Coloquio Online Spanish MagazineBaltimore's Inner Harbor

La Revista electrónica de la comunidad hispana del area metropolitana de Baltimore-Washington DC
The Electronic Newsletter of the Hispanic community of Baltimore-Washington DC metropolitan area

 

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Eric GoodmanEric D. Goodman is a full-time writer and editor.  National Public Radio’s WYPR recently called him “a regular on the Baltimore literary scene.”  His work as been published in The Washington Post, The Baltimore Review, The Baltimore Sun, The Los Angeles Times, Slow Trains, Smile Hon You’re In Baltimore, On Stage Magazine, Writers Weekly, The Arabesques Review, Travel Insights, JMWW,  To Be Read Aloud,and Neck of My Guitar.  He’s read his fiction on WYPR, at the Baltimore Book Festival, Patterson Theater, and was a featured author at Book Expo America 2009 in New York City, Baltimore Authors Showcase, and Catonsville’s Book Festival.  Eric is also a two-time finalist in the Chesterfield Writer’s Film Project founded by Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment, four-time winner of National Novel Writing Month, and winner of the Newsletter on Newsletter’s Gold Award for superior editing.  Learn more about the literary life by reading Eric’s weekly Lit Bit, and visit his literary blog for readers and writers, Writeful

 

The Literary Life:
by Eric D. Goodman
        

Updike Down

Is it just me, or does it seem that we’re losing our Great American Writers?

Watching them fall like a heavy rain of letters and semicolons.

I woke with that thought yesterday.  It ended up being the opening of the first and only poem I’ve written this year.  Like much of my creative fiction and poetry, the idea comes to live in my head and roosts: I sit on a train and look at all of the passengers and imagine their lives; I imagine what it must be like for a child inside the womb; I watch a spider ride a wave down the drain of the shower and wish it hadn’t gone so soon.

This thought—about the great writers dying off—came yesterday when I realized it was the two-year anniversary of John Updike’s death.

Updike, like Rabbit, is at rest.

Sure, there are still hundreds, probably thousands, of Great American Writers.  But somehow Updike is lodged in my mind as one of the giants, a powerhouse in league with Hemingway, Steinbeck and Faulkner; Henry James and Mark Twain.  A writer of serious literature.  There are masterful authors at work now, certainly.  But when it comes to the representatives of literature, the old men in tweed jackets, sleeves rolled up and a single slice of paper rolled in the typewriter … have they all died off?

If not, will they soon?  Who are the contenders in the collective conscious of the universal library?  Roth?  Irving?  Franzen?  Wolfe? McDermott?

(We’ve recently lost contenders Wallace, Mailer and Vonnegut.)

Now, with Updike down, who will carry on the tradition?  Who will play the music of heavy keys and bleeding fingers, clanking out a soundtrack of antiquated print?

If you’d like to nominate someone as a literary great, visit the Atticus Books website and leave your nomination in the comments section.
http://atticusbooksonline.com/updike-down/

For more about the “literary life,” visit my lit blog at www.Writeful.blogspot.com.
The new Great American Writers: any nominations?
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