Messages 257-306

 

Messages in the-kraken group.

Page 6 of 186.

Group: the-kraken Message: 257 From: Alida Allison Date: 26/01/2000
Subject: Re: b-day
Group: the-kraken Message: 258 From: Day Voll Date: 26/01/2000
Subject: Re: b-day
Group: the-kraken Message: 259 From: Day Voll Date: 27/01/2000
Subject: birthday greetings
Group: the-kraken Message: 260 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: the birthday list so far…
Group: the-kraken Message: 261 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: The good stuff: news from Mr. H…
Group: the-kraken Message: 262 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: Re: the birthday list so far…
Group: the-kraken Message: 263 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: do you want to be on the birthday list?
Group: the-kraken Message: 264 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: Oops–please disregard that last post
Group: the-kraken Message: 265 From: Day Voll Date: 29/01/2000
Subject: “final” birthday list
Group: the-kraken Message: 266 From: alida allison Date: 29/01/2000
Subject: Re: “final” birthday list
Group: the-kraken Message: 267 From: pat_____@_____.com Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: Remove my name from your e-mail
Group: the-kraken Message: 268 From: Day Voll Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: one last thing…
Group: the-kraken Message: 269 From: Andy Barding Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: Re: one last thing…
Group: the-kraken Message: 270 From: Day Voll Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: Re: one last thing…
Group: the-kraken Message: 271 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 31/01/2000
Subject: Glims
Group: the-kraken Message: 272 From: jhyde Date: 31/01/2000
Subject: [Fwd: GEN: Intriguing quote!]
Group: the-kraken Message: 273 From: Day Voll Date: 31/01/2000
Subject: Re: Glims
Group: the-kraken Message: 274 From: Diana Slickman Date: 01/02/2000
Subject: Mission accomplished
Group: the-kraken Message: 275 From: Day Voll Date: 01/02/2000
Subject: Re: [Fwd: GEN: Intriguing quote!]
Group: the-kraken Message: 276 From: jhyde Date: 01/02/2000
Subject: This time I’ll get it right
Group: the-kraken Message: 277 From: Day Voll Date: 02/02/2000
Subject: Re: This time I’ll get it right
Group: the-kraken Message: 278 From: Ted Curtin Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Creatures of the deep
Group: the-kraken Message: 279 From: Ted Curtin Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Creatures of the deep, readable version!
Group: the-kraken Message: 280 From: Chris Bell Date: 02/02/2000
Subject: Some (random) associations made after starting ‘Angelica’s Grotto’
Group: the-kraken Message: 281 From: Tim Haillay Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Re: Some (random) associations made after starting ‘Angelica’s Grot
Group: the-kraken Message: 282 From: jhyde Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Re: Creatures of the deep
Group: the-kraken Message: 283 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Some (random) associations
Group: the-kraken Message: 284 From: Olaf Schneider Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: place 5
Group: the-kraken Message: 285 From: buh_____@_____.es Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: GLIM
Group: the-kraken Message: 286 From: Olaf Schneider Date: 06/02/2000
Subject: bloomsbury top ten part II
Group: the-kraken Message: 287 From: judy backhouse Date: 08/02/2000
Subject: Re: bloomsbury top ten part II
Group: the-kraken Message: 288 From: Chris Bell Date: 08/02/2000
Subject: The birthday action
Group: the-kraken Message: 289 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 08/02/2000
Subject: Welcome new list member
Group: the-kraken Message: 290 From: Day Voll Date: 09/02/2000
Subject: Re: The birthday action
Group: the-kraken Message: 291 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 09/02/2000
Subject: Hobanhealth
Group: the-kraken Message: 292 From: Kerry Martin Power Date: 10/02/2000
Subject: Re: Welcome new list member
Group: the-kraken Message: 293 From: Kerry Martin Power Date: 10/02/2000
Subject: Re: Welcome new list member
Group: the-kraken Message: 294 From: Day Voll Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Re: Hobanhealth
Group: the-kraken Message: 295 From: Day Voll Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Bloomsbury Charts
Group: the-kraken Message: 296 From: Chris Bell Date: 12/02/2000
Subject: Bloomsbury chart
Group: the-kraken Message: 297 From: Day Voll Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Re: Bloomsbury chart
Group: the-kraken Message: 298 From: Sandra Smith Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Re: Bloomsbury chart
Group: the-kraken Message: 299 From: Day Voll Date: 17/02/2000
Subject: Scheduled Maintenance
Group: the-kraken Message: 300 From: Day Voll Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: Reading in London
Group: the-kraken Message: 301 From: Day Voll Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: Grotto Review
Group: the-kraken Message: 302 From: Day Voll Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: interview video clip!!!!!!! Brilliant!
Group: the-kraken Message: 303 From: ULTIMATE CHRISMOON Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: Re: interview video clip!!!!!!! Brilliant!
Group: the-kraken Message: 304 From: Day Voll Date: 01/03/2000
Subject: Glimswatch & Maltus Interruptus
Group: the-kraken Message: 305 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 02/03/2000
Subject: Giant squid
Group: the-kraken Message: 306 From: Alida Allison Date: 03/03/2000
Subject: Re: [the-kraken] Glimswatch & Maltus Interruptus

 


Group: the-kraken Message: 257 From: Alida Allison Date: 26/01/2000
Subject: Re: b-day
 

Hi Folks,So scotch it is. Let me know to how much and to whom to contribute. I
have also learned a lot about scotch from these emails!

best, alida

p.s. my book of essays on Russ’ kids books is in production! Will keep you
posted.

At 01:21 PM 1/26/00 -0500, you wrote:

>From: “Duane Spurlock” <dua_____@_____.com>
>
>Even though I’m a bourbon drinker, I like the Scotch idee. Let me know how
>and when to chip in.
>
>Speaking of “But “the finest Scotch that money can buy”? We could have a
>long and serious discussion about that,” as Diana did, as well as mentioning
>how a high-priced bottle can sit on the shelf a long time . . .
>
>A few years ago I read in Wine Spectator or some such magazine about a
>Scotch collector. Bottles and bottles of exotic stuff he’d gotten for
>exorbitant prices. A sip here and there from various bottles over the years.
>His liquid treasure.
>
>He commissioned modernist/post-modernist architect Michael Graves to design
>and build a cabinet for his Scotch. The thing looked amazing. Glass and wood
>and veneers in Graves’ signature style using lots of circles, squares,
>triangles, spheres, etc. It was a very architecturally-styled piece of
>furniture. As I recall, this single cabinet cost somewhere in the
>neighborhood of $15,000.
>
>Yep, that feller treasured his Scotch.
>– Duane
>
>
>————————— ONElist Sponsor —————————-
>
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>————————————————————————
>
>—————————————————
>The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
>For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
>http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh

 

Alida Allison
Associate Professor
Director, Children’s Literature Circle
Dept. of English and Comparative Literature
San Diego State University
5500 Campanile Dr.
San Diego, CA 92182-8140
(619) 594-6385, office phone
(619) 594-5443, department phone
(619) 594-4998, FAX

CHECK OUT THE CHILDREN’S LITERATURE PROGRAM WEB SITE AND BOOK REVIEW SERVICE:
http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/english/childlit

FOR INFORMATION ABOUT CURRENT CHILDREN’S LITERATURE COURSES:
http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/english/engl.html

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 258 From: Day Voll Date: 26/01/2000
Subject: Re: b-day
 

Alida wrote:

>p.s. my book of essays on Russ’ kids books is in production! Will keep you
>posted.

 

That’s great news! I think a lot of us here are looking forward to it.

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 259 From: Day Voll Date: 27/01/2000
Subject: birthday greetings
 

Hi folks,A couple of things:

1) Diana and I already have a good and growing list of names of those who
want to be included in the birthday greetings & bottle. If you want to
participate and haven’t contacted us yet, please do so ASAP. We need to
hear from you by Friday *at the latest* as the order will be placed over
the weekend. (We’ll post the list that we have as of Thursday night, for
double-checking purposes…)

2) If you mentioned your interest in being involved prior to Wednesday, and
haven’t contacted us since, it wouldn’t hurt to remind us–just in case you
spoke up before we had actually started keeping the list.

Once again, send a direct message to Diana and me at:

sli_____@_____.com, and
day_____@_____.com

with an obvious subject line like INCLUDE ME IN THE BIRTHDAY BOTTLE.

Also: last year when we did the electronic birthday card, everyone
submitted individual greetings to Russ. A few people have already submitted
similar messages in the reasonable expectation that it would work the same
way this time. But it appears that space will be limited–the message text
all has to be entered into a web-based form–so we’ll need to stick to one
short message and then the list of everyone’s names. Apologies to those of
you who have already thought up clever and thoughtful messages of your
own…you can always email them directly to Russ yourself, of course.

I think that’s it for now.

