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This blog is © Scott Lax 2009 & 2010
READING LIST 2010
(Novels, Nonfiction Books, Short Stories, Long-form essays and some poems are included)
1. "The Deposition" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
2. "Down to Bone" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
3. "Nightengale" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
4. "The Benefit of the Doubt" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
5. "Deep Kiss" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
6. "The Liar" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
7. "Top of The Pops," about Andy Warhol, essay by Louis Menand, The New Yorker
8. "Soldiers Joy" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
9. "The Rich Brother" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
10. "Leviathan" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
11. "Desert Breakdown, 1968" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
12. "Say Yes" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
13. "Mortals" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
14. "Flyboys" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
15. "Sanity" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
16. "The Other Miller" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
17. "Two Boys and a Girl" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
18. "The Chain" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
19. HAVANAS IN CAMELOT (Essays) William Styron
15. "Smorgasbord" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
16. "Lady's Dream" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
17. "Powder" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
18. "The Night in Question" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
19. "Firelight" (Short Story) Tobias Wolff
20. "Bullet in the Brain" (Tobias Wolff)
21. "A Perfect Day for Banana Fish" (Short Story) J.D. Salinger
22. INDIGNATION (Novel) Philip Roth
23. "It's Six A.M. Do You Know Where You Are?" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
24. "Smoke" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
25. "Invisible Fences" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
26. "The Madonna of Turkey Season (Short Story) Jay McInerney
27. "Third Party" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
28. "In the North-West Frontier Province" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
29. "Appetite" (Short Story) Said Sayrafiezadeh
30. "My Public Service" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
31. "The Waiter" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
32. "The Queen and I" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
33. "The Debutante's Return" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
34. "Simple Gifts" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
35. "How it Ended" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
36. "Head Case: Can psychiatry be saved?" (Essay) Louis Menand
37. "Story of My Life" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
38. "Philomentha" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
39. "Con Doctor" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
40. "Getting In Touch With Lonnie" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
41. "Summary Judgment" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
42. "I.D." (Short Story) Joyce Carol Oates
43. "I Love You, Honey" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
44. "Sleeping With Pigs" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
45. "Everything is Lost" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
46. "Reunion" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
47. "Putting Daisy Down" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
48. "The Business" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
49. "Penelope on the Pond" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
50. "The Last Bachelor" (Short Story) Jay McInerney
51. "Gavin Highly" (Short Story) Janet Frame
52. "The TV" (Short Story) Ben Loory
53. YOU: ON A DIET: The Owner's Manual for Waist Management (nonfiction book) Mehmet C. Oz, M.D., Michael F. Roizen, M.D
54. "The Lower River" (Short Story) Paul Theroux
55. "Master of Revels: Neil Simon’s comic empire" (Essay) .by John Lahr
56. "The Hunted: Did American conservationists in Africa go too far?" (Essay) by Jeffrey Goldberg
57. "Trailhead" (Short Story) E.O. Wilson
58, "Ash" (Short Story) Roddy Doyle
59. "What Did Jesus Do? Reading and unreading theGospels" (Essay) by Adam Gopnik
60. "Exhaust" (Poem) C.K. Williams
61. "Roanoke Pastorale" (Poem) David Huddle
62. "Agreeable" (Short Story) Jonathan Franzen
