LET’S GET RELEVANT!
“Literature is news that stays news.”
-Ezra Pound
Except writers today aren’t even trying to get the first part right. To make fiction and poetry a vibrant part of today’s debates. IF literature is to survive and thrive in this time of new technologies, it needs to become part of the cultural conversation. Literature carries into this battle unique assets: its ability to not only describe everything happening, supplemented by the reader’s own experiences and memories– without the expense and apparatus of television and movies– but also to move inside the heads of people, to understand them and to show what they’re feeling and thinking. Because writing consists of condensed information– still the quickest, most efficient and least expensive way of communicating knowledge (letters and words a sophisticated data network)– it can address current issues and events quickly. To compete in this hyper-noisy age it needs to address the world quickly, in compelling, insightful and knowledgeable ways. Which we attempt to do in our new feature story, “The Advisor” by New Pop Lit editor Karl Wenclas. We hope you read it.
Allison noted the room’s evident props. Paintings of several past presidents, prominently displayed. The current president had added his own pagan touches– garish gold statuary. In-your-face exhibits of his well-known lack of taste. Allison realized that for the Advisor, the President was himself a prop. Allison by now knew the Advisor’s worldview– he admired the orange man, but only as a historical relic. As if P.T. Barnum or Colonel Tom Parker were in the room. A cutting-edge businessman for his time– master salesman– but his time had passed.
ALSO: Speaking of fiction, we have a flash fiction piece– about an overturned salt truck and other things– by the one-and-only M.C. Schmidt now up at our Fast Pop Lit site. The title: “Mandala.” How is that topical, you ask? Well, here in Michigan it snowed yesterday. Talk about good timing!