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 260 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: the birthday list so far…
 

Hey folks,as promised, this is the 24-hours-to-the-deadline notice, and list
confirmation, regarding the birthday bottle for Mr. Hoban. Here are the
folks Diana and I have on the list so far:

Alida Allison
Dave Awl
Chris Bell
Eli Bishop
Chris Hannan
Richard Hoos
Jane Hyde
Chris Moon
Michael Piper
Joe Rotella
Olaf Schneider
Diana Slickman
Mike Smith
Sandra Smith
Duane Spurlock
Ben Wolfson

If you don’t see your name and want to be included, you have until Midnight
US Central time to let us know (that’s 6AM Greenwich time). After that you
might still be able to squeak in if the order hasn’t yet been placed, but
there are no guarantees. To participate, just send a message to:

sli_____@_____.com, and
day_____@_____.com

with the heading INCLUDE ME IN THE BIRTHDAY BOTTLE.

If anyone’s worried about cost, don’t–since we’ve already got sixteen
sponsors, a “share” will likely work out to well under five bucks American.
So you shouldn’t have to worry about selling off the good china in order to
chip in.

If you’re new on the list and don’t know what the heck I’m talking about,
email me direct and I’ll fill you in!

Hey, I think this is going to be fun!

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 261 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: The good stuff: news from Mr. H…
 

Well, here comes the most fun part of my job (I use the j-word very
loosely). I’ve got some great news from Russ to pass along, which should
brighten everybody’s dreary January. (Those of you in the southern
hemisphere, where I’m given to understand it’s summer now, could perhaps
regard the news as a “cool breeze.” But I digress.)ITEM ONE: Russ is no longer “in-between!” He’s going like gangbusters on
his next novel, working title _Glims_. And I do mean gangbusters, or “house
on fire” or however you want to put it–he says he’s already about halfway
through the first draft! Granted, he could always pull one of his patented
“return to page one, do not pass go, do not collect $200” moves, but still
this seems like very speedy progress.

Better yet, Russ tells me that Bloomsbury has already accepted the book
SIGHT UNSEEN and slated it for publication in the spring of 2001!
Wow–apparently the folks at Bbury are pretty happy with Grotto, and Russ.

Naturally I asked Russ for some hard info on what the book is about, but
he’s being uncharacteristically cryptic about this one. All he’ll say at
the moment is that it’s “a love story with an unusual twist.” (Of course,
as Ms. Slickman pointed out to me earlier this evening, that could apply to
most of Mr. Hoban’s books…) He also says: “It’s going well and I know how
it ends and I’m
trying not to get there too soon.

So put that in your pipe and smoke it.

Anyone out there want to speculate on what the title means? When I first
heard it I thought it sounded like something in an SF vein, like Fremder.
But it was also suggested to me that “Glims” might be a slang term for
something or other…anyone recognize it?

ITEM TWO: Bloomsbury is also going to be bringing out some, if not all, of
Mr. H’s back catalog, taking it over from Picador. They seem to be really
investing heavily in our man. Lion and Turtle Diary will come out under the
Bloomsbury imprint in September, others will probably follow in good time.
I think this is a very good thing because new editions could breathe new
life into sales…the only potential downside is that since Picador will
reportedly be phasing out everything, if Bloomsbury doesn’t pick up all the
books something might slip through the cracks. But there’s no need to
borrow trouble, and I kind of have faith at this point that Bbury will want
to publish the whole line. I mean, why wouldn’t they?

Well, I suppose that’s enought great news for one night. Need to save some
excitement for the weekend…

toddling off,
Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 262 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: Re: the birthday list so far…
 

Well, we’ve already caught one name I accidentally left off the list, Mr.
Haillay. Here’s the updated list:Alida Allison
Dave Awl
Chris Bell
Eli Bishop
Tim Haillay
Chris Hannan
Richard Hoos
Jane Hyde
Chris Moon
Michael Piper
Joe Rotella
Olaf Schneider
Diana Slickman
Mike Smith
Sandra Smith
Duane Spurlock
Ben Wolfson

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 263 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: do you want to be on the birthday list?
 

Hey Kerry and Theo,Diana and I are finalizing the list of names to go on the birthday bottle
of Scotch we’re sending Mr. Hoban. Both of you participated in the
birthday discussion early on, but haven’t specifically contacted Diana and
myself since we settled on the gift and asked folks to mail us if they
wanted to be included. I’m tempted to just include your names since I know
you were interested early on, but since the gift is alcohol and some folks
have strong feelings about that I figured I shouldn’t put your names on
without express permission.

Please don’t interpret this as a “hard-sell” if you’ve decided not to
participate–I’m only writing you because I’d feel terrible if there was a
misunderstanding and we left out anyone who wanted to be included.

So: if you do want your names listed, please let me know ASAP. If you
aren’t interested, I apologize for bugging you about it!

best,
Dave Awl

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 264 From: Day Voll Date: 28/01/2000
Subject: Oops–please disregard that last post
 

Yikes! I goofed–that last post was s’posed to go to two individuals, not
the list. Apologies for my slip-up.Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 265 From: Day Voll Date: 29/01/2000
Subject: “final” birthday list
 

Okay, gang, here’s the “final” birthday list for proofing, as of Friday
night. If I’ve goofed up again and left anyone’s name off who contacted us,
email me ASAP. But I’m pretty sure this list is accurate.Alida Allison
Dave Awl
Chris Bell
Eli Bishop
Ruth Bosch
Ted Curtin
Tim Haillay
Chris Hannan
Kurt Heintz
Richard Hoos
Jane Hyde
Chris Moon
Michael Piper
Kerry Power
Joe Rotella
Olaf Schneider
Diana Slickman
Mike Smith
Sandra Smith
Duane Spurlock
Janis Van Court
Ben Wolfson

bottoms up,
Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 266 From: alida allison Date: 29/01/2000
Subject: Re: “final” birthday list
 

Hi Dave,And a fine list it is–glad to be on it.

best, alida

Day Voll wrote:

>
> From: Day Voll <day_____@_____.com>
>
> Okay, gang, here’s the “final” birthday list for proofing, as of Friday
> night. If I’ve goofed up again and left anyone’s name off who contacted us,
> email me ASAP. But I’m pretty sure this list is accurate.
>
> Alida Allison
> Dave Awl
> Chris Bell
> Eli Bishop
> Ruth Bosch
> Ted Curtin
> Tim Haillay
> Chris Hannan
> Kurt Heintz
> Richard Hoos
> Jane Hyde
> Chris Moon
> Michael Piper
> Kerry Power
> Joe Rotella
> Olaf Schneider
> Diana Slickman
> Mike Smith
> Sandra Smith
> Duane Spurlock
> Janis Van Court
> Ben Wolfson
>
> bottoms up,
> Dave
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll
>
> ————————— ONElist Sponsor —————————-
>
> GET A NEXTCARD VISA, in 30 seconds. Get rates as low as 2.9 percent
> Intro or 9.9 percent Fixed APR and no hidden fees. Apply NOW.
> <a href=” http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/NextcardCreative4AE “>Click Here</a>
>
> ————————————————————————
>
> —————————————————
> The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
> For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
> http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 267 From: pat_____@_____.com Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: Remove my name from your e-mail
 

_______________________________________________________
Get 100% FREE Internet Access powered by Excite
Visit http://freeworld.excite.com

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 268 From: Day Voll Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: one last thing…
 

Okay, I know by now you’re probably all sick to death of hearing about this
birthday bottle. But one last thing: I would like to stress that Diana and
I are taking a “pay what you can, whenever you get around to it” approach
to the chipping in. That means if you’re short of cash, broke this week,
“between positions” or anything like that and you’re worried about making
your contribution–don’t. Between us, Diana and I are more than willing to
cover anyone who wants to participate. Speaking only for myself, having
spent the last ten years as a fringe performance artist slash temp slave,
I’ve gone through plenty of rough months and know what it’s like when
you’re not sure where your next box of crackers is coming from. So if you
would like your name included, just let us know, and don’t sweat about the
dough–no one will be asked or expected to chip in any more or any sooner
than is comfortable. The main thing is that we get everyone’s name in who
would like to be included.We are extending the deadline through Monday morning, to allow anyone who’s
been shy or hesitant for the above-mentioned reasons, to join in. We have a
healthy, happy list of more than twenty names already, so I hope this
doesn’t sound like I’m browbeating for more participation–it’s just my
(pathological?) desire not to exclude anyone who wants to be part of the
reindeer games. (Infer what you like about my own childhood from that… ;
) )

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 269 From: Andy Barding Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: Re: one last thing…
 

Hooray! This means I’m in time, does it?
Hope so. Please let me know how much cash you want and where to mail it.Thanks,

Andy

Andy Barding
1 Mellon Street
Newport
SOUTH WALES
NP9 1EP
UK

email: bar_____@_____.uk

website: http://www.geocities.com/frug_uk/

For a fistfull of Dollars – then a few Dollars more – go here.
Get paid to surf!

http://www.alladvantage.com/go.asp?refid=IIY350

Please quote my ID: IIY-350 if you sign up, then we’ll all make money!