63. "Extreme Solitude" (Short Story) Jeffrey Eugenides
64. "Letter From Chicago: The Daley Show-the most powerful mayor in America" (essay) Evan Osnos
65. SCOUNDREL TIME (Novel) Lillian Hellman
66. THE RED THREAD (Novel) Ann Hood
Reading list 2009
1. THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD (novel) - John Le Carre
2. SNARK (nonfiction book) - David Denby
3. A YEAR IN PROVENCE (nonfiction book) - Peter Mayle
4. A SIMPLE PLAN (novel) - Scott Smith
5. TENDER IS THE NIGHT (novel) - F. Scott Fitzgerald
6. OUTLIERS: THE STORY OF SUCCESS (nonfiction book) - Malcolm Gladwell
7. ENCORE PROVENCE (nonfiction book) - Peter Mayle
8. THE DEVIL TREE (novel) - Jerzy Kosinski
9. BIG BAD LOVE (fiction, book of short stories)- Larry Brown (re-read)
10. BRIGHT LIGHTS, BIG CITY (novel) - Jay McInerney' (re-read)
11. A HEDONIST IN THE CELLAR: Adventures in Wine (nonfiction book) - Jay McInerney
12. NETHERLAND (novel) - Joseph O'Neill
13. "A Sliver Dish" (short story) - Saul Bellow
14. "Gesturing" (short story) - John Updike
15. "Janus" (short story) Ann Beattie
16. "The Things they Carried" (short story) - Tim O'Brien (re-read)
17. "Crazy Sunday" (short story) - F. Scott Fitzgerald (re-read)
18. "Once More to the Lake" (essay) - E.B. White (re-read)
19. "Indianapolis (Highway 74) - (short story) Sam Shepard
20. "In the Garden of the North American Writers" (short story) Tobias Wolff
21. "Next Door" (short story) Tobias Wolff
22. "Hunters in the Snow" (short story) Tobias Wolff
23. "That Room" (short story) Tobias Wolff
24. "A White Bible" (short story) Tobias Wolff
25. "Her Dog" (short story) Tobias Wolff
26. "A Mature Student" (short story) Tobias Wolff
AWARDS AND RECOGNITION - SCOTT LAX
TEACHING
2010 - The Hub City Writers' Workshop of South Carolina awards the second annual Scott Lax Prize in Writing to Bertrice Robinson. The Scott Lax Prize is a full-ride, one-week scholarship to the Wild Acres Writers Workshop in North Carolina. This award was established in 2008 by Hillcrest Publications of Spartanburg, S.C., "in recognition of novelist Scott Lax of Ohio."
2009 - The Hub City Writers' Workshop of South Carolina awards the first annual Scott Lax Prize in Writing to Josette Davison.
FICTION
February 14, 2010 - Scott Lax's short story, "Sales Call," won 2nd Place for Fiction Lit's (Cleveland's Literary Center) Muse Magazine 2010 Literary Competition.
1999 - The Year That Trembled, a Novel named Vermont Book of the Year, Runner-Up.
Dec. 1998 - The Year That Trembled, a Novel, named of of 1998’s “Milestones in Fiction by Denver Post.
1998 - Sewanee Writers’ Conference (Univ. of the South), Walter E. Dakin Fellowship in Fiction
NON-FICTION
May 22, 2010 - In the Ohio Professional Writers 2010 Communications Contest, Scott Lax won Second Place for "Original Columns, General."
May 16, 2009 - In the Ohio Professional Writers 2009 Communication Contest, Scott Lax was awarded:
1. First Place for "Original Columns, General"
2. First Place for "Feature Story, Magazine"
3. Second Place for "Special Series, Print Media."
June 2008: Ohio Excellence in Journalism Award, statewide competition, sponsored by The Cleveland Press Club, Honorable Mention, Best Single Essay, Open Print
1993 - Bread Loaf Writer’ Conference (Middlebury College), Bernard J. O’Keefe Scholarship in Nonfiction
1994, 1995 - Bread Loaf Writer’s Conference, Staff Scholarship
FILM
2002 - Midwest Filmmaker of the Year, Cleveland International Film Festival
2002 - Producer’s Award, Winner, People’s Choice, Cincinnati International Film Festival
2002 - Producer’s Award, Winner, Best Regional Feature, Cincinnati International Film Festival
2002 - Bessie’s People’s Choice Award, Burlington, VT City Arts, Favorite Film
OTHERS
2002 - City of Cleveland Certificate of Congratulations for body of work
1999 - Named to fourteen-person list of Hiram College’s “Most Illustrious Alumni"
Recommended Web Sites & Blogs
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January 28, 2010
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J.D. Salinger, Jerry Salinger, death of, Catcher in the Rye, Nine Stories
J.D. Salinger died. He gave us great literature that changed the way America and the world thought about stories. As for his personal life, he wanted to keep that private. I know a member of his immediate family, and my thoughts go out to that person and anyone else associated with J.D. Salinger who cared about him as a man.
Salinger gave voice to my generation's disaffection with established cultural values, decades earlier than they manifested in the culture itself; that influence continues. He certainly influenced my writing and my view of life and he entertained me. I couldn't have asked for more of him as a writer.
