McSweeney's 04: Trying, Trying, Trying, Trying, Trying
by Dave Eggers (Editor)
McSweeney's Quarterly Concern (4)
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McSweeney's Issue 4 is a box containing 14 booklets. The booklets feature fiction and nonfiction, from Denis Johnson, Haruki Murakami, Sheila Heti, George Saunders, Jonathan Lethem, Rachel Cohen, Lawrence Weschler, Rick Moody, Lydia Davis, and many others. The first of many experiments in book and magazine packaging, McSweeney's Issue 4 marks a departure from the simpler paperback mold of the first three issues. For this issue, authors chose the art and design of their booklet. So, for show more example, Denis Johnson chose to use his son Matt's doodle for the cover of his three-act play "Hellhound On My Trail." George Saunders gave us a photo he took years ago, in Russia, for the cover of his "Four Institutional Monologues." And we took all of these booklets, and fit them in a box with a wood-footed bird adorned on the top. (For those asking Why?, there is also a booklet devoted to answering that question, written by editor Dave Eggers.) This rare issue, virtually out of print since it was first published, is now lovingly remade with a sturdier, more archive-worthy box and the same wondrous collection of prose. show lessTags
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The first three issues of McSweeney's Quarterly were uniformly sized paperback books densely covered with text and odd diagrams. The magazine's goal was to highlight writing that couldn't get published elsewhere in a way that made fun of the industry itself. Out of nowhere came Issue 4, a thick white box with a strange color illustration of a bird with human arms and wooden planks for feet. Inside the box were thirteen booklets, each containing just one story or essay, and a longer booklet containing the letters section and thirteen shorter pieces. It immediately sold out, became a collector's item, and began McSweeney's experimentation with the physical format of their issues.
While the author list is star-studded and the booklets are show more beautiful little things, the actual writing doesn't always match the presentation. The standouts by far are the non-fiction pieces:
"Symmes Hole" by Paul Collins about a man who advanced a theory that the earth has another world inside it complete with continents, oceans, and animals
Paul Maliszewewski's fascinating article, "Paperback Nabokov," which details the very specific ideas for cover illustrations the famous writer battled for
Another set of art history "Convergences" by the brilliant Lawrence Weschler.
The very short pieces collected in the longer booklet are generally humorous and suffer from being so short they don't engage and often rely on cliché. There are a couple of good pieces, but now most of this material would be published on the McSweeney website. The Letters section is particularly good.
Although the actual contents are a little disappointing, the issue is a beautiful object to own and enjoy. The issue I have is a 2010 second printing of the 2000 original with a sturdier box. show less
While the author list is star-studded and the booklets are show more beautiful little things, the actual writing doesn't always match the presentation. The standouts by far are the non-fiction pieces:
"Symmes Hole" by Paul Collins about a man who advanced a theory that the earth has another world inside it complete with continents, oceans, and animals
Paul Maliszewewski's fascinating article, "Paperback Nabokov," which details the very specific ideas for cover illustrations the famous writer battled for
Another set of art history "Convergences" by the brilliant Lawrence Weschler.
The very short pieces collected in the longer booklet are generally humorous and suffer from being so short they don't engage and often rely on cliché. There are a couple of good pieces, but now most of this material would be published on the McSweeney website. The Letters section is particularly good.
Although the actual contents are a little disappointing, the issue is a beautiful object to own and enjoy. The issue I have is a 2010 second printing of the 2000 original with a sturdier box. show less
A collection of fourteen booklets housed in a box. A wide variety of material is included; the most immediately interesting to me was Paul Maliszewski's essay on Nabokov's book jackets, and the great Paul Collins on the hollow-earth folks active in the early years of the nineteenth century.
Many interesting words interestingly presented.
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Dave Eggers was born on March 12th, 1970, in Boston, Massachusetts. His family moved to Lake Forest, Illinois when he was a child. Eggers attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, until his parents' deaths in 1991 and 1992. The loss left him responsible for his eight-year-old brother and later became the inspiration for his highly show more acclaimed memoir "A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius". Published in 2000, the memoir was nominated for a nonfiction Pulitzer the following year. Eggers edits the popular "The Best American Nonrequired Reading" published annually. In 1998, he founded the independent publishing house, McSweeney's which publishes a variety of magazines and literary journals. Eggers has also opened several nonprofit writing centers for high school students across the United States. Eggers has written several novels and his title, A Hologram for the King, was a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award. His most recent work of fiction, entitled The Circle, was published in 2013. His recent nonfiction books are The Monk of Mokha (January 2018) and What Can a Citizen Do? (Illustrated by Shawn Harris)(September 2018). (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- McSweeney's 04: Trying, Trying, Trying, Trying, Trying
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- McSweeney's Quarterly Concern No. 4
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