—– Original Message —–
From: Day Voll <day_____@_____.com>
To: <the_____@_____.com>
Sent: Sunday, January 30, 2000 12:14 PM
Subject: [the-kraken] one last thing…

> From: Day Voll <day_____@_____.com>
>
>
> Okay, I know by now you’re probably all sick to death of hearing about
this
> birthday bottle. But one last thing: I would like to stress that Diana and
> I are taking a “pay what you can, whenever you get around to it” approach
> to the chipping in. That means if you’re short of cash, broke this week,
> “between positions” or anything like that and you’re worried about making
> your contribution–don’t. Between us, Diana and I are more than willing to
> cover anyone who wants to participate. Speaking only for myself, having
> spent the last ten years as a fringe performance artist slash temp slave,
> I’ve gone through plenty of rough months and know what it’s like when
> you’re not sure where your next box of crackers is coming from. So if you
> would like your name included, just let us know, and don’t sweat about the
> dough–no one will be asked or expected to chip in any more or any sooner
> than is comfortable. The main thing is that we get everyone’s name in who
> would like to be included.
>
> We are extending the deadline through Monday morning, to allow anyone
who’s
> been shy or hesitant for the above-mentioned reasons, to join in. We have
a
> healthy, happy list of more than twenty names already, so I hope this
> doesn’t sound like I’m browbeating for more participation–it’s just my
> (pathological?) desire not to exclude anyone who wants to be part of the
> reindeer games. (Infer what you like about my own childhood from that… ;
> ) )
>
> Dave
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll
>
>
>
> ————————— ONElist Sponsor —————————-
>
> GET A NEXTCARD VISA, in 30 seconds! Get rates as low as 2.9 percent
> Intro or 9.9 percent Fixed APR and no hidden fees. Apply NOW!
> <a href=” http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/NextcardCreative4 “>Click Here</a>
>
> ————————————————————————
>
> —————————————————
> The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
> For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
> http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh
>
>

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 270 From: Day Voll Date: 30/01/2000
Subject: Re: one last thing…
 

>From: “Andy Barding” <bar_____@_____.uk>
>
>Hooray! This means I’m in time, does it?

 

Yup.

>Hope so. Please let me know how much cash you want and where to mail it.

 

Will do.

uncharacteristically laconic due to temporal constrainment,
Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 271 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 31/01/2000
Subject: Glims
 

> ITEM ONE: Russ is no longer “in-between!” He’s going like gangbusters on
> his next novel, working title _Glims_.

 

[SNIP!]

 

> Anyone out there want to speculate on what the title means?

 

The first thing that comes to mind for “glims” is “eyes.” Usually heard in
hard-boiled crime movies or pulp crime fiction from the 1930s or early ’40s,
which were usually filled with tough-guy underworld slang to sound
authentic, to follow the model of Dashiell Hammett’s THE MALTESE FALCON.

Example:
“Cast your glims over there.”

Closely related to “glom,” which means “To steal” or “To see or take a
look.”

Mr. Hoban certainly has a way with words, but I’ll truly be surprised if his
GLIMS has a close relation to this crime-story slang.

Hope this helps!

— Duane

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 272 From: jhyde Date: 31/01/2000
Subject: [Fwd: GEN: Intriguing quote!]
 

Looky here, folks! This is great, because the LM_NET has by now I think
over 10,000 members!

Jane Hyde, Librarian 828-684-6232
St. Dunstan Library jhy_____@_____.org
Christ School
500 Christ School Rd.
Arden, NC 28704When I get a little money, I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food
and clothes. — Erasmus

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 273 From: Day Voll Date: 31/01/2000
Subject: Re: Glims
 

>From: “Duane Spurlock” <dua_____@_____.com>

>The first thing that comes to mind for “glims” is “eyes.” Usually heard in
>hard-boiled crime movies or pulp crime fiction from the 1930s or early ’40s,
>which were usually filled with tough-guy underworld slang to sound
>authentic, to follow the model of Dashiell Hammett’s THE MALTESE FALCON.
>
>Example:
>”Cast your glims over there.”
>
>Closely related to “glom,” which means “To steal” or “To see or take a
>look.”
>
>Mr. Hoban certainly has a way with words, but I’ll truly be surprised if his
>GLIMS has a close relation to this crime-story slang.

 

Very interesting. Also, Tim Haillay tells me:

>Glim / Scottish slang for a glimpse, a scrap or a light

from German “glimm”, same root for glimmer I suppose.

We shall see what we shall see.

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 274 From: Diana Slickman Date: 01/02/2000
Subject: Mission accomplished
 

The order has been made. Thanks to all for your input and participation. As soon as I figure what the cost is I’ll let you know the suggested contribution is.Best to all!
Slick
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
Chrysanthemum growers –
you are the slaves
of chrysanthemums!
— Yosa Buson

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 275 From: Day Voll Date: 01/02/2000
Subject: Re: [Fwd: GEN: Intriguing quote!]
 

>From: jhyde <jhy_____@_____.org>
>
>Looky here, folks! This is great, because the LM_NET has by now I think
>over 10,000 members!

 

Hey Jane,

I don’t think the quote part came through. Did you try to send it as an
attachment? Further down in your message it said:

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Onelist doesn’t allow attachments to go out over the list because they
usually get garbled, at least for some people–so I’m thinking that’s what
happened here. Could you try sending whatever it was as text in the body of
your message–or if it’s an image file or something like that, you could
always upload it to the “Files” area of The Kraken homepage on Onelist, and
then let us know. If you’re not sure how to do that, just ask me and I’ll
fill you in.

best,
Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 276 From: jhyde Date: 01/02/2000
Subject: This time I’ll get it right
 

Hi folks. I guess I can’t forward something after all, but I CAN cut
and past. Here’s what I tried to share with you all yesterday, from the
LM_NET, a huge (12,000+) listserv of school librarians:
GEN: Intriguing quote! (“Joanne E. Ladewig” , Sun 2:47)
To:
LM______@_____.EDUNetters:

This quotation just came up on the “A Word a Day” service, and I thought
it
was perfect to share since we’re all enjoying the “regionisms” so much:

“Language is an archeological vehicle… the language we speak is a
whole
palimpsest of human effort and history.” -Russell Hoban [Novelists in
Interview]

Cool, eh? And since I had no idea what a “palimpsest” was, I looked it
up.
According to Webster, a palimpsest (noun) is a parchment or tablet, one
on
which the writing has been erased, and then reused. (This was apparently
a
common practise in previous centuries since making parchment was a
laborious task.)

By the way, is this Russell Hoban any relationship to Lillian Hoban who
wrote the Arthur (the monkey, not the aardvark!) and Frances (the
badger)
books?

Joanne Ladewig
Information Center Director
Fairgrove Academy – a K-8 public school focusing on
the Visual and Performing Arts, and Technology
La Puente, CA
jla_____@_____.us
or: sha_____@_____.com

Sorry if it comes across funkily, but I though you’d like to see this.
BTW, I did reply to LM_NET and included links to Dave’s page and to this
list. A few other librarians replied with info the Hobans, and one
other included the links. So watch for some traffic….. Best to all,
and I’m Siriusly looking forward to the Birthday. — JLH

Jane Hyde, Librarian 828-684-6232
St. Dunstan Library jhy_____@_____.org
Christ School
500 Christ School Rd.
Arden, NC 28704

“The quahog walks among us.” — Don Bosquet

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 277 From: Day Voll Date: 02/02/2000
Subject: Re: This time I’ll get it right
 

>From: jhyde <jhy_____@_____.org>
>
>Hi folks. I guess I can’t forward something after all, but I CAN cut
>and past. Here’s what I tried to share with you all yesterday, from the
>LM_NET, a huge (12,000+) listserv of school librarians:

 

Hey Jane, second time worked like a charm. Thanks for sharing that–I
hadn’t seen that quote before myself. FWIW, Gore Vidal used Palimpsest as
the title of a book a couple years back.

>”The quahog walks among us.” — Don Bosquet

 

Okay, I’ll bite: “quahog,” what is it that it is? And who’s Don Bosquet?

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 278 From: Ted Curtin Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Creatures of the deep
 

In Digest #88 Joanne Ladewig wrote:

>>”The quahog walks among us.” — Don Bosquet

 

And Dave Awl responded:

>Okay, I’ll bite: “quahog,” what is it that it is? And who’s Don Bosquet?

 

Had a good laugh myself over the Bosquet quote, especially in relation to our friend the Kraken. Hope Joanne doesn’t mind my responding… For non-New Englanders, the quahog (pronounced ‘co-hog’) is another denizen of the sea bottom, a large hard-shell clam, used in clam chowder and (of course) stuffed quahogs, and from the shell of which wampumpeag or wampum (in the 17th century, the local native american currency) was fashioned. Delicious (the clam, not the wampum…)! Mr. Bosquet might be best described as Rhode Island’s answer to Gary Larson.

Ted

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 279 From: Ted Curtin Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Creatures of the deep, readable version!
 

