Shrewd Austerity

As I said from day 1, “anti-racism” means budget cuts and layoffs. Always, 100% of the time. It means absolutely nothing else whatsoever. This is neither a bug nor a feature. It’s the essence of the concept.

Anti-racism is an austerity measure that shrewdly silences objections by labeling those who protest as racist.

It’s very entertaining to watch people who are only realizing it now.

“Wait! This was supposed to be a good thing!”

You, poor innocent duckie.

Back to Feudalism

LONDON — YouTube suspended the monetization of Russell Brand’s channel on Tuesday, saying he had violated its “creator responsibility policy,” just days after the British actor and comedian was accused of a string of offenses, including rape, sexual assault and abuse.

I have no idea who this guy is and what the allegations are but there can’t be a better illustration of what I keep saying about the collapse of the nation-state. All of the constitutional rights, the due process, the legal system that took forever to invent, put in place and hone are becoming redundant. Google and YouTube are our criminal justice system now.

It took the longest time for humanity to create such concepts as the presumption of innocence or freedom of speech. It took even longer to create societies where these principles are enshrined as foundational. We are now dispensing with these enormously important achievements to go back to a semi-feudal system where a bunch of dim-witted barons are the judges and the executioners of us all based on their whims.

To Saunders or Not to Saunders?

I don’t know if to include George Saunders into the new book. He’s like an untalented Jennifer Egan but then I’m running short on postmodernists whom I can read without wanting to tear my hair out. Plus, he’s an incredibly good illustration of out-of-touch wokeism.

New People

Zelensky has replaced half of his cabinet. It’s a normal thing in Ukraine where nobody wants the repetition of Brezhnevism, with its senile, doddering leaders who can’t be removed from their jobs except by death. The war is entering a new stage, so it makes sense to have new people with new ideas.

It’s strange to see this strategy criticized by people whose leadership freezes up, rambles off, and remains in the same job from AIDS to COVID.

A government job shouldn’t be a lifetime sinecure. People in government jobs for 60 years, that’s corruption. New people coming in at regular intervals to avoid sclerotization of government is not.

The owner of the large publishing house I talked to yesterday is younger than me by about a decade. She’s a regular person who worked for another publisher. Then she had an idea for a new type of publishing that her employer didn’t believe in (non-fiction not in translation but by Ukrainian authors). She started her own business, bootstrapped it from the ground up, and now it’s the largest publisher of non-fiction and classical literature in the country. That’s how it should be. Young people should have opportunities and not marinate in uncertainty until somebody pushing ninety finally decides to step down.

The Car Line

People are so weird. I love my school car line. Life isn’t supposed to be “efficient”. You are sitting there, either chatting with your kid or waiting to see your kid. It’s bloody paradise, in my book.

“Agony”! “Crazy-making”! So much drama over something there’s a million reasons to enjoy.

I wonder what the efficient Angie would rather do. The crazy, deeply, agonizing vocabulary does give some idea.

By the way, the best measure of real psychological health is the capacity to enjoy the different components of one’s daily life.

American Literature for Ukrainians

For the book about American literature, I’m going to do the realists vs the postmodernists and how the struggle between these two trends mimics the great American polarization.

The normies versus the pretentious crowd.

The stunned silent majority versus the angry wokesters.

Main Street versus the Met Gala.

Worrying over pronouns versus trying to make ends meet.

I don’t write about bad books, so both trends will be represented by excellent literature.

For the normies, I’m doing Richard Russo before he lost touch, Stephen Markley’s Ohio and Barbara Kingsolver’s Demon Copperhead. Maybe Dreamland for the non-fiction angle.

For the chi-chi frou-frous, I’m doing Jennifer Egan for sure, and I have to think of more. Oh, Philip Roth, obviously.

And then I’ll do the books where the two trends cross paths. I’m thinking Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn. Maybe Elizabeth Strout’s Lucy Barton.

Each of the books will speak to an important event or phenomenon.

Ohio is the Iraq War.

Russo is deindustrialization.

Kingsolver is the opioid epidemic.

Flynn is the 2008 recession. And the foundation of #MeTootery.

Egan is the Silicon Valley, the transhumanism, all that.

Roth is the PC culture and the racial tensions.

Linguist Fail

I’m only now realizing that, of course, 90,000 words in Ukrainian take up a lot more space than in English. Because Ukrainian words are longer.

Jeez, some linguist I am.

The Talk with the Publishers

Turns out that being a stubborn cow who always does things her way is not always a brilliant idea. I always contact publishers after I finish a book out of a misguided sense of pride, and that’s dumb. For instance, I know that with American publishers the expected length of a literary criticism book is 90,000 words, which comes to about 220 pages in print. So that’s what I did with this Ukrainian book.

Of course, today I discovered that 90,000 words with a Ukrainian publisher comes to 400 pages. Why I didn’t try to find out in advance is a mystery.

The publishers have taken the book for peer review. I was so terrified of talking to them that I broke out in zits, giving me a weird, adolescent look. Given that I had no zits in actual adolescence, this was unfortunate.

The first thing I did after the conversation ended half an hour ago was start working on the next book, which will be on contemporary American literature. I want it to come out before the election. It’s doable since I now know that it should half the length of the book on Spain. I have a great idea for it. After that I want to do contemporary Latin American literature for Ukrainians, and then I’ll calm down. Hopefully, the zits will disappear by that time, too.

Book Notes: Elizabeth von Arnim’s Enchanted April

Enchanted April seems to be von Arnim’s best-known novel. There’s even a movie based on it. To me, it’s her weakest book of all I read, including the one where she lists all the dogs she ever had.

Enchanted April is cute. It goes on being unwaveringly cute from the first page to the last. So much unrelieved cuteness gets depressing after a while but the novel is mercifully short. There were moments when I rolled my eyes so hard they almost hurt. I mean, it’s not a bad novel. I wish I had it with me when I was sick with COVID and had brain fog and no energy. It’s a perfect COVID book, not least because the possibility of death seems a lot less daunting if it can liberate one from so much cuteness.

Spice Rub

I bought a bunch of flank steak because it was cheaper than other cuts. I was thinking that it’s so lean and stringy that nobody would be able to eat a lot at once, and it was going to last until the midweek.

But then the dickens possessed me to do this spice rub with brown sugar, olive oil, paprika, garlic, and ground allspice, and put the whole thing in the slow cooker for 6 hours.

As a result, it lasted under 24 hours, it’s so good. It’s the curse of being a good cook.