May Favorites š½ļøšš„: Smoke, Heti, and Dehd
Plus an invitation to criticize music in a literary magazine
Hello,
Iām weeding the garden beds this week. I forgot bug spray the first day, and now Iām covered in bites, itching so bad Iād sandpaper my skin if Malory werenāt watching to make sure I donāt do it. She hates when I scratch my skin scabby every summer.
My right knee has been a wreck since walking 37,000 steps up and down the hills of Seattle wearing Birkenstocks last summer. This was the day before I lost my shit backstage on an old friend who was promoting a festival there.
Itās summer again, almost a year later, and Iāve admitted that things wonāt magically improve with time. I started physical therapy for the knee, and itās working. Thereās less pain and agitation, and Iām learning how to stretch and move in new ways to keep things from getting out of wack again. I also quit my job. Thatās working, too, in roughly the same ways.
Below, I wrote the stuff I loved in May: a handful of books, an old movie, and a new record. What are you getting into?
š¤AV
PS: If youāre a music writer, catch the submission call at the end. If you know music writers, please send this to them.
I re-watched Smoke š½ļø
A favorite film long ago, and itās even better than I remembered. I was surprised to find that itās about fatherhood, or family at least. I didnāt get that when I watched it many times in the ā90s. I wonder what I thought it was about. A writer? A merchant? A neighborhood? I suppose itās also those things.
Mal hadnāt seen it but loved it. She pointed out something obvious Iād never clocked. The slow zoom-in on the mouth of Auggie Wren as he tells his Christmas story is perfect. It must have been intended as the filmās final shot. The next scene, Auggieās story dramatized with the dialog on mute and a Tom Waits tune on top, is unnecessary. The story is so good, and so well-told, Auggie to Paul over lunch at the diner, that weāve already seen it. I bet someone in LA pushed to have the extra bit tacked on.
After we watched, Mal brought up the cover of the VHS on her phone. āWeird art,ā she said. I never questioned it, but itās shockingly out of sync with the flick. āWhere thereās smoke⦠thereās laughter.ā Yikes.
Soon weāll watch Blue in the Face. I remember not liking it nearly as much, but I mean:
Five highlights in reading š
Alphabetical Diaries
by Sheila Heti
Yes, sheĀ simply alphabetizes sentencesĀ from her journal, but the gimmick is smarter than it sounds in a press release or blurb. Hetiās clever literary limitation expands what narrative can do. Writing with a weird new structure AND ALSO arriving at real meaning in easy-to-digest prose? Goddamn. I mightāve been less impressed with the trick if the writing werenāt fantastic, but it is. This is the best thing Iāve read recently.
The jacket copy says she began with half a million words. So itās the vastness of the source material and the alphabet thing that makes the magic. Knowing how much other writing exists makes the fill-in-the-blank game a blast, and the trick, the limitation, ends up being an allowance. Itās just so much fun to read. I hope it was a pleasure for Heti to make a book this way, though I can imagine it being the opposite.
In chapter nine, Chapter I, eventually the I isĀ I as in Heti. I am this. Iām not sure. I did that. I saw this, liked this, hated that. Here, the book found another gear and opened up even further for me.
Juxtaposition works hard on every page. Something saucy or serious lands next to a tossed-off thought, and suddenly insignificance bears weight. Repetition, too, is doing heavy lifting. Something embarrassing shows up. And then it shows up again, and then again. By Q R S, youāre dizzy with recurrent themes: some big, some mean, many funny, plenty sexy, and a majority so stubbornly the same. Instead of asking how a personĀ shouldĀ be, this book shows us how a personĀ is. If thereās movement, itās centimeters, and itās centimeters without a direction in time. There is no progress toward a goal, no path to resolution.
I want a B-side compilation to accompany the book, maybe for a future anniversary edition. Heti cut well over 400,000 words to get what weāve got inĀ Alphabetical Diaries.
Negatives: A Photographic Archive of Emo (1996-2006)
by Amy Fleisher Madden
Emo is like goth now; itās forever, and the definition is forever blurry. I love a small handful of the bands in here, but I enjoyed reading about the ones I disliked or ignored as much as my faves. The photography rules. Itās fun to see the venues, what fans in the crowds were wearing, and how the bands were combing their hair. Someone do a prequel here, a book covering the mid-ā80s stuff up to 1996, where Amyās begins.
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said
by Philip K. Dick
My first Dick, and I enjoyed it quite a bit. There are so many novels! Let me know your favorites. I need a roadmap.
2666
by Robert BolaƱo
This is taking forever. While I love it in theory, I'm bored and slogging through Part 4. After lovingĀ The Savage DetectivesĀ to death, this is the second BolaƱo in My Year of Reading Thicclyā¢ļø. It's time for a break from the dude after this. I'll stick with the numbers-as-titles thing, and do Auster'sĀ 4321Ā as my next big one.
Train Dreams
by Denis Johnson
Perfect. I need to read more of his novels.
OK. Petition to replace the peer pressure to worship Jesusā Son with Train Dreams devotion instead, at least temporarily.
DATE: _____________
NAME: _____________
SIGNED: _____________
Americaās coolest band have a new album š„
I've been rinsing Dehd's new album since I got my pre-order LP a few days before the official release. "Poetry" finds the band still in sparseland (thank god), and like all their records, this one's deceptively crammed with hooks and melodies. The songs are equally weighted between Emily and Jason singing lead, their signature duets weaving in and out throughout, and almost every song's about love. My current go-to is "Light On", which is Chorus City holy shit, but my favorite song rotates every few days.
I like to point out that you hear zero (0) cymbals across Dehdās five-album catalog. āUnless you count the tambourine,ā my buddy said dryly. āThatās just really tiny cymbals.ā
Iāve been on an extended Modest Mouse kick. Itās been extending since 1996. I canāt help but be reminded of the early trio period of Mouse when listening to Dehd, though Iād have never wanted anyone to take Jeremiahās cymbals away.
In closing, I need to make fun of Pitchforkās review.
Not because they dissed it or gave it a bad number, but because of the bonkers bad writing.
Someone said, āP4K is obviously using AI now.ā Maybe, but my gut says a human wrote it, and that one or two other humans who stand between the .doc and the publish button called in sick, got laid off, or no longer give a fuck.
Look, you can screenshot dumb shit Iāve written, but Iām just blogginā over here, not writing forĀ The most trusted voice in music. Dehd deserve better!
Which brings me to a submission call.
Music writers: please submit to Little Engines. Iāve published poems and essays by musicians in the magazine, but Iām eager to include select profiles, interviews, scene reports, reviews, etc. Writers are paid.
To discuss, pitch, or send work:
āļø submit@littleengines.pub
Please forward this to friends who write about music.
š¤AV
I have never watched any of the Auster movies, so thanks for the nudge. Where'd you find em?
You got it right starting with Flow My Tears. I'd head to The Man in the High Castle next, or The Penultimate Truth if you really want to dig in. (Happy to send you either.) I'm 90 pages in on the latter, and so far he's predicted human-less wars, AI-written speeches, and the Mandela effect.
train dreams is a masterpiece. a small perfect thing that is thrilling and new every time i read it