With appologies for forgetting how to do this properly,
here is the same message that doesn’t string out forever……In Digest #88 Joanne Ladewig wrote:

>>”The quahog walks among us.” — Don Bosquet

 

And Dave Awl responded:

>Okay, I’ll bite: “quahog,” what is it that it is? And who’s Don Bosquet?

 

Had a good laugh myself over the Bosquet quote, especially in relation
to our friend the Kraken. Hope Joanne doesn’t mind my responding…
For non-New Englanders, the quahog (pronounced ‘co-hog’) is another
denizen of the sea bottom, a large hard-shell clam, used in clam chowder
and (of course) stuffed quahogs, and from the shell of which wampumpeag
or wampum (in the 17th century, the local native american currency)
was fashioned. Delicious (the clam, not the wampum…)!

Mr. Bosquet might be best described as Rhode Island’s answer to Gary Larson.

Ted

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 280 From: Chris Bell Date: 02/02/2000
Subject: Some (random) associations made after starting ‘Angelica’s Grotto’
 

So,_Angelica’s Grotto_ finally turned up at the Borders store, but no one
called to tell me. I was stumbling around the store – as you do – when a
familiar cover caught my eye… So I started reading it on Monday night. I’m
now about half way through. Here are a few more-or-less random associations
with other parts of the Body of Work (from memory, so please correct any
factual errors – if you care):

1) Anyone else noticed the name of the Scottish typesetters? Palimpsest, one
of Mr Hoban’s favourite words.
2) Pissing in two streams: this occurs as a symptom in _Kleinzeit_, where
our ‘Hero’ excuses away as something that only happens when his underwear
gets into a twist after a long day!
3) Picking people up on bad grammar (in this case ‘who’/’whom’). This also
happens a bit in _Mr Rinyo-Clacton’s Offer_.
4) Waking up like a man trapped in a car going over a cliff. If my memory
serves me correctly, this happens to someone Hermann Orff is writing about
in _The Medusa Frequency_. She starts out being called Millicent, but that
doesn’t ‘do it’ for Hermann…
5) _Bring Me The Head of Alfredo Garcia_. There is also a reference to this
film in _Mr Rinyo-Clacton’s Offer_.
6) ‘Windmills of Your Mind’, the Michael Legrand ballad, is part of the
inspiration behind Mr Hoban’s short story, _Like A Circle In A Spiral_, read
by David Horowitz on BBC Radio 3, 30.06.98.
7) A song seems to have been omitted from the otherwise very detailed
copyright acknowledgements at the front of the book; in Chapter 25, ‘A Taste
of Honey’, RH makes reference to Klein playing Portishead’s first album, and
at the end, he quotes a few lines, but no credit is given.
8) The yellow A4 pages, of course, echo both _Kleinzeit_ and _The Moment
Under The Moment_.
9) To be a total pedant, the standard of publishers’ proof-readers continues
to dwindle. There were some errors in the German to be found in the UK
(hardback) edition of ‘Rinyo-Clacton’ (the odd missing Umlaut here and
there). In _Angelicia_, Rorschach is misspelt several times as Rorshach – to
make matters worse, it’s also written correctly a couple of times – and
there should either be an Umlaut over the ‘a’ in ‘Selbstgesprach’ (talking
to oneself, Chapter 5, ‘Worth Writing Up’, page 20) or it should be written
as ‘Selbstgespraech’. Later on ‘Die Schoepfung’ is written correctly.
(Sorry, it’s got something to do with being a Virgo, I’m afraid…)
10) RH also refers to the Garbage song, ‘Only Happy When It Rains’ (and even
plays it for the audience!) as a guest on the Michael Berkeley-hosted BBC
radio show ‘Private Passions’, 14.11.98.

That’s it for now (as you’ve probably gathered, I’m enjoying it so far).

Chris

_____________________

Chris Bell
7P Cintra
3 Whitaker Place
Auckland 1001
New Zealand
chr_____@_____.nz

_____________________

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 281 From: Tim Haillay Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Re: Some (random) associations made after starting ‘Angelica’s Grot
 

— Begin original message —

> From: “Chris Bell” <chr_____@_____.nz>
> Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2000 20:39:19 -0000
> Subject: [the-kraken] Some (random) associations made after starting ‘Angelica’s Grotto’
> To: <the_____@_____.com>
> Reply-to: the_____@_____.com
>
> From: “Chris Bell” <chr_____@_____.nz>
>
> So,
>
> _Angelica’s Grotto_ finally turned up at the Borders store, but no one
> called to tell me. I was stumbling around the store – as you do – when a
> familiar cover caught my eye… So I started reading it on Monday night. I’m
> now about half way through. Here are a few more-or-less random associations
> with other parts of the Body of Work (from memory, so please correct any
> factual errors – if you care):
>
> 1) Anyone else noticed the name of the Scottish typesetters? Palimpsest, one
> of Mr Hoban’s favourite words.
> 2) Pissing in two streams: this occurs as a symptom in _Kleinzeit_, where
> our ‘Hero’ excuses away as something that only happens when his underwear
> gets into a twist after a long day!
> 3) Picking people up on bad grammar (in this case ‘who’/’whom’). This also
> happens a bit in _Mr Rinyo-Clacton’s Offer_.
> 4) Waking up like a man trapped in a car going over a cliff. If my memory
> serves me correctly, this happens to someone Hermann Orff is writing about
> in _The Medusa Frequency_. She starts out being called Millicent, but that
> doesn’t ‘do it’ for Hermann…
> 5) _Bring Me The Head of Alfredo Garcia_. There is also a reference to this
> film in _Mr Rinyo-Clacton’s Offer_.
> 6) ‘Windmills of Your Mind’, the Michael Legrand ballad, is part of the
> inspiration behind Mr Hoban’s short story, _Like A Circle In A Spiral_, read
> by David Horowitz on BBC Radio 3, 30.06.98.
> 7) A song seems to have been omitted from the otherwise very detailed
> copyright acknowledgements at the front of the book; in Chapter 25, ‘A Taste
> of Honey’, RH makes reference to Klein playing Portishead’s first album, and
> at the end, he quotes a few lines, but no credit is given.
> 8) The yellow A4 pages, of course, echo both _Kleinzeit_ and _The Moment
> Under The Moment_.
> 9) To be a total pedant, the standard of publishers’ proof-readers continues
> to dwindle. There were some errors in the German to be found in the UK
> (hardback) edition of ‘Rinyo-Clacton’ (the odd missing Umlaut here and
> there). In _Angelicia_, Rorschach is misspelt several times as Rorshach – to
> make matters worse, it’s also written correctly a couple of times – and
> there should either be an Umlaut over the ‘a’ in ‘Selbstgesprach’ (talking
> to oneself, Chapter 5, ‘Worth Writing Up’, page 20) or it should be written
> as ‘Selbstgespraech’. Later on ‘Die Schoepfung’ is written correctly.
> (Sorry, it’s got something to do with being a Virgo, I’m afraid…)
> 10) RH also refers to the Garbage song, ‘Only Happy When It Rains’ (and even
> plays it for the audience!) as a guest on the Michael Berkeley-hosted BBC
> radio show ‘Private Passions’, 14.11.98.
>

Addendum

And also Donald Fagen’s the “Goodbye Look”

And now for all total pedants.. The first line of the 1st ed of Riddley Walker was
misprinted as “On my naming day when I come 12 I to gone front spear and kilt a wyld
boar…”

So there you have it
Tim H

> _____________________
>
>
> ————————— ONElist Sponsor —————————-
>
> GET A NEXTCARD VISA, in 30 seconds. Get rates as low as 2.9 percent
> Intro or 9.9 percent Fixed APR and no hidden fees. Apply NOW.
> <a href=” http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/NextcardCreative4AE “>Click Here</a>
>
> ————————————————————————
>
> —————————————————
> The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
> For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
> http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh
>
>

 

— End original message —

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 282 From: jhyde Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Re: Creatures of the deep
 

Ted: It wasn’t Joanne Laedwig, it was me, with poor cutting and
pasting. SOME Little Rhody “clamdiggers” say co-hog, but I always said
qua-hog. We had a great time tossing regionalisms around on the LM_NET
till the list moderator said “enough, folks!” In 9th grade in RI we had
to do a research paper on the quahog. It was great fun and took me into
lots of local history. Keep on clammin’ — jlh

Jane Hyde, Librarian 828-684-6232
St. Dunstan Library jhy_____@_____.org
Christ School
500 Christ School Rd.
Arden, NC 28704When I get a little money, I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food
and clothes. — Erasmus

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 283 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: Some (random) associations
 

> From: “Chris Bell” <chr_____@_____.nz>
> Subject: Some (random) associations made after starting ‘Angelica’s

Grotto’

>

> 5) _Bring Me The Head of Alfredo Garcia_. There is also a reference to

this

> film in _Mr Rinyo-Clacton’s Offer_.

