<![CDATA[Gawker: steve almond]]> http://cache.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: steve almond]]> http://gawker.com/tag/steve almond http://gawker.com/tag/steve almond <![CDATA[ Steve Almond Is A Hypocrite And A Bad Reader ]]> steve"God bless you!" wrote Steve Almond's editor Julia Cheiffetz to me, after we ran a long excerpt from Steve's new essay collection, effectively shoving the book into the consciousness of at least the 6,966 readers who clicked on the post and who may not have previously known of its existence. Today, Steve writes on the Huffington Post that "Until a few weeks ago, I'd never paid much attention to Gawker. I had a vague sense that they were a gossip website that had something to do with New York. Then my editor sent me a link to a post they wrote about me. As it turned out, they'd been talking shit about me for a while."

The recent few weeks have been very edifying though! He totally has our number now. According to Steve, we are like the Fox News in some amoral way and we "don't care about books" and "don't pretend to care about 'objectivity' or even accuracy for that matter," using as evidence quotes that referred solely to our reader-generated Stalker Map, not the actual site—you know, that thing the journalists call "taking quotes completely out of context."

"If this country ever hopes to rouse itself from the moral torpor marked by the Bush years, we are going to have to end our addiction to Gawking, and face up to the common crises of state." Steve concludes. Hey, buddy, don't let us keep distracting you. You get back in there and keep up your impressive and fruitful struggle against the evils of our time.

]]>
Wed, 17 Oct 2007 15:20:16 EDT Emily Gould http://gawker.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=311997&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Steve Almond's New Book Will Change The World ]]> steveSo author and daddyblogger Steve Almond's new collection of mostly previously published essays, Not That You Asked: Rants, Exploits and Obsessions, doesn't just contain a deranged yet oddly bet-hedgey open letter to Oprah. It also contains secret wisdom that will change America, reopening our eyes to the pleasures of literature and eliminating our dependence on lowbrow culture! And maybe curing AIDS and solving poverty! At least, that's what Steve seemed to be implying in the thank-you note he sent to the Random House staff who worked to publicize his book.

I do know that I wrote the book as a kind of wake-up call — a plea to the citizens of our country, that they might reconnect to literature, and awaken their hearts from a long moral slumber ... People spend more and more time in front of screens, letting the shiny abs and fake death wash over them. This is precisely what corporate America wants: they want young people who consent to the myth that happiness can be purchased via credit card.
The missive was signed, "In gratitude and hope." Hot tip, Stevie: next time, send a fruit basket. ]]>
Mon, 17 Sep 2007 12:20:10 EDT Emily Gould http://gawker.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=300474&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Steve Almond To Oprah: "I Don't Give A Shit How Many Books You Sell" ]]> steveFormer journalist and current fiction writer Steve Almond writes a letter to Oprah in his new book, (Not that You Asked): Rants, Exploits, and Obsessions, which was published this week. It's called "How This Book Became an Official Oprah Book Club™ Pick," and it's one of those "Kidding! Haha. Ok, not kidding! Okay, kidding!" type of jokes. It is pretty bonkers.

Dear Oprah Winfrey,

I am writing to inform you that I cannot accept your kind offer to name this book as your October, 2007 selection for Oprah's Book Club™. I realize this letter may come as something of a shock, given my reputation for shameless self-promotion, which I hope precedes me. I also realize that authors who cross you tend to wind up with an awful lot of egg on their faces. Fortunately, I walk around most days with a four-cheese omelette hanging from my chin, so no problem there.

The truth is, I don't give a shit how many books you sell. I don't care how much dough you give away, or how many famous people you make cry. At the end of the day, you're a TV star. You show up on a tiny screen and give lonely people a place to park their emotions for an hour. You're the world's leading retailer of inspiration. You're the Wal-Mart of Hope.

