That’s what I write about.

Was JT Leroy a lie? No. Leroy was a persona, and authors all have them, whether they admit it or not. It seems to me that people were upset because they thought they had connected with Leroy, at first by reading his writing and later in person, but when they discovered “Leroy” himself was a fiction, it somehow made his work invalid or deceitful. It was a fiction on top of a fiction, but they were upset because they had mistaken Leroy’s fiction for reality.

This is why I am so annoyed with people who cannot seem to accept the concept that writing labeled fiction is made up. It may be inspired by a person’s real-life experiences, but when it’s written on the page, it’s a story—a creative work, an interpretation, a drama. It’s the lie that tells a truth, as they say, but it’s not a literal account of what really happened. Fiction is make-believe. Don’t ever mistake it for reality and you won’t get hurt.

What do you think about JT Leroy and Anne Lamott? Who’s your favorite L author?

P.S. If you’re hankering for more A to Z Challenge madness, don’t forget to check out my “Ninja Weapons from A to Z” post at rebelsofthe512.com!

Literary Snobbery meme

I was tagged by two of the most fabulous Facebook users in the world, AV Flox and Atherton Bartelby, so obvs I have to complete their literary meme now! Feel free to join in the snobbery if you are a literary type, or wallow in your tragic illiteracy if not. (This has also been posted on my Facebook page, so apologies if you’ve already read it there.)

1) wintersonWhat author do you own the most books by?
Jeanette Winterson

2) What book do you own the most copies of?
I don’t really have any repeats, though I’ve bought Beautiful Losers at least three times now. Damn Cohen thieves.

3) Did it bother you that both those questions ended with prepositions?
It’s post-gym. I’m tired. Eff prepositions in the arse. But yes.

4) What fictional character are you secretly in love with?
Holly Golightly, bless her whorish little soul.

4a) What fictional character would you most like to be?
Hmm. That’s a tough one, as I always seem to like the losers, the underdogs, and the not-entirely-together. Let’s go with Harriet the Spy. She still amuses, after all these years.

4b) What fictional character do you think most resembles you?
Lolita. Or maybe Humbert Humbert?

5) What book have you read the most times in your life?
Beautiful Losers

6) harrietthespyWhat was your favorite book when you were ten years old?
Harriet the Spy. Or maybe those god-awful Sweet Valley High books. I devoured books in series, back then.

7) What is the worst book you’ve read in the past year?
Undoubtedly something I had to review for publication, so I will keep mum.

8) What is the best book you’ve read in the past year?
The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things, J.T. LeRoy

9) If you could force everyone you tagged to read one book, what would it be?
I think I may be forced to echo Ms. Flox on this one: “The one I publish one day, duh.”

10) Who deserves to win the next Nobel Prize for literature?
Salman Rushdie. I mean, c’mon already. Does the fatwa not speak for itself?

11) What book would you most like to see made into a movie?
I fear most good books make terrible movies, but what about Post Office?

12) What book would you least like to see made into a movie?
Any and all books that fall under the heading “chick lit.”

13) Describe your weirdest dream involving a writer, book, or literary character.
Nabokov’s son emailed me to tell me how bad I suck because of a sex column I wrote. Wait, that was real.

14) What is the most lowbrow book you’ve read as an adult?
Happiness™ by Will Ferguson

15) What is the most difficult book you’ve ever read?
Anything by Kathy Acker. I have problems with “experimental” literature and plagiarism.

16) What is the most obscure Shakespeare play you’ve seen?
This is embarrassing, but I have only seen Othello with a high school class. And we were mostly mortified by the way the actors showered us with spittle, sitting in the front row. Umbrella? Thanks.

17) Do you prefer the French or the Russians?
I am currently reading Anna Karenina, so I will side with the Russians. For now.

18) Roth or Updike?
Having never read any Roth (the shame! the horror!) I will say Updike.

19) davidsedarisDavid Sedaris or Dave Eggers?
Sedaris, hands down. Eggers is a poseur.

20) Shakespeare, Milton, or Chaucer?
No thank you. I successfully avoided all of these classes as an English Lit major and I’m not about to cave now!

21) Austen or Eliot?
I don’t do “lady authors.”

22) What is the biggest or most embarrassing gap in your reading?
It is a bit embarrassing that one can have an English Lit degree without having been forced to take the Shakespeare, Milton or Chaucer courses at one’s university, but I refuse to feel shame. I have seen enough to know it’s not for me.

23) What is your favorite novel?
Beautiful Losers

24) Play?
Is it plebian of me to say “The Shape of Things”?

25) Poem?
“As the Mist Leaves No Scar,” Leonard Cohen

26) Essay?
“Art Objects,” Jeanette Winterson

27) tiffanysShort story?
“Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” Truman Capote

28) Work of non-fiction?
Kitchen Confidential, Anthony Bourdain

29) Who is your favorite writer?
I love my man LC, but I feel compelled to say J.M. Coetzee.

30) Who is the most overrated writer alive today?
That damn woman who wrote those stupid “Twilight” books that all the pre-teens are reading these days. Bleh!

31) What is your desert island book?
I hate these “desert island” questions, since I can never decide whether I want an old fave or something that will keep me occupied for a long while. How about the Tao Te Ching just to hurt my brain?

32) And … what are you reading right now?
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy, as well as Do Everything in the Dark by Gary Indiana, and a vast assortment of magazines, newspaper articles and whatever’s close at hand.

15 books in 15 minutes

Here’s a meme everyone can play along with.

THE RULES:

This can be a quick one. Don’t take too long to think about it. Fifteen books you’ve read that will always stick with you. First fifteen you can recall in no more than 15 minutes. Tag 15 friends, including me because I’m interested in seeing what books my friends choose. Ready? Go!

  1. beautifullosersBeautiful Losers by Leonard Cohen
  2. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
  3. Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit by Jeanette Winterson
  4. Anna Karenina by Tolstoy (as it’s taking FOREVER for me just to read it!)
  5. The First Five by Henry Rollins
  6. The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
  7. The Moor’s Last Sigh by Salman Rushdie
  8. Madame Bovary by Flaubert (probably because I read it WAY too young)
  9. those effing vampire books by Anne Rice—The Vampire Lestat, Interview with a Vampire, Queen of the Damned, etc. (ah, impressionable youth)
  10. Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand (anyone who’s read it as a young person understands why this will stick)
  11. The Pearl by John Steinbeck (I think I had to read this three times in junior high, no wonder)
  12. Invisible Monsters by Chuck Palahniuk
  13. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
  14. Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote (okay, it’s a short story; so sue me)
  15. Sarah by J.T. LeRoy