 

Also echoes the floating head of Orpheus that shows up frequently,
especially in MEDUSA FREQUENCY. I’ve been reading RIDDLEY WALKER, and came
to the part last night where Goodparley describes the head of Eusa floating
against the current to the Ram. And the plot — a quest by a character
(played by Warren Oates) for money and respect that takes him on a surreal
trip to hell — echoes in some ways Herman’s quest past blighter’s rock in
MEDUSA.

— Duane

PS: I’m a day late, but the quahog references reminded me to wish everyone a
happy groundhog day!

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 284 From: Olaf Schneider Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: place 5
 

Hello folks,
just wanted to share with with you that Angelicas Grotto is under the
Bloombury top ten paperback list on place 5!
Best,
OlafDipl. Biol. Olaf Schneider
-Interface- und Interaktionsdesign-
Projektleiter TIDE – Texte in digitalen Erfahrungsr�umen
Universit�t Bielefeld, Fakult�t f�r Linguistik und
Literaturwissenschaft,
Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld
www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~lili_lab/home/personen/schneider/index.html
Tel.: Uni 0521/106-3697
email: ola_____@_____.de
Privat:
Jakobus Stra�e 2
33604 Bielefeld
Tel.: 0521/2703175

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 285 From: buh_____@_____.es Date: 03/02/2000
Subject: GLIM
 

GLIM. Interesting word. This word was used in my distant youth by older people in
the Yorkshire region of Northern England. It’s meaning was
(and probably still is) akin to the Standard English GRIM but closer to the
lowland Scottish DRICHT. It is an adjective referring to something that is drab,
colourless, uniform and tedious. It’s definitely a negative sentiment.
Very different from the sparkly, colourful connotations of GLIMMER.
Given the regional nature of the usage of the word I would hazard a guess that it
probably comes from the Viking invaders of the 8th and 9th centuries and passed
into Old English. This kind of thing is quite common in northern England where
the influence of 11th century Norman French was markedly less strong than
further south.
Probably the best known example of GLIM is the phrase:
It’s glim up north!
There are not too many of these words still in existence, given the preponderance
of southern social and economic norms.
Curiously American English is closer to old English than British English, for
example Americans tend to use GOTTEN as the participle of GET whereas the
English tend to use GOT. Also Americans tend to use DID YOU EAT YET?, the
English prefer the present perfect HAVE YOU EATEN YET?.
It’s perfectly possible that in some parts of the USA the word GLIM is still in
use. Anybody come across it?
The history of language was until very recently the best tool for investigating
the migration of peoples. Today of course genetics is proving a more powerful
tool.
All that is known is culture and vice versa. It is the job of the artist to
comment upon culture.
Forward in all directions!
Chris Hannan

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 286 From: Olaf Schneider Date: 06/02/2000
Subject: bloomsbury top ten part II
 

Hello Krakenites,
Angelicas Grotto is now listed in the Bloomsbury overall top ten at
place 7.
I never expected this particular novel to be so successful. A nice
surprise.
Maybe as a consequence a paperback version of FREMDER will see the
light…
I went back to Fremder, IMO it’s one of the best and most delicate
science fiction ever written and it’s narrated
in a brilliant style. Something which I often miss in the sf-genre.Any news about the birthday action? Did the present arrived in time?
Best,
Olaf

Dipl. Biol. Olaf Schneider
-Interface- und Interaktionsdesign-
Projektleiter TIDE – Texte in digitalen Erfahrungsr�umen
Universit�t Bielefeld, Fakult�t f�r Linguistik und
Literaturwissenschaft,
Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld
www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~lili_lab/home/personen/schneider/index.html
Tel.: Uni 0521/106-3697
email: ola_____@_____.de
Privat:
Jakobus Stra�e 2
33604 Bielefeld
Tel.: 0521/2703175

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 287 From: judy backhouse Date: 08/02/2000
Subject: Re: bloomsbury top ten part II
 

Olaf Schneider wrote:

>
> From: Olaf Schneider <osc_____@_____.de>
>
> Hello Krakenites,
> Angelicas Grotto is now listed in the Bloomsbury overall top ten at
> place 7.
> I never expected this particular novel to be so successful. A nice
> surprise.
> Maybe as a consequence a paperback version of FREMDER will see the
> light…
> I went back to Fremder, IMO it’s one of the best and most delicate
> science fiction ever written and it’s narrated
> in a brilliant style. Something which I often miss in the sf-genre.
>
> Any news about the birthday action? Did the present arrived in time?
> Best,
> Olaf
>
> Dipl. Biol. Olaf Schneider
> -Interface- und Interaktionsdesign-
> Projektleiter TIDE – Texte in digitalen Erfahrungsr�umen
> Universit�t Bielefeld, Fakult�t f�r Linguistik und
> Literaturwissenschaft,
> Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld
> www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~lili_lab/home/personen/schneider/index.html
> Tel.: Uni 0521/106-3697
> email: ola_____@_____.de
> Privat:
> Jakobus Stra�e 2
> 33604 Bielefeld
> Tel.: 0521/2703175
>
> ————————— ONElist Sponsor —————————-
>
> Body Paint, Chocolates, & Roses Oh My.
> <a href=” http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/SparksValentine8 “>Click Here</a>
>
> ————————————————————————
>
> —————————————————
> The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
> For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
> http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh

 

Hello everyone, I just joined this list – I couldn’t believe my good
luck, to find it! I was DESPERATE to talk to someone about Russell
Hoban, having also just now re-read Fremder and swooning.

Someone gave me Mr. Rinyo-Clacton’s Offer for Christmas and I have read
that a couple of times too – I love it.

How fortunate we are, to be enjoying these gems. I hope Mr. Hoban stays
alive a long time and writes lots more.

I have to confess my favourites of his are The Marzipan Pig, and La
Corona and The Tin Frog.

I also have to say (and I may get boo-ed off the list for this) that I
do not like Riddley Walker.

Now show me how compassionate you all are and accept me!

Regards from Sydney Australia,

Judy

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 288 From: Chris Bell Date: 08/02/2000
Subject: The birthday action
 

>Any news about the birthday action? Did the present arrived in time?
>Best,
>Olaf<

 

Yeah,

I was wondering about that too… Any news Dave.

By the way, Olaf – The Bloomsbury chart. I’m glad too, but is it _really_
such a big deal? I mean, aren’t those publishers’ charts something they put
together themselves to promote books they’re trying to sell, rather than the
positions being based on actual sales…? Or am I just a cynical old
bastard?

Chris

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 289 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 08/02/2000
Subject: Welcome new list member
 

> Hello everyone, I just joined this list

 

Hello and welcome, Judy!

> I have to confess my favourites of his are The Marzipan Pig, and La
> Corona and The Tin Frog.

 

I’ve read The Marzipan Pig, but haven’t encountered the other two titles you
mention.

> I also have to say (and I may get boo-ed off the list for this) that I
> do not like Riddley Walker.

 

I just finished RW this past weekend. After finishing it, my overall
feeling — like? I don’t know. But it’s certainly an excellently executed
work. Evokes a marvelously murky world that any of us would have a
difficult time trying to imagine living in, I think.

Of course, I have a 9-month old son and my reading time comes in smaller
dashes than it used to — like others on the list have said, once you get
into the rhythm of Riddleyspeak, the narrative flows along rather smoothly
(I won’t say easily). However, it takes about 5 minutes of reading for my
reading mind to pick up that rhythm, yet my interruptions for baby usually
occur about 3 minutes after picking up a book. So it took awhile for me to
get all the way through Riddley Walker, and I’m not sure my opinion is very
well-formed at this point. Certainly a book I’ll have to re-read at some
time. Maybe after little Jack enters school!

> Now show me how compassionate you all are and accept me!

 

Oh we’re very compassionate. Or at least passionate about Mr. Hoban and his
works.

Best — Duane

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 290 From: Day Voll Date: 09/02/2000
Subject: Re: The birthday action
 

>From: “Chris Bell” <chr_____@_____.nz>
>
>>Any news about the birthday action? Did the present arrived in time?
>>Best,
>>Olaf<
>
>Yeah,
>
>I was wondering about that too… Any news Dave.

 

Well, Diana ordered the Scotch on schedule, in plenty of time for Feb. 4
delivery. And I tossed Russ a little Happy Birthday message myself, telling
him that if he hadn’t already gotten a delivery from The Kraken he should
be expecting one. I haven’t heard anything back, but I assume things went
off without a hitch. I’m sure I’ll hear something from Russ when he has a
moment. Generally he trusts me (and by extension, all of us) to understand
that since his functional work time has been greatly reduced by health
difficulties, when he’s working on a book he needs to really focus. So I’ve
learned to interpret not hearing from him as a good sign that he’s really
making progress with his writing, in this case, Glims. But rest assured as
soon as I do hear something I’ll pass it along to the list.

And I’m guessing we’ll probably be hearing from Diana soon with the message
she sent, cost, etc.

Thanks again to everyone who participated!

Also: hello to Susan and welcome to the list! I’ll reply to your off-list
post when I can catch another breather from my drudgework.