Literature, though, isn't supposed to be a convenient shopping experience. It's a solitary imaginative endeavor aimed at arousing the anguish hidden inside us, the bad news of our hearts. There's no celebrity shrink on hand to dispense hankies, no empathic host to buzz manage our tears. There's no assurance that our frail human experiment will end in triumph by the final commercial break. You tell me, Oprah: should the Savior of Publishing be available with your basic cable package?

I can already hear your fans howling for my head. But from where I'm sitting, you're just another zillionaire narcissist for whom fame (the illusion of unconditional love) has become the true goal and your public acts of good merely the means. Whatever noble cause you're pimping this week, in the end you're pimping yourself. Because if you really gave a shit about all us little people, you'd hoist your fluctuating ass out of the luxury self-help suite and express some outrage over the state of this nation: the young Americans snuffed over in Iraq, the poor ones economically sodomized by your pal Dubya, a realpolitik that dependably rewards bigotry over policy.

But outrage isn't your thing, Oprah. To express such a vulgar emotion would violate the dictates of the brand. All we have to do to solve the crisis of empathy in this country is buy your lousy magazine, right? The one with you on the cover every single fucking month. Forget confronting evil. Just keep dreaming and hoping and snuffling with Oprah, keep gulping down the aspirational sugar pills. What a crock.

The answer is no.

If that makes me an asshole, fine, I'm happy to be an asshole on behalf of literature. Someone has to be.

Until we meet again,

Phil Donahue

P.S. - Kidding! My real name is Steve Almond.

Dear Ms. Winfrey,

I'm not sure if you got the last letter I sent. I hope not. I don't want to make excuses, so I'm not going to mention that I suffer from depression, or that my infant daughter was ill, or that I'd just finished a truly disappointing blackened grouper sandwich that left me queasy and out of sorts.

The point is contrition. I'd like to apologize for the things I wrote. I talked this over with some of the folks at my publishing house yesterday - there were twelve in all, I guess - and they felt that I had done both of us a disservice by refusing your gracious (potential) offer to select my book for Oprah's Book Club™. Their contention was that insulting you may have gratified my own righteous indignation, but did little to promote the greater cause we share. That crack about your ass, for instance. I didn't mean that it literally fluctuates.

A lot of this boils down to insecurity. There's a part of me that worries you won't really choose my book for Oprah's Book Club™. The letter was my way of rejecting you before you could reject me. Pretty third-grade on my part.

I have deep respect for the work you do, not just as a media figure, but as a literary philanthropist. You could easily have hitched your wagon to the Freakshow Express, like Springer. Instead, you've spent your cultural capital encouraging people to read writers like Toni Morrison and William Faulkner. That I failed to acknowledge this reflects nothing beyond my own chronic bitterness.

This is all by way of saying that, on the off chance that you have read my previous letter, I hope you will file it under Unintended Satire, or perhaps Temporary Dementia. Rest assured, I have no plans to pull a Franzen. It would be an honor to appear on your show. And I promise not to jump on your couch! (Unless you'd like me to.)

Also, as I mentioned, I have a new daughter. Despite her recent near-fatal illness, she has fully recovered - something of a miracle, the docs say - as you can see from the photo I've enclosed. Her mother bought her the Oprah 4 Prez T-shirt.

Yours in apology & admiration,

Steve Almond

Dear Oprah,

This is going to seem a little crazy, but I'm enclosing another copy of the letter I sent along earlier this week. I know how much mail you must get. Better safe than sorry.

Great show yesterday, by the way! I have to admit that I had not given a great deal of thought to the challenges of menopause, but I appreciated how you handled the jerk who referred to his wife as Senora Hot Flasha. My wife and I had a long talk after the show and I came away with a whole new perspective. It's like you say, "Menopause isn't a process, people, it's a journey."

Let's talk soon,

Steve

P.S. Yes, another photo of our little angel. That's her peeking out from an official Oprah tote bag. What can I tell you - she's a fan!

Oprah,

One thought I had, in terms of planning - one of the essays in my book is about Condoleeza Rice. Long story short, I slam her pretty hard. I'm thinking it might be cool to do a show that's about "healing" the rift between Condoleeza and myself. She could (for instance) apologize for the lies that got us into the Iraq war, and I could apologize for referring to her as "the President's office wife." Then we might hug. Or do some music together. Or both.

