Autoren-Bilder

Lou Beach

Autor von 420 Characters

3 Werke 150 Mitglieder 14 Rezensionen

Werke von Lou Beach

420 Characters (2011) 142 Exemplare
Cut It Out (2015) 6 Exemplare
The Great Zomboni 2 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Beach, Lou
Rechtmäßiger Name
Lubicz-Ledochowski, Andrzej Jerzy Gregor
Geschlecht
male
Geburtsort
Poland
Ausbildung
State University of New York, Buffalo

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Rezensionen

Quick read. Love how the jacket only covers half the book, though I'm sure librarians don't like it.
 
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amandanan | 13 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 6, 2020 |
Danny and I stand outside the church, fidget in our muted plaid sport coats. Maybe not muted enough. An old guy in a tuxedo walks up to Danny and hands him some car keys. “What’s this?” says Danny. “Aren’t you the parking valet?” says the guy. “No, I’m the best man.” The guy walks away and we see him later inside. He’s the father of the bride. “Oh, it’s going to be a fun reception,” Danny says, taking out the flask.


Lou Beach is a well known artist (but recent discovery to me) who has done many illustrations for clients such as Wired, The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s, The Los Angeles Times and the New York Times (where he was a regular contributor to the Book Review). The bio on his website starts with the following paragraph: "I was born on a mountaintop in Tennessee, killed me a bear when I was only three. No, wait..I was born in Germany of Polish parents, came to the US when I was only four, spent my youth in Rochester, New York, riding my bike, building snow forts, throwing chestnuts at the kid down the street. I was a fair student, no great shakes, disappointing several teachers by not realizing my “full potential.”

Right away, you know you're dealing with a highly creative individual who doesn't take himself too seriously, especially given the kinds of illustrations which animate his site (see below). I discovered Beach when I was looking up reviews for [The Stockholm Octavo] by Karen Engelmann, offered as a Kindle daily deal one day and landed on the NYT review page featuring one of his gorgeous illustrations (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/09/books/review/the-stockholm-octavo-by-karen-engelmann.html?_r=0). Looking up his blog, I found out he'd published this book, which is a collection of short stories exactly 420 characters long, including punctuation, which he had initially published as his Facebook status updates when the site only allowed that specific amount of text. Then I discovered several LTers had already found this book and loved it. The kindle edition includes some illustrations and several audio selection read by Dave Alvin, Ian McShane, and Jeff Bridges. As can be expected from this sort of project, the results are a mixed bag. There are some sublime moments, some ho hum moments, and some head-scratching moments of... 'WTF?' but undeniably, the man had fun with the form and a reader is bound to find something that appeals. A few examples that worked for me:

The servants seem peculiar lately. The kitchen help, the housekeeper, and the gardener move about in a shuffle, mumbling, glazed. When I confront them they appear startled, as if just awakened. Only Claude, the chauffeur, retains his old demeanour, sneering or scowling, smoking a Gauloise as he leans against the Packard, wiping a long black fender with my cashmere sweater.

***

A bird lives on my head, nests in my hair, pecks at my scalp. A finch, I believe. When I go out in public I cover it with a hat, so it’s away from prying eyes and cats who would climb my body to catch it. Sometimes on the bus I notice others wearing hats, and if there are seeds or an errant feather on their shoulders, I nod and smile and preen.

***

I lay the book on the floor, open to the middle. It’s a lovely volume, green leather covers, engraved endpapers. I remove my shoes and step into it up to my ankles, knees, hips, chest, until only my head is showing and the pages spread around me and the words bob up and down and bump into my neck, and the punctuation sticks to my chin and cheeks so I look like I need a shave.

***

And my favourite:

“Are you my mommy?” said the little blue egg. “No, dear. You are a plastic trinket full of sweets,” said the brown hen. “My baby is over there," and she pointed to a pink marshmallow chick being torn apart and devoured by a toddler. The hen screamed and woke up, her pillow wet with sweat, the sheets twisted around her legs. “Christ, I hate that dream.” She reached for a smoke.


More stories, which weren't included in the book can be found on his site: http://www.loubeach.com/stories/
… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
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Smiler69 | 13 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 10, 2014 |
Each of the micro-stories in this book makes a game attempt at setting a scene, at illustrating character, and at suggesting a larger context. Some are subtle, others broadly farcical, and nearly all of them go beyond their somewhat gimmicky origins.
 
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rmagahiz | 13 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 21, 2013 |
This is a book of microstories, each 420 characters or less. Many of them are excellent and some quite dark. Here's an example:

The train pulls into Jawbone at 1:07. I'm on the platform waiting for you but the only passengers off the car are three old farmers. I stand there for a while, look around, hoping you'll appear out of the heat. The engine chugs off into the dust and I retreat to the Red Dog, drink until I'm numb, then stumble past the livery barn to lie down on the tracks. I put my ear to the rail, close my eyes and listen for you.

The book as an object is a lovely red hard back with gold lettering and a band of a dust jacket. Surrealist illustrations by the author adorn the cover and can be found throughout the text. I wish more new hardbacks were presented so nicely.
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dtn620 | 13 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 22, 2013 |

Auszeichnungen

Statistikseite

Werke
3
Mitglieder
150
Beliebtheit
#138,700
Bewertung
3.9
Rezensionen
14
ISBNs
3

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