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 291 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 09/02/2000
Subject: Hobanhealth
 

> Generally he trusts me (and by extension, all of us) to understand
> that since his functional work time has been greatly reduced by health
> difficulties, when he’s working on a book he needs to really focus.

 

I’ve seen a few mentions on the list about Mr. Hoban’s health difficulties,
but I haven’t seen specific mentions about what these are. I assume from
various scenes in the books that there may be cardiac problems. I certainly
don’t want to pry or air anyone’s private travails in public. But I am
curious about the degree of his ailments and certainly wish him well.

— Duane

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 292 From: Kerry Martin Power Date: 10/02/2000
Subject: Re: Welcome new list member
 

Hi Judy,I can certainly understand your reaction to RW, especially with a young
child and interruptions.

Maybe I’ll throw my spanner into the works. I have just finished Angelica’s
Grotto

—–Original Message—–
From: Duane Spurlock <dua_____@_____.com>
To: the_____@_____.com <the_____@_____.com>
Date: Tuesday, February 08, 2000 11:59 PM
Subject: [the-kraken] Welcome new list member

 

>From: “Duane Spurlock” <dua_____@_____.com>
>
>> Hello everyone, I just joined this list
>
>Hello and welcome, Judy!
>
>> I have to confess my favourites of his are The Marzipan Pig, and La
>> Corona and The Tin Frog.
>
>I’ve read The Marzipan Pig, but haven’t encountered the other two titles

you

>mention.
>
>> I also have to say (and I may get boo-ed off the list for this) that I
>> do not like Riddley Walker.
>
>I just finished RW this past weekend. After finishing it, my overall
>feeling — like? I don’t know. But it’s certainly an excellently executed
>work. Evokes a marvelously murky world that any of us would have a
>difficult time trying to imagine living in, I think.
>
>Of course, I have a 9-month old son and my reading time comes in smaller
>dashes than it used to — like others on the list have said, once you get
>into the rhythm of Riddleyspeak, the narrative flows along rather smoothly
>(I won’t say easily). However, it takes about 5 minutes of reading for my
>reading mind to pick up that rhythm, yet my interruptions for baby usually
>occur about 3 minutes after picking up a book. So it took awhile for me to
>get all the way through Riddley Walker, and I’m not sure my opinion is very
>well-formed at this point. Certainly a book I’ll have to re-read at some
>time. Maybe after little Jack enters school!
>
>> Now show me how compassionate you all are and accept me!
>
>Oh we’re very compassionate. Or at least passionate about Mr. Hoban and his
>works.
>
>Best — Duane
>
>
>————————— ONElist Sponsor —————————-
>
>Shop for your Valentine at eGroups.
><a href=” http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/SparksValentine6 “>Click Here</a>
>
>————————————————————————
>
>—————————————————
>The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
>For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
>http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh
>

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 293 From: Kerry Martin Power Date: 10/02/2000
Subject: Re: Welcome new list member
 

Hi Judy and welcome to the list,I can certainly understand your reaction to RW, especially with a young
child and interruptions. First time it is a hard book to read. Next time I
am sure you will find a world that you didn’t walk through before.

Maybe I’ll throw my spanner into the works. I have just finished Angelica’s
Grotto and I was disappointed – not because it is a bad book, but I don’t
think it rose to the levels of his other works. It was just a good read.

I saw it as an uncomplicated story about growing old, quite sad and
reflectrive of things wasted and missed in parts –(“Things are always much
simpler than they appear at first”). There seemed to be so much of Hoban
himself in this book. I felt quite sad for the dark mood of Klein’s
refelctions and wondered how close these are to RH as he ages (and from
recent messages not in the best of health). Anyways…enough of this
morbidity – some good news….. (apart from RH referring to the GREAT Edna
Everidge (a la OZ icon Barry Humphries, now in 6th month on Broadway, in AG)

Finally, at Chapter 47 “Deeply Moving”, Hoban appeared in all his glory – I
loved the description of “The Passenger” (I always remember his reference to
the movie “The Swimmer” in Turtle Diary)….Only Hoban would wonder if the
learner driver passed his driving test!

Then Chapter 48 “Loomings” and one of those wonderful unforgettable lines:

The thing about more is that it comes after what comes before it. When
it’s ready it’ll make itself known.

Thanks for listening.

Kerry Power

—–Original Message—–
From: Duane Spurlock <dua_____@_____.com>
To: the_____@_____.com <the_____@_____.com>
Date: Tuesday, February 08, 2000 11:59 PM
Subject: [the-kraken] Welcome new list member

 

>From: “Duane Spurlock” <dua_____@_____.com>
>
>> Hello everyone, I just joined this list
>
>Hello and welcome, Judy!
>
>> I have to confess my favourites of his are The Marzipan Pig, and La
>> Corona and The Tin Frog.
>
>I’ve read The Marzipan Pig, but haven’t encountered the other two titles

you

>mention.
>
>> I also have to say (and I may get boo-ed off the list for this) that I
>> do not like Riddley Walker.
>
>I just finished RW this past weekend. After finishing it, my overall
>feeling — like? I don’t know. But it’s certainly an excellently executed
>work. Evokes a marvelously murky world that any of us would have a
>difficult time trying to imagine living in, I think.
>
>Of course, I have a 9-month old son and my reading time comes in smaller
>dashes than it used to — like others on the list have said, once you get
>into the rhythm of Riddleyspeak, the narrative flows along rather smoothly
>(I won’t say easily). However, it takes about 5 minutes of reading for my
>reading mind to pick up that rhythm, yet my interruptions for baby usually
>occur about 3 minutes after picking up a book. So it took awhile for me to
>get all the way through Riddley Walker, and I’m not sure my opinion is very
>well-formed at this point. Certainly a book I’ll have to re-read at some
>time. Maybe after little Jack enters school!
>
>> Now show me how compassionate you all are and accept me!
>
>Oh we’re very compassionate. Or at least passionate about Mr. Hoban and his
>works.
>
>Best — Duane
>
>
>————————— ONElist Sponsor —————————-
>
>Shop for your Valentine at eGroups.
><a href=” http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/SparksValentine6 “>Click Here</a>
>
>————————————————————————
>
>—————————————————
>The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
>For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
>http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh
>

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 294 From: Day Voll Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Re: Hobanhealth
 

>From: “Duane Spurlock” <dua_____@_____.com>

>I’ve seen a few mentions on the list about Mr. Hoban’s health difficulties,
>but I haven’t seen specific mentions about what these are. I assume from
>various scenes in the books that there may be cardiac problems. I certainly
>don’t want to pry or air anyone’s private travails in public. But I am
>curious about the degree of his ailments and certainly wish him well.

 

Well, I don’t think I should get too far into specifics, but if you’ve read
Angelica’s Grotto, you may have some idea of what Russ has been going
through–his medical situation is similar to Klein’s, minus the part about
blurting out rude remarks to strangers, of course. The “lost inner voice”
is a fictional device. But the line about being “a walking catalog of
infirmities” is fairly autobiographical. Keep in mind that Russ is 75, and
add to that a history of heart trouble, and some of the other ailments that
come along to brighten a person’s twilight years. Russ is a tough old bird
and I like to think he’ll be around a while longer–but I also think that
at this point, every new bit of writing we get from him is a real gift.
Beyond that I try not to worry too much about it–I think Gundel takes
great care of him and other than that, it’s in the hands of the goddess.
(Sorry to go all Mists of Avalon on you all, but there it is.)

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 295 From: Day Voll Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Bloomsbury Charts
 

>From: “Chris Bell” <chr_____@_____.nz>

>By the way, Olaf – The Bloomsbury chart. I’m glad too, but is it _really_
>such a big deal? I mean, aren’t those publishers’ charts something they put
>together themselves to promote books they’re trying to sell, rather than the
>positions being based on actual sales…? Or am I just a cynical old
>bastard?

 

Well, of course you are ; ) …but that doesn’t mean you don’t have a
point, old chum. Still, it seems to me that–if nothing else–Russ’s
presence on those charts is a gauge of Bloomsbury’s interest in him, and it
promotes him by putting his name in front of visitors to the site, so even
if it’s not a reflection of huge sales, it’s good to see his name there.

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 296 From: Chris Bell Date: 12/02/2000
Subject: Bloomsbury chart
 

>Message: 2
> Date: Fri, 11 Feb 2000 04:24:02 -0600
> From: Day Voll <day_____@_____.com>
>Subject: Bloomsbury Charts
>
>>From: “Chris Bell” <chr_____@_____.nz>
>
>>By the way, Olaf – The Bloomsbury chart. I’m glad too, but is it _really_
>>such a big deal? I mean, aren’t those publishers’ charts something they

put

>>together themselves to promote books they’re trying to sell, rather than

the

>>positions being based on actual sales…? Or am I just a cynical old
>>bastard?
>
>Well, of course you are ; ) …but that doesn’t mean you don’t have a
>point, old chum. Still, it seems to me that–if nothing else–Russ’s
>presence on those charts is a gauge of Bloomsbury’s interest in him, and it
>promotes him by putting his name in front of visitors to the site, so even
>if it’s not a reflection of huge sales, it’s good to see his name there.
>
>Dave

 

Ah,

Yes indeed. Of course, it’s a good thing to see him up there. And the
packaging of ‘Grotto’ is an indication that this publishing house does take
RH very seriously. Not that I’m implying Jonathan Cape and Picador didn’t
but perhaps new blood is a good thing. It certainly seems evident that
there’s far more empathy and awareness out there.

