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Summer Reading: Brad Mackay ![]() Our next Summer Reading Survey comes from writer and Wright Awards founder Brad Mackay. Please send us your own list. 1. Name and occupation (contact info/website/publisher's website). Brad Mackay, writer, www.bradmackay.com, www.drawnandquarterly.com. 2. What is your latest project (ie, what are you hyping)? Volume one of the two-part HC retrospective Doug Wright: Canada's Master Cartoonist, for which I wrote a substantial essay that attempts to piece together Wright's life and career arc from his birth through to what was arguably the peak of his success in the early 1960s. The article will be a good read, but the real corker will be seeing the pages upon pages of Wright's art (a fair bit unseen) all compiled and designed by Seth. I hope this book becomes the Canadian treasure I imagine it to be in my head. 3. Please provide a list of books you have recently read or are planning to read. They don't have to be comic books. (In fact, we would almost prefer they weren't.) Any number of books is fine. Please feel free to comment (ie, Why are you reading these books? What did you think?). Steve Ditko: Strange and Stranger by Blake Bell. Reading this book made me happy that Doug Wright was such a balanced, hard-working chap. It couldn't have been easy to write a book about a cranky old guy who wants nothing to do with you, and for this reason i give full credit to Bell. I've read as much about Ditko as the next comic geek, but up until now I didn't really get a fuller idea of who the man is. As iconoclastic as he is - what with the Objectivism and all - it was reassuring to feel that he was genuinely dedicated to being a cartoonist. It also re-sokoed my interest in Mr. A, and re-introduced the phrase "I don't abuse my feelings" back into my day-to-day lexicon, where it belongs! The Amazing Adventures of Jimmy Olsen. I snapped this book up in a fit of drunk shopping and I do not regret it. I loved these stories as a kid, and the stupidness of them endures to this day. According to my Pal Jeet Heer, editor Mort Weisinger actually interviewed kids and asked them what creature they wanted Olsen to turn into next - and used the ideas in the book. My four-year-old daughter was obsessed with this book all summer, but couldn't figure out why the comic never showed Jimmy actually writing his stories. As a former news reporter my answer was simple: It would be excruciatingly dull. Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson. Despite having one of the best double-barreled titles ever, this book is a remarkable, eye-opening read. The only way it could have been better is if it was published when I was 15. The Areas of My Expertise by John Hodgman. This is less a book, more of a magnificent piss take. An ambitious parody of olde "almanacs" with plenty of false information and funny stuff. (Not for girls!) The View From Castle Rock by Alice Munro. I credit Seth and a long wait in Markham with only New Yorker magazine for company, for stoking my interest in Clinton Ontario's-own genius, Alice Munro. She's spare and withering in her appraisal of the human condition, and I thanks her so much for that. What It Is by Lynda Barry. The great one (Barry) answers the question posed by the Red Foxx (the other Great One) decades ago; "What is it?" "What it is!" An amazing, inspiring, crazy beautiful book that demystifies the elusive thing called "creative inspiration." Gary Panter. I bought this $100 art book without my wife's knowledge a couple of month's ago. The trouble is, that I was so good at concealing my purchase that i can now only read it when she's not around - which isn't often. Great book, but I think the sneaking around has enhanced my enjoyment of it. Essentially, I'm having an affair with this book. 4. Please list any upcoming events/upcoming publications. Your next project? With the 2008 Doug Wright Awards swept out of the way, I am now focussing on; training for a half marathon, preparing to fly to Nunavik to arctic undergo survival training, and sanding and painting an old table. Oh - and there's a kid's book I'm working on with my wife called The Shortest Story in the World. (It isn't, really.) That's all. Have a good balance of the summer. Labels: summer reading, summer reading 08 - Stumble It! - Leave a comment!| 2comments - Archive by Region Alberta - British Columbia - Calgary - Gatineau - Halifax - Moncton - Montreal - New Brunswick - Newfoundland - Nova Scotia - Ontario - PEI - Quebec - Saskatchewan - Saskatoon - Toronto - Vancouver - Victoria - Winnipeg - Archive by Month August 2002 - September 2002 - October 2002 - November 2002 - December 2002 - January 2003 - February 2003 - March 2003 - April 2003 - May 2003 - June 2003 - July 2003 - August 2003 - September 2003 - October 2003 - November 2003 - December 2003 - January 2004 - February 2004 - March 2004 - April 2004 - May 2004 - June 2004 - July 2004 - August 2004 - September 2004 - October 2004 - November 2004 - December 2004 - January 2005 - February 2005 - March 2005 - April 2005 - May 2005 - June 2005 - July 2005 - August 2005 - September 2005 - October 2005 - November 2005 - December 2005 - January 2006 - February 2006 - March 2006 - April 2006 - May 2006 - June 2006 - July 2006 - August 2006 - September 2006 - October 2006 - November 2006 - December 2006 - January 2007 - February 2007 - March 2007 - April 2007 - May 2007 - June 2007 - July 2007 - August 2007 - September 2007 - October 2007 - November 2007 - December 2007 - January 2008 - February 2008 - March 2008 - April 2008 - May 2008 - June 2008 - July 2008 - August 2008 - September 2008 - October 2008 - November 2008 - December 2008 - January 2009 - February 2009 - March 2009 - April 2009 - May 2009 - June 2009 - July 2009 - August 2009 - September 2009 - October 2009 - November 2009 - December 2009 - January 2010 - February 2010 - March 2010 - |
2 Comments:
Not only did i misspell a few things, but that last section sounds amazingly pretentious. Yet it's all true! I swear! - B.
Yes I did promise responses would be unedited, for either spelling or pretentiousness! But seriously, I will try to spellcheck future surveys (Mozilla is highlighting "spellcheck" as I type this), even though it goes against the spirit of the exercise (basically: zero effort content generation during the summer holiday season).
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