Think about it.

Steve

Oprah!

Just a silly note to tell you that my wife and I rented The Color Purple. Again. What can I tell you? You got jobbed at the Oscars. Your performance made Anjelica Huston's look like dinner theater. Also: my publicist was wondering when I might hear back from you. (I explained about your schedule, but you know how these people get.)

Also also: Would it be too forward for me to refer to you, in future correspondences, as my homegirl?

Oprah in '08!

Steve

Dearest O,

Last night I was looking through The Uncommon Wisdom of Oprah Winfrey: A Portrait in Her Own Words and I came across this quote.

"I don't do anything unless it feels good. I don't move on logic. I move on my gut. And I have a good gut!"

You were talking about your business philosophy. But it got me thinking about your actual gut, and the way the tabloids cover it so obsessively. (Extra! Extra! Oprah Gains Four Pounds!) It's like, in a way, your body has become public property, up there on display for everybody to gawk at and poke and prod. I'm sure this thought has occurred to you a few million times, but here you are, the most influential black woman in human history, and somehow you're still the white man's slave.

That's fucked up.

Steve

There's more, too. He crazy.

]]>
Thu, 13 Sep 2007 14:40:21 EDT Emily Gould http://gawker.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=299521&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Steve Almond Gets All Sanctidaddious ]]> steve_almond2.jpgOn his Babble.com blog, bechesthaired author Steve Almond continues to unravel the mysteries of parenting. This week, he explores his guilt about inadvertently allowing his infant daughter to watch a shootout on The Wire:
it took watching my daughter's reaction to one show to recognize how completely horrible and anti-human the images are. I keep seeing her eyes blinking, her head snapping back, the twisting of her mouth into a terrified frown.
What was even scarier than her reaction, though, was our reaction. I mean, we tell ourselves we're these gentle citizens. But we didn't bat an eye watching people shoot each other. It's like our natural human reaction - to blink, to be fearful and upset - had been eroded. We've become so habituated to manufactured violence that we've forgotten what it's supposed to portray.
I know people get all hacked off when I talk politics on this blog, so I'll step away from the bullhorn. I realize, after all, that we can't shelter Josie from this country's popular culture forever. Eventually, she'll see lots and lots of fake murders.
But here's what I'm getting at: shouldn't we try?
Personally, if we were Steve Almond, we'd be more worried about what happens when the kid learns to read (particularly that one menstrual sex-heavy short story in My Life in Heavy Metal), but that's just us.

Baby Daddy: Baby's First Body Count
[Babble]

]]>
Mon, 08 Jan 2007 09:20:00 EST Emily Gould http://gawker.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=226890&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ Steve Almond's Daddy Blog: Watch Your Back, Neal Pollack! ]]> steve_almond.jpgMore in the "a generation of self-consumed male hipsters have suddenly discovered parenthood, and we'll be forced to listen to them for years on end" department: did you know that author Steve Almond, formerly content merely to sit back and vindictively sling mud at bloggers, now has a pro blog of his very own? It's on new Nerve spinoff site Babble, and it's exactly as self-conscious and caught up in the tired 'bragging about how cool I used to be and now I'm not, but it's ok because parenthood is a Higher Calling than coolness' thing as you'd expect it to be. Witness this scintillating tidbit: "So I guess that's what we're doing: we're enjoying this time. Not doing much work. Not going out at all. Just sitting around worshipping our kid. It rules."

Pray that Chuck Klosterman's shooting blanks. It's our only hope.

Baby Daddy
[Babble]
Earlier: Neal Pollack: Spokesman of His Grup-Eration
Earlier: 'Babble' Publisher Doesn't Know When To Shut Up

]]>
Tue, 02 Jan 2007 11:00:00 EST Emily Gould http://gawker.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=225358&view=rss&microfeed=true