Good to hear that the birthday delivery seems to have gone according to
plan.

As to some previous postings – sorry, can’t quite remember who this was
now… – expressing reservations about ‘Angelica’s Grotto’, I can understand
that. All I’ll say on this topic is that the peaty flavour of a good single
malt whisky takes a few years to filter through in the barrel…

Oh, and welcome onboard Judy. Of course, it’s not compulsory to like _all_
of Mr Hoban’s writing to be accepted here. Every person who likes a _single_
one of his works is an extraordinary phenomenon: a person with taste. We are
a small and select group ;- )

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 297 From: Day Voll Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Re: Bloomsbury chart
 

Chris wrote:

>Oh, and welcome onboard Judy.

 

Yes, welcome aboard. And I promise to stop calling you Susan. (Unless, of
course, you decide that you like being called Susan.)

Hey, now that we have a Judy on the list, all we need is for someone named
“Punch” to join!

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 298 From: Sandra Smith Date: 11/02/2000
Subject: Re: Bloomsbury chart
 

Day Voll sez: Hey, now that we have a Judy on the list, all we need is for
someone named
“Punch” to join!Sandra sez: I’ve had resurgent pneumonia for two weeks now and am feeling
plenty punchy!

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 299 From: Day Voll Date: 17/02/2000
Subject: Scheduled Maintenance
 

Hey gang, just a notice from the Onelist folks that service will be down
for a few hours on Saturday.Dave

>From: adm_____@_____.com
>
>Dear ONElist Moderators
>
>The ONElist site will be off-line from 9am until 3pm Pacific Standard Time
>on Saturday 19th February, 2000 for scheduled maintenance.
>
>We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause you or your subscribers.
>Please notify your subscribers of this scheduled downtime.
>
>Mail will not be delivered during this time. Any mail posted to a list
>during this time will be delivered after 3pm Pacific Standard Time on
>Saturday 19th February, 2000.
>
>Thank you in advance for your patience.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 300 From: Day Voll Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: Reading in London
 

hola Krakenites,I’m posting three things Olaf tried to post earlier, but for some reason
he’s having trouble posting to the list and they didn’t go through. The
first is below…

Dave

————————————————————

Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 13:09:19 +0100
From: “Olaf Schneider” <ola_____@_____.de>
Subject: misses reading in london
To: “The Kraken” <the_____@_____.com>

Hello Krakenites,
did anyone attend this?

Russell Hoban
The cult author of a host of extraordinary novels, including Turtle Diary,
the Booker Prize winning Ridley Walker and his latest, Angelica’s Grotto,
talks about his work. ‘Russell Hoban is an original, imaginative and
inventive. Though some of his work has been compared with that of Tolkein
and CS Lewis, he is his own man, working his own vein of magical fantasy’
The Times

Monday 22 November 8pm
�6 (�4)
Old Town Hall

Dipl. Biol. Olaf Schneider
-Interface- und Interaktionsdesign-
Projektleiter TIDE – Texte in digitalen Erfahrungsr�umen
Universit�t Bielefeld, Fakult�t f�r Linguistik und
Literaturwissenschaft,
Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld
www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~lili_lab/home/personen/schneider/index.html
Tel.: Uni 0521/106-3697
email: ola_____@_____.de
Privat:
Jakobus Stra�e 2
33604 Bielefeld
Tel.: 0521/2703175

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 301 From: Day Voll Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: Grotto Review
 

Here’s the second forward from Olaf…——————————————————-

Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 13:12:28 +0100
From: “Olaf Schneider” <ola_____@_____.de>
Subject: grotto review
To: “The Kraken” <the_____@_____.com>

Hello folks,
I tried out a new serach machine (www.google.com)
and fout this Grotto review
http://www.independent.co.uk/enjoyment/Books/Interviews/hobanrussellint30109
9.shtml . Enjoy,
Olaf
A screen star named desire

Once famous as a kids’ author, Russell Hoban now tackles the very adult
theme of Internet sex

By Guy Mannes-Abbott

30 October 1999

In many ways, Russell Hoban ought to be a national treasure. Eventually, a
blue plaque will surely adorn his house in Fulham. This is still rather odd
for a 74-year-old American writer whose latest novel is an unflinching
exploration of male sexual appetites set loose on the Internet and
confronted with their real-life consequences. The narrator of Angelica’s
Grotto (Bloomsbury, �10), Harold Klein, has an uncannily similar biography
to his author and says at one point “I’m the answer to the question, ‘Who
will play the Old Fool in a geriatric-sex farce?’”

But then Russell Hoban is self-consciously strange, as I knew without having
met him. His books reveal a recklessly exploratory writer who, aged 50 and
with a reputation in bud, took the suicidal gamble of writing an entire
novel in a made-up dialect. That novel, Riddley Walker, about a futuristic
post-nuclear Kent returned to the Iron Age, proved to be such a
reputation-making success that it still overshadows Hoban’s diverse
achievements.

Hoban is also unusual for having revealed an extraordinary amount about
himself and his home of almost 30 years in Fulham, which he has gutted as
well as stuffed in the service of his art. In Angelica’s Grotto, he takes
London’s porn underworld home and ends up killing someone in his study. I
can’t say I approached Fulham too nervously, though – and not only because
of Klein’s life-threatening ailments and cranky fixation with the signature
details of Underground trains.

Klein’s creator is an overtly contemporary writer, and funny in peculiarly
British ways. Most of all, he’s a man who lives to write. Hoban’s books
explore realms and experiences beyond the bounds of would-be national
treasures. He’s curious enough about things to go out on a limb to discover
them for himself.

In Angelica’s Grotto, this involved confronting graphic pornographic images
and what he really felt about them. He describes it as “a dirty job –
someone had to do it”, adding that when he saw where the novel was going,
“it scared me and so I thought it must matter.”

In person, Hoban strikes me as small, relaxed and gentle; but also
methodical, driven and sure of his territory. He knows that he takes risks
as a writer, but couldn’t help himself and wouldn’t try. He describes what
most writers say about their work as “bollocks” and litters his speech with
sing-song homilies like “life is just a bowl of cherries, don’t make it
serious, it’s too mysterious.” He says of his own work, “I use myself… I’m
a body of perception and that’s where I write from. He avoids contemporary
writing “as much as possible”, not wanting to be “interfered with”.

We talk in between continental biscuits in his study, which is exactly as
described in the books – hugely messy and overstuffed, books and videos
cascading from the ceiling and growing from the floor. It’s encrusted with a
working life and embodies his imagination: masses of figurines and animals
surround a Meissen statuette, a lion mask and various incarnations of Punch.
The walls have posters of King Kong on them, but most telling is the huge
map of Kent that has covered the wall behind his desk for over 20 years.

We sit, nibbling in his head as it were, and Hoban describes himself as a
“painstaking writer” who constantly redrafts a novel from scratch until it
works. I remark that his books are strange solutions of fabular, mystic,
literary, lewd, and comic elements, mixed with lament, exuberance and the
everyday. He says, slowly, “well, I work at it”.

In conversation, he can be quick, concise and breezy on familiar ground. But
then he trawls deeply for less accessible thoughts, pausing for as long as
necessary to give a truthful answer. I asked him whether he would prefer to
die hungry or sated and he laughed, floundered a little and said he’d come
back to it. After a while he said “I could peg out at any time. Death
doesn’t worry me because I’ve given it my best shot. I’m doing whatever is
in me to do and I’ve done as much of it as I could up to now. And whenever I
go I’ll be up to date with doing what I could do. Is that hungry or sated?”
There was a pause. “It’s not sated!”

Angelica’s Grotto is a satisfyingly unsated novel. It follows Klein’s sudden
loss of his inner voice, his subsequent vocalising of every thought in his
head and the violence that results. He resorts to the Internet, where he
types the word “sex” into a search engine and soon becomes entranced with a
website called Angelica’s Grotto. Soon his fantasising is made actual, but
in highly unexpected ways that involve him in new sexual experiences,
forcing him to confront what he wants and what that means.

Angelica’s Grotto is typically funny-melancholic, but looser and more
rounded than earlier novels. It displays Hoban’s ability to write about the
here and now at its best. Together with his searing honesty about the sexual
imaginings of an old man, this is an intelligent book about contemporary
life, its technologies, sexual politics and urban culture. It re-enacts the
foreshortening of experience that the Internet effects but also achieves a
rare degree of perspective. Hoban argues that “there is no unnatural act”
for human beings and remains fascinated by the “self-revelation of humanity
on the Internet”.