At a writers' conference last year, I gave a presentation. A young man, maybe in his early twenties, came up to me after my talk. He told me that CATCHER IN THE RYE and my novel, THE YEAR THAT TREMBLED, were his favorite novels. While I would never compare TREMBLED with CATCHER, he was likely saying that both coming-of-age stories evoked something important in him.
The larger point is: a writer is charged with trying to evoke something in his or her readers. It's not to be a role model -- as a writer. (As a father, husband, etc., that's different.) That's ultimately the writer's job - to evoke feelings and thoughts. And that's all. May Salinger rest in peace.
January 22, 2010
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Transcendentalists, Emerson, Whitman, Thoreau, cleverness, opposite of, the icon of The Writer
My earliest influences were the American Transcendentalists, particularly Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman. They began writing in mid-nineteenth-century New England. The essence of their work was to push back against the Puritan ethic and materialism, and they celebrated freedom, individualism, inquiry, experiment and intuitive spirituality. They were at the literary center of American letters for half a century.
I think it helps to have some sense of where you write from in an intellectual and spiritual (or religious) sense. When I teach creative writing, I spend the first couple of classes working with students to access their writerly selves, so that they can supplant what’s been called “the icon of The Writer” with their own writer’s sensibility.
Real writing – that is, writing that lasts, that can take readers somewhere they’ve never been – usually comes from a writer’s core. Not from mere cleverness. Cleverness that affects intellect and hides honest feeling is like weeds growing where nothing else dares: in the cracks of a culture’s spiritual and intellectual sidewalks. It’s there, sure, but often ugly and ultimately abandoned, withered and forgotten.
January 19, 2010
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Eleanor Roosevelt
Maybe you agree that one of the biggest blocks to having a career as a writer, or even submitting your writing, is fear. Fear of rejection; fear of failure. I can't think of better advice than that of Eleanor Roosevelt, who said:
"You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You must do the thing which you think you cannot do."
What are you afraid of as a writer? When you identify it, you can face it and work and write through it.
January 17, 2010
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Golden Globes
Like many of you, I enjoy watching the Golden Globes. I respect actors, directors, set designers, production assistants, and the hundreds of other people that go into creating a film or TV show.
But I never forget one thing: every one of those shows or movies was written and/or conceived of by a writer. Story trumps all. Thanks to actors and all the rest for bringing them to life; but believe me when I say that they know where the story begins: with the writer.
January 12, 2010
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Kahlil Gibran, why should I write, why you should write
(Please substitute she for he, or woman for man, as needed)...
"The significance of a man is not in what he attains but in what he longs to attain." - Kahlil Gibran
If we apply that to writing, it's the act of writing - of reaching our writerly selves and allowing it to flow into our work - that matters. Most of us want to be published, and read, and so forth, but what gives our words significance is what we long to say. Writing from the heart makes that longing come alive.
January 10, 2010
Tags:
Graham Greene, writing talent
Graham Greene said, "Talent, even of a very high order, cannot sustain an achievement, whereas a ruling passion gives to a shelf of novels the unity of a system."
In other words, you have to care about what you're writing if you hope to achieve anything that matters to you -- and your readers.
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Nonfiction
Click here for samples of published nonfiction by Scott Lax
Click here to read some of Scott's columns, essays and features, including the 2009 Ohio Professional Writers First Place Award-winning column and feature.
Fiction
Click here for more on "The Year That Trembled," a novel by Scott Lax
“One of 1998’s Milestones in Fiction--Powerful!” --The Denver Post, Tom Walker, Book Editor (Please click the link above to read more reviews)
Film
Click here for more on "The Year That Trembled," a feature film, source written and produced by Scott Lax
"The most important movie of the year." - The Ithaca Times (Please click the above link to read more reviews)
Theatre
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Evans Printing CompanyIf you represent a bookstore or chain, you can order my novel, THE YEAR THAT TREMBLED, here. (It's not out of print; the previous publisher, Paul S. Eriksson, closed out his company and sold out his stock.)
The Scott Lax Prize in WritingAwarded by the Hub City Writers Project; established 2008
The Authors GuildScott's a member since 1998
Ohio Professional Writers, IncScott won two first place awards and one second in 2009. Click "About Scott," above, for more on those awards; click here for information on the OPW.
ALS AssociationWorking for a cure to treat and fight ALS
Bright Side of the Road Foundation Funding research in the battle against ALS |
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