What's Up!

September 13, 2020

What's Up - Your guide to what's happening in Fayetteville, AR this week!

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SEPTEMBER 13-19, 2020 WHAT'S UP! 7 Walter adds that the two stories from the 1960s "precede his creation of Stay More and don't contribute anything directly to its history, but they do share some telling themes with the later novels that I try to explain (without giving any spoilers away) in the introduction. The two stories from the '90s are vintage Stay More yarns that re-create the lovingly lived-in world of the Ozark town that he worked so long and joyfully to conjure for his readers; those later stories also offer their own variations on the enduring themes of the Stay More novels: love of storytelling, love of nature and the world, and love of love." Walter says the original plan "was to group this short novel and the stories together with the 'nonfiction' — a word that should always carry quotation marks when talking about Don's work — in 'The Guestroom Novelist' (2019). But putting them together produced a manuscript almost 600 pages long, which makes for a pretty ponderous book just to pick up, much less to read, so we pretty quickly agreed just to split the fiction off into its own volume." But readers also get a collection of Harington's correspondence that was discovered in the search to date "DUB." "Because there was no date on the typescript of 'DUB,' I had to go through a lot of Don's correspondence in the Special Collections archive to try to figure out when he wrote it," Walter says. "Don was very much his own literary curator throughout his life, diligently collecting his letters and organizing them by correspondent and by date. In the course of this research, I was able to piece together the curious and entertaining backstory of this novel's rather improbable existence, so I wanted to share that story with his readers. It's an intensely Haringtonian scenario of an artist surprising himself by pouring creative love into a publisher's odd and frankly rather impertinent suggestion only to have that love finally left unrequited by publication. So the appendix encapsulates many of the themes of inspiration, vulnerability and artistically generous disappointment that characterize both his novels and his life story as Don tells it in the documentaries and in 'The Guestroom Novelist.'" Walter says the correspondence includes "many illuminating, often scathing, and often quite funny references to writers whom Don and his editor considered important influences on (or rivals to) his work in the early '70s." "But what I most love about the correspondence is the way it emphasizes the deeply personal relationships that Don developed around his fiction. Even though everything he says is pressured by his desire for literary fame and financial success, you can't help seeing how eagerly he connected on a personal level with his editor and his publisher even when they were just discussing business matters. In the preface to the appendix, I refer to him as 'this most incorrigibly personal of writers,' because all of his letters — just like all of his novels — were, in one way or another, love letters, sprung from an almost desperate desire for deep and lasting personal connection. Even when he's joking or angry or depressed in these letters, that vital wellspring of love and delight that sources all of his writing bubbles through." FYI 'Double Toil and Trouble' Available at $22.46 from the University of Arkansas Press at www.uapress.com. The University of Arkansas' Osher Lifelong Learning Insti- tute has invited editor Brian Walter to do a pair of online events this fall: a talk for the OLLI book club about "DUB" on Nov. 19 and a 90-minute short course on Dec. 1 called "Stay- ing More: New Work by Donald Harington." Find out more at olli.uark.edu. Newly discovered Harington correspondence, also included in "Double Toil and Trouble," "includes many illuminating, often scathing, and often quite funny references to writers whom Don and his editor considered important influences on (or rivals to) his work in the early '70s," editor Brian Walter says. "If you've ever wondered about Don's early take on the influence of Faulkner and Nabokov on his novels, or his opinions of contemporaries like William Styron, John Barth, and William Gass, the correspondence in the appendix is a literary gold mine." This photo of Harington was taken in 1998. (Arkansas Democrat- Gazette File Photo) "I've always thought of Don's work as a gift both to the reader and to the world he loved so much and in so many complicated, artful, and inspiring ways," says Brian Walter, editor of the posthumous Donald Harington release, "Double Toil and Trouble." "In this case, I get to play the lucky Santa Claus who delivers this unexpected gift." (Courtesy Photo)

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