Hoban grew up on a smallholding listening to Yiddish, Russian and English
and was “a proto drop-out” before eventually becoming a successful
illustrator. He came to London in 1969 as a children’s writer and the city
made him into an adult novelist. “London,” he says, “is very juicy for me…
it’s my place now, the place where it happens for me.”

Hoban feels closest to his second novel, Kleinzeit , “which was the first
novel of mine in which I found what I’d call a Jewish, wry-humour voice. It
was a lot of fun.” This is the chattering internal dialogue that also
appears in Pilgermann and The Medusa Frequency, the inner voice that Klein
loses – and vocalises – in Angelica’s Grotto.

London also ended his first marriage, but it’s where he met and married
Gundel. Both, he says, felt like strangers at home and so felt at home in
London, where they actually were strangers. This “strangeness”, he has
written, “is the essential human condition”. He told me that he’d always
felt “affinities” with European and particularly German culture. “There’s
this openness to the darkness imminent in everything,” he said, which is
“not a bad chaos, but a warm or fruitful chaos.” This, together with his
remarks about satedness and his argument that “a lot of lamentation doesn’t
preclude having a lot of bounce also,” conveys the character of his books.

So, there you have Russell Hoban: a collection of unlikely elements ranging
from Rilke to Garbage’s Shirley Manson. He would say that life is like that,
but he is no less unusual for affirming it. It all comes together in
Angelica’s Grotto to produce an impressively vigorous and enjoyable novel, a
bit like Kleinzeit and The Medusa Frequency folded into one. It’s a
challenging late novel from an unpredictable writer whose books are worth
treasuring.

Dipl. Biol. Olaf Schneider
-Interface- und Interaktionsdesign-
Projektleiter TIDE – Texte in digitalen Erfahrungsr�umen
Universit�t Bielefeld, Fakult�t f�r Linguistik und
Literaturwissenschaft,
Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld
www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~lili_lab/home/personen/schneider/index.html
Tel.: Uni 0521/106-3697
email: ola_____@_____.de
Privat:
Jakobus Stra�e 2
33604 Bielefeld
Tel.: 0521/2703175

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 302 From: Day Voll Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: interview video clip!!!!!!! Brilliant!
 

Number 3 of 3 from Olaf…——————————————————

Hello fols,
the new search machine is unbelieveable:
I’ve found an streaming (or downloadable) interviewclip with Russell Hoban
in brilliant
quality (sound and pics). The setting is very nice. Mr. Hoban against
blackness.
Enjoy under:
http://www.roland-collection.com/rolandcollection/literature/101/W64.htm
Best,
olaf
Dipl. Biol. Olaf Schneider
-Interface- und Interaktionsdesign-
Projektleiter TIDE – Texte in digitalen Erfahrungsr�umen
Universit�t Bielefeld, Fakult�t f�r Linguistik und
Literaturwissenschaft,
Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld
www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~lili_lab/home/personen/schneider/index.html
Tel.: Uni 0521/106-3697
email: ola_____@_____.de
Privat:
Jakobus Stra�e 2
33604 Bielefeld
Tel.: 0521/2703175

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 303 From: ULTIMATE CHRISMOON Date: 21/02/2000
Subject: Re: interview video clip!!!!!!! Brilliant!
 

Yes, this clip looks really good. What I am wondering is if the entire
video they mention–apparently 15 minutes long is really for sale. That
might be worth investing in. Either way, this was a great way to actually
hear and see Hoban.Chris

 

On Mon, 21 Feb 2000, Day Voll wrote:

> From: Day Voll <day_____@_____.com>
>
>
> Number 3 of 3 from Olaf…
>
> ——————————————————
>
> Hello fols,
> the new search machine is unbelieveable:
> I’ve found an streaming (or downloadable) interviewclip with Russell Hoban
> in brilliant
> quality (sound and pics). The setting is very nice. Mr. Hoban against
> blackness.
> Enjoy under:
> http://www.roland-collection.com/rolandcollection/literature/101/W64.htm
> Best,
> olaf
> Dipl. Biol. Olaf Schneider
> -Interface- und Interaktionsdesign-
> Projektleiter TIDE – Texte in digitalen Erfahrungsr�umen
> Universit�t Bielefeld, Fakult�t f�r Linguistik und
> Literaturwissenschaft,
> Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld
> www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~lili_lab/home/personen/schneider/index.html
> Tel.: Uni 0521/106-3697
> email: ola_____@_____.de
> Privat:
> Jakobus Stra�e 2
> 33604 Bielefeld
> Tel.: 0521/2703175
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll
>
>
>
> ————————————————————————
> GET A NEXTCARD VISA, in 30 seconds! Get rates as low as 2.9%
> Intro or 9.9% Fixed APR and no hidden fees. Apply NOW!
> http://click.egroups.com/1/915/0/_/_/_/951134410/
> ————————————————————————
>
> —————————————————
> The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
> For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
> http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll/rh
>
>
>
>

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 304 From: Day Voll Date: 01/03/2000
Subject: Glimswatch & Maltus Interruptus
 

Hey Krakenites,well, I have some great news and some not-so-great news. I’ve finally heard
from Mr. Hoban, he’s fine and we were correct in assuming he was letting
his email pile up unanswered in order to focus on finishing Glims. The
great news is that this task has been accomplished! Glims came in at 178
pp. and, as mentioned previously, is already scheduled for publication in
Spring 2001.

The not-so-great news is that our bottle of Scotch went missing–it didn’t
show up on Mr. H’s birthday or indeed at all so far. That’s the thing about
online shopping, sigh: when it works it’s really fun, but it also has the
potential to fail spectacularly (just ask all those kids who didn’t get
their presents last Christmas when their parents ordered from Toys R Us).

Diana is following up with the merchant involved, Master of Malt in the UK,
and will let us know what the story is once she’s gotten to the bottom of
the case. And one way or another, we’ll regroup and make sure Russ gets his
birthday bottle, though it’ll be a bit late and no longer a surprise. Still
refreshing, though, I have no doubt.

thanks for your patience everyone…

Dave

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ocelot Factory: http://www.suba.com/~dayvoll

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 305 From: Duane Spurlock Date: 02/03/2000
Subject: Giant squid
 

It’s been quite around here lately!A site Krakenites might find vaguely interesting:

http://seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov/squid.html

The Cephalopod Page:
http://is.dal.ca/~ceph/TCP/index.html

— Duane

 

Group: the-kraken Message: 306 From: Alida Allison Date: 03/03/2000
Subject: Re: [the-kraken] Glimswatch & Maltus Interruptus
 

Dave,I’m in the early stages of organizing a Russell Hovban confernce next
fall at Warwick University in the U.K. It’d be helpful to the organizers if
we had even a vague idea of who might want to come–there’d be plane fare,
of course, but also a registration fee–probably housing on the campus
would be pretty cheap: few hundred $ total for fee, room & some board,
probably. Short conference, couple of days. No details yet, except the idea
is to honor you know who.

Could you run the question by our group just as a general inquiry?

At 04:13 PM 3/1/00 -0600, you wrote:

>From: Day Voll <day_____@_____.com>
>
>
>Hey Krakenites,
>
>well, I have some great news and some not-so-great news. I’ve finally heard
>from Mr. Hoban, he’s fine and we were correct in assuming he was letting
>his email pile up unanswered in order to focus on finishing Glims. The
>great news is that this task has been accomplished! Glims came in at 178
>pp. and, as mentioned previously, is already scheduled for publication in
>Spring 2001.
>
>The not-so-great news is that our bottle of Scotch went missing–it didn’t
>show up on Mr. H’s birthday or indeed at all so far. That’s the thing about
>online shopping, sigh: when it works it’s really fun, but it also has the
>potential to fail spectacularly (just ask all those kids who didn’t get
>their presents last Christmas when their parents ordered from Toys R Us).
>
>Diana is following up with the merchant involved, Master of Malt in the UK,
>and will let us know what the story is once she’s gotten to the bottom of
>the case. And one way or another, we’ll regroup and make sure Russ gets his
>birthday bottle, though it’ll be a bit late and no longer a surprise. Still
>refreshing, though, I have no doubt.
>
>thanks for your patience everyone…
>
>Dave
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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>
>
>
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>The Kraken: The Russell Hoban Mailing List
>For help contact Dave Awl – day_____@_____.com
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Alida Allison
Associate Professor
Director, Children’s Literature Circle
Dept. of English and Comparative Literature
San Diego State University
5500 Campanile Dr.
San Diego, CA 92182-8140
(619) 594-6385, office phone
(619) 594-5443, department phone
(619) 594-4998, FAX

CHECK OUT THE CHILDREN’S LITERATURE PROGRAM WEB SITE AND BOOK REVIEW SERVICE:
http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/english/childlit

FOR INFORMATION ABOUT CURRENT CHILDREN’S LITERATURE COURSES:
http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/english/engl.html