Commonplace Book · Here, Read · Obituaries

Christopher Hitchens on writing and the “will to live”…

“I am typing this having just had an injection to try to reduce the pain in my arms, hands, and fingers. The chief side effect of this pain is numbness in the extremities, filling me with the not irrational fear that I shall lose the ability to write. Without that ability, I feel sure in advance, my ‘will to live’ would be hugely attenuated. I often grandly say that writing is not just my living and my livelihood but my very life, and it’s true. Almost like the threatened loss of my voice, which is currently being alleviated by some temporary injections into my vocal folds, I feel my personality and identity dissolving as I contemplate dead hands and the loss of the transmission belts that connect me to writing and thinking.”

— Christopher Hitchens (13 April 1949 – 15 December 2011), “Trial of the Will,” Vanity Fair (January 2012)

Christopher Hitchens died yesterday, 15 December 2011, at the age of 62. The cause of death is reported to have been pneumonia, a common complication of the esophageal cancer for which he had been receiving treatment.


“In whatever kind of a ‘race’ life may be, I have very abruptly become a finalist.”
— Christopher Hitchens, “Topic of Cancer,” Vanity Fair (September 2010)


Continue reading “Christopher Hitchens on writing and the “will to live”…”

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Look Here · Russell Hoban

Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part I

In 1963, The Macmillan Company published Tales and Poems of Edgar Allen Poe, with an afterword by Clifton Fadiman and illustrations by Russell Hoban. Hoban died this week of complications from quadruple bypass surgery, but his work as an illustrator, children’s author, and novelist lives on. All of the images in the following online gallery have been scanned by yours truly from a copy of Tales and Poems of Edgar Allen Poe that I bought a few years ago at the annual book sale to benefit the Regina Symphony; I haven’t tried to equalize the space around the images but instead have left them as they appear on the page, printed at variable distances from the gutter. This post is part one of two. Enjoy! And don’t just take. Link.


Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part I <– YOU ARE HERE
Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part II


[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]


Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part I <– YOU ARE HERE
Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part II


Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Edgar Allan Poe · Illustration Art · Look Here · Russell Hoban

Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part II

In 1963, The Macmillan Company published Tales and Poems of Edgar Allen Poe, with an afterword by Clifton Fadiman and illustrations by Russell Hoban. Hoban died this week of complications from quadruple bypass surgery, but his work as an illustrator, children’s author, and novelist lives on. All of the images in the following online gallery have been scanned by yours truly from a copy of Tales and Poems of Edgar Allen Poe that I bought a few years ago at the annual book sale to benefit the Regina Symphony; I haven’t tried to equalize the space around the images but instead have left them as they appear on the page, printed at variable distances from the gutter. This post is part two of two. Enjoy! And don’t just take. Link.


Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part I
Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part II <– YOU ARE HERE


[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]


Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part I
Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part II <– YOU ARE HERE


Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Look Here · Obituaries · Russell Hoban

Rest in Peace: Russell Hoban (4 February 1925 – 13 December 2011)

I’m a couple of days late with this notice, and to tell you the truth, I don’t really have anything to say about the death of Russell Hoban that would be of interest to anyone, but I will probably be back to add to the list of links below as more notices and tributes to the great man appear on the Web, and I definitely plan to supplement this post with a visual tribute to Russell Hoban in the near future. So watch for updates!


UPDATE (16 December 2011): RCN’s VISUAL TRIBUTE TO RUSSELL HOBAN:

Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part I
Look Here: TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE, illustrated by Russell Hoban, Part II



“I’m working on something now, and I worry I may drop dead before it’s finished… but come to think of it that’s true of any book you write.”
— Russell Hoban, in conversation with Will Self, 2010


FORMAL OBITUARIES:

guardian.co.uk > Russell Hoban Obituary by John Clute

io9 > R.I.P. Russell Hoban, Author of Over 50 Magical Children’s Books, Plus a Post-Apocalyptic Classic

New York Times > Russell Hoban, ‘Frances’ Author, Dies at 86. Here’s an excerpt that provides some facts about Hoban’s life:

Russell Conwell Hoban was born in Lansdale, Pa., west of Trenton, N.J., and north of Philadelphia, on Feb. 4, 1925. His parents were Ukrainian immigrants who opened a newsstand in Philadelphia. His father, who died when Russell was 12, also worked as an advertising manager for The Jewish Daily Forward.

After high school he attended art school in Philadelphia and served in the Army in Europe during World War II, earning a Bronze Star. At his death he was awaiting publication of a new book, “Soonchild,” due early next year.

“Writing was my father’s life,” Phoebe Hoban said Wednesday, “and when he died he had done what he needed to do.”

Mr. Hoban had lived in London since 1969. His first marriage ended in divorce. He is survived by his wife, the former Gundula Ahl; their three sons, Jake, Ben and Wieland; four children from his first marriage to Lillian Aberman: three daughters, Phoebe, Esmé and Julia, and a son, Brom; and 13 grandchildren.


“I think death will be a good career move for me.
People will say, ‘Yes, Hoban, he seems an interesting writer, let’s look at him again.'”
— Russell Hoban, interview (2002)



BONUS LINKS:

A.V. Club > Riddley Walker author Russell Hoban, interview by Todd VanDerWerff (April 30, 2010)

guardian.co.uk > Writers’ rooms: Russell Hoban — text by Russell Hoban, photo by Eamonn McCabe.

Ocelot Factory > THE HEAD OF ORPHEUS: A Russell Hoban Reference Page > An Interview with Russell Hoban by Edward Myers — originally published in The Literary Review in 1984.

wordsSHIFTminds > Russell Hoban the illustrator

Frank Frazetta · Heads Up!

Heads Up: THE FRAZETTA SKETCHBOOK (2012)

Coming in 2012 from Vanguard Productions, The Frazetta Sketchbook by Frank Frazetta and J. David Spurlock is an “all-new art collection” that was planned shortly before the Frazetta died on 10 May 2010. According to the publisher, the book “is brimming with rare and previously unpublished drawings and painting preliminaries of the subjects Frazetta is best remembered for including barbarians, wild beasts, Tarzan, buxom beauties, monsters and Conan.”

If all goes as planned, The Frazetta Sketchbook will be published in hardcover in August 2012 (ISBN-10: 1-934331-57-0, ISBN-13: 9781934331576), with a softcover edition scheduled for September 2012 (ISBN-10: 1-934331-56-2, ISBN-13: 9781934331569). Although the hardcover edition will have six more pages than the softcover (134 pages vs. 128 pages), both editions, says the publisher, will “feature big, 8.5″ x 11″ lavish illustrated, full-color pages with text.”

Click here for the official announcement.