News: August 2008 Archives
We're happy to announce the addition of two authors with new historical novels about Cuba to Session 2 of our Seminar this January 15-18. Rachel Kushner's debut novel, Telex from Cuba, is a portrait of the American colonies in pre-Revolutionary Cuba and their collapse in the face of revolutionary change, partly inspired by the experiences of her mother's family, who lived in Oriente Province in the 1950s. It received the cover review in The New York Times Book Review and raves from Carolyn See in the Washington Post ("a pure treat from the cover to the very last page.") Kushner is a former editor at Grand Street and Bomb, a coeditor at Soft Targets, and has written for Artforum, The Believer, Fence, Cabinet, and Modern Painters, among other publications. (Also– the website for Telex, though Flash-heavy and therefore finicky, is an elegant confection of faded Cuban snapshots, snatches of text, a map, and a beautiful loop of piano music.Chantel Acevedo's first novel, Love and Ghost Letters, is set in Cuba from 1938 to the 1960s, and chronicles the haunted relationship between a daughter and her exiled father. Of it, Oscar Hijuelos has written "Love and Ghost Letters is enchanting; a heartfelt story. It tells volumes about the intimate life and loves of a family in pre-Castro Cuba. Along the way, it captures beautifully the atmosphere and emotions of a time which both Cuban-Americans and many an American reader will find both reminiscent and fulfilling. A great debut." Acevedo is a professor of English at Auburn University, and has had fiction published in American Quarterly Review, Prairie Schooner, and Cimarron Review, among others.
To register for Session 2 of the 27th annual Key West Literary Seminar, Historical Fiction and The Search for Truth, click here.
If you attended the Seminar in January, you may remember Curt Richter, the Helsinki-based American photographer who seemed to be everywhere each night. He was in town through the generosity of The Studios of Key West, which made Richter their first ever artist-in-residence and hosted an exhibit at the Armory of his show, Faces and Stories: A Portrait of Southern Writers. In laudable Key West style, Richter managed to attend much of the Seminar and most of the parties while also working diligently each day on a new series of portraits. In January 2009, we've just learned, Richter will return to TSKW to debut Still and All, the result of those Key West portrait sessions. The details are, as yet, hushed. However, you can see a few of the portraits here and rest assured that we'll be collaborating in some way with the good people at TSKW for this second Richter-go-round. I spoke with Richter on the phone the other day, and asked him where he got the idea for the title:
"Still and All" came to me while re-reading a Walker Percy novel this summer– The Moviegoer. The protagonist begins a sentence with that superfluous preface, which I hadn't heard anyone say for years. It's out of fashion now, an old dialect. As a title, it worked perfectly. Why? I don't know– I'm a moviegoer, I've always been a moviegoer, and these are still photographs. A lot of people begin a sentence with 'uhh...' or "like..." "Still and all" sounded a lot better.
We are pleased to announce that Session 1 of our upcoming Seminar, Historical Fiction and the Search for Truth, is now full. With the list of speakers we've assembled, an early sellout comes as no surprise. Indeed, it is the reason we decided to make this January's event a doubleheader. Tickets remain for Session 2, which will open on January 15 at the San Carlos Institute with a keynote address by Booker Prize winner Barry Unsworth. (Read our interview with Unsworth on Littoral.) Featured speakers include Pulitzer Prize winners Marilynne Robinson and William Kennedy; Andrew Carnegie biographer David Nasaw; Toussaint Louverture biographer Madison Smartt Bell; and a number of critically acclaimed, bestselling authors of historical fiction including Anchee Min, Thomas Mallon, Andrea Barrett, Russell Banks, and Francisco Goldman.Three of our Writers' Workshops are also sold out: Alan Cheuse; Alison Lurie and Edward Hower; and Mary Morris. Spaces are available for Writers' Workshops with Billy Collins, Bich Minh Nguyen, Patricia O'Toole, Timothy Seldes, Porter Shreve, and Dara Wier.
We expect Session 2 and our workshops will also sell out. If you would like to register, please contact us at your earliest convenience. Click here to register online or to print out a form. Or call us at 1-888-293-9291.
The journal of the Key West Literary Seminar features recordings from our
audio archives, exclusive interviews, essays, news about the Seminar, and
dispatches from Key West's literary past and present. It is created by Arlo
Haskell. Send email to arlo [at] kwls [dot] org
Each January, we explore a different literary theme through lectures, panel presentations, readings, informal gatherings, and discussions. In January 2011, we explore food in literature with our 29th annual Seminar, THE HUNGRY MUSE.
C O N N E C T
S U B S C R I B E
Audio recordings on this page and elsewhere on www.kwls.org are being made
available for educational and noncommmercial use only. All rights to the recorded
material belong to the author or authors speaking. © 2008, 2009.
The Key West Literary Seminar Audio Archives Project is sponsored in part by the
State of Florida, Department of State, Division of
Cultural Affairs, the Florida Council on Arts and Culture, and the National
Endowment for the Arts.

