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Wednesday, Oct 05
Picking Up the PiecesIn 1925, William Faulkner spent a year in New Orleans, subletting the ground floor of a French Quarter home. He kicked off his writing career with appearances in a local literary journal from that home, as well as completing his first novel, Soldiers' Pay. Today, Faulkner House is preserved by a non-profit organization that provides resources for aspiring writers, including an annual arts festival that was to be held next month, before Katrina changed everybody's plans. Faulkner Society co-directors Rosemary James and Joseph DeSalvo, who live in the building's upper floors and have been away since evacuating just before the storm hit, made it back to the house recently to check on the damage. In an email, they report no single large calamity, but a lengthy catalog of little things that add up:
"And we are among the fortunate," James and DeSalvo reflect. The Society has hit a financial snag, however, as its annual membership drive was scheduled to kick off during the first week of September and, of course, never did. Their solicationat continues online. New Yorkers will have another, more localized opportunity to help Katrina victims next Monday night (Oct. 10), when Bookforum hosts a benefit reading at the Cooper Union. Among those scheduled to appear in support of the Acadian Arts Council: Robert Stone, Donna Tartt, Roy Blount, Jr., and John Barry--who, you'll recall, wrote the book on the flood of '27. There will also be "special musical guests" of an undisclosed nature. Email This Post |
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