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Personal blog of Jessica Zafra, author of The Collected Stories and the Twisted series
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Archive for March, 2011

German plagiarism scandal ousts a would-be chancellor

March 15, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Current Events, Places 1 Comment →

I burst my pimples at you and show you the soles of my shoes! Photo from Der Spiegel.

In Germany, Uproar Over a Doctoral Thesis
by Michael Kimmelman

. . .The trouble started last month when this country’s most popular cabinet minister, Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, a handsome, media-savvy, conspicuously pomaded 39-year-old baron widely presumed to be a leading candidate to succeed Angela Merkel someday as chancellor, tried to brush off charges that he had plagiarized parts of his 2006 thesis.

“Absurd,” was his initial response. And many Germans wanted to believe him. “Well-born, well-spoken and well-groomed,” as The Economist observed about the baron, he had “seemed blunt where others prevaricated, principled where they plotted. Alone among German leaders,” the magazine went on, referring to the gray, proficient bureaucrats who tend to run the country, he made “voters’ hearts quicken.” . . .

Read the full story in NYT.

Funny how the article says the Germans are so. . .German. We could use some German-style intellectual rigor in our institutions.

Literary Real Estate: Say goodbye to Gatsby’s green light

March 15, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Books, Money, Places 1 Comment →

Moseley Bog, the inspiration for the Old Forest in The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien, is still there. The community protected it from developers.


Photo by Megan Cytron

This is Lands End, the mansion on Long Island that may have been one of the models for Daisy Buchanan’s house in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. It will be demolished. A subdivision will be built on the land.


Photo by Joshua Bright

Look: A perfume commercial from 1988 directed by David Lynch and starring Benicio Del Toro (Rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr) and Heather Graham. The words are by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Flightless but beautiful

March 15, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Announcements 1 Comment →

Junix Jong-Il

March 15, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Announcements 2 Comments →

Budjette just sent this: Junix Inocian is now the leader of a communist country!


Advertising Agency: Geller-Nessis Publicis, Tel Aviv, Israel. Chief Creative Director: Rony Schneider. Aired: March 2011

Don’t say “Don’t panic” because People Will Panic

March 14, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Current Events, Places, Science, Technology No Comments →


BOILING WATER REACTOR SYSTEM: The system’s inverted lightbulb primary containment vents below through pipes to a pressure suppression torus. Once that torus breaches due to overpressure, the secondary containment is all that separates the released radioactive steam from the outside environment.
Image: http://www.nucleartourist.com/

Nuclear Experts Explain Worst-Case Scenario at Fukushima Power Plant
The type of accident occurring now in Japan derives from a loss of offsite AC power and then a subsequent failure of emergency power on site. Engineers there are racing to restore AC power to prevent a core meltdown.
By Steve Mirsky

Read the article in Scientific American.

The winner of LitWit Challenge 5.1: Brrrrring! will be announced after a short message from the Yucch-meter.

March 14, 2011 By: jessicazafra Category: Books, Contest 4 Comments →

The Yucch-meter would like to make a statement.

Do not try to be cool. If you try to be cool, that is uncool. Much of what is great in the world was thought up by people who were not considered cool in their time. We are not cool. So accept your uncoolness and embrace it.

Just tell the damn story, everything follows. Thank you.

The Yucch-meter is back from a longish break, refreshed and ready to cut off some heads. What have we got?

#1 rice_cooker. Garden-variety tale of unrequited passion set in a call center. The location is wasted: there is no good reason why this story should take place in a call center. Apparently this call center has a grand total of two employees, the narrator and the object of his desires. But our main problem with this entry: Inept figures of speech. “Piano-long fingers”—They’re 2.2 meters long?? What is she, a giant squid? She has a “coke figure”—emaciated and nervous?? You mean capital C plus bottle. “Her laugh is braying like a donkey”—Do consult the spelling and grammar checker on your word processing application, it would spare you so much grief and spare us so much annoyance.

In general something happens in a story. In this one the narrator pines from beginning to end, eliciting not sympathy but the urge to put him out of his misery.

#2 Askaniclan. Shrewdly exploits consumer fury at inefficient customer service. Actually knows something about how call centers operate. Hilarious! Not a waste of Michael’s picture.

#3 angus25. This is interesting because. . .?

#5 aimubear. Cute, but this is a caption not a story.

#6 sirius black. The reason we enforce a 1,000-word limit is not only to prevent the Yucch-meter from exploding out of sheer rage but to encourage the contestants to cultivate discipline in their writing. Control is a much undervalued quality because it does not show. And yet it is most essential when going for the effect of being out of control. Otherwise words would not be employed; all would be drool spattered on a screen.

Of course we allow contraventions of the word limit if we sense something extraordinary in the piece. One never knows where genius will turn up. Next.

#7 shadowplay. See # 3. Even if you put a bunch of words together according to the rules of grammar, it does not automatically follow that you are saying something.

#8 winnerific. This entry has aspirations. There is a potentially intriguing plot lost in a welter of words. You might try rewriting this as simply and directly as possible.

Everyone, listen. Before you can experiment you have to be adept at basic storytelling. Before he could go cubist, Picasso had to learn to draw the traditional way. How can you fracture, fragment, reinvent something if you do not know what it is in the first place?

Sure, bring up Orson Welles. Really? Is that you Orson? Show us. And bear in mind what happened to Orson Welles after Citizen Kane.

#9 Cacs. A future in which spoken language is obsolete. Good idea. We are tired of saying nice things about you. Here’s an assignment for you: Write us an ad promoting reading.

#10 ouroboros. Sound the alarm, we just heard the ring of authenticity. This narrator sounds like a human being with actual life experience. Forthright style, details chosen to elicit empathy. The final paragraphs connect the story to the photo in a humorous way. Works for us.

The winners of LitWit Challenge 5.1 are ouroboros, Cacs (you can open a bookstore now), winnerific, aimubear and Askaniclan. Please post your full names in Comments (they won’t be published) and we’ll alert you when your prizes have been delivered to National Bookstore in Rockwell.

The Weekly LitWit Challenge is brought to you by our generous and very helpful friends at National Bookstore. We would like to thank the staff of National Bookstore at Power Plant Mall, Rockwell in particular for their courteous service, efficiency and their patience in addressing prize claims.

Next LitWit Challenge coming right up.