Sunday, January 18, 2009

I'm Busy Reading Stephen Crane's Letters!




That's right! And, working 14,000 hours per week. But it's so relaxing at the end of the day to crawl into bed with The Correspondence of Stephen Crane Volumes I and II. I just finished Volume I and have put a dent in II. Perhaps i shall review them after i've finished both, as i intend to post reviews of every Crane-related book on this blog, eventually. Right now i will give you my first impressions of Correspondence and the basic info in case you'd like to read along!

Published in 1988 by Columbia University Press, and edited by Paul Sorrentino and Stanley Wertheim, The Correspondence of Stephen Crane Volumes I and II totals 772 pages of every known (in 1988) letter by Stephen Crane and many written to him and to/by Cora. Sorrentino has updated the letters in various volumes of Stephen Crane Studies.

Crane's letter writing is just as good as his story-telling, and i don't think many Crane fans would be disappointed by the man revealed through these letters. His sense of humour is especially sharp. Sometimes he is shady, for instance writing love letters to multiple women at once...but jeez what young man of brilliance and vigor hasn't been there?! It was rather pathetic when Crane runs off to Cuba and doesn't write his debt and panic stricken honey Cora for months (or anyone else in his family). But in Crane's defense he was sickly and overworked and broke at the time too, so extremely distracted. During this period he writes mainly to his agent, Paul Revere Reynolds, badgering him for cash and urging sales of his stories. Crane seems to be dodging bankruptcy from month to month, flinging publication rights into the mouth of the financial beast at his heels, while constantly seeking loans and advances. The poor man!

The Correspondence gives a good insight into Crane's relationships with publishers, agents, and fellow literary men alike, in addition to his family and school chums, which i personally found less interesting. Crane has good rapport with outlandish literary promoter Elbert Hubbard, his lit godfather Willie Dean Howells, and writer co-exile Joseph Conrad, to name a few. He shows fairly good business sense in some of his letters to agents Reynolds and James Pinker, but demonstrates rather poor relations with his publishers, such as S.S. McClure, and doesn't hold back when talking about some editors.

Cora Crane, his common law wife, makes a good showing for herself in the letters she's written. She seems very intelligent, warm-hearted, and devoted entirely to Stephen and his career. We will be discussing much more of Cora in the months to come, including a review of the biography by Lillian Gilkes.

If you'd like to pick up a copy of the Correspondence, i would suggest you do it soon as the book is already 20 years old. Look to Amazon and Alibris for the most affordable/in best condition copy, as if you insist on buying a new copy you will spend $100 to $200 if you are able to find one at all. I was able to buy two sets for $15 for each set, I don't know if you will be that lucky but certainly you could find a set for $35 plus shipping on Amazon. The ISBN numbers are as follows...Volume One: 978-0231066525, Volume Two: 978-0231066549, the set of Vols I & II, somewhat pointless since it's two books no matter what, but easy to look up: 978-0231060028.

Below & above are scans of the dust jackets...




Thursday, January 1, 2009

Futuristic Crane Interview

A few days ago the Crane Crusaders Crack Internet Research Team was scouring a site called YouTube for exciting videos about our hero. One titled "Stephen Crane Interview" jumped out and kicked us in the sack! Before we say anything more about it, why don't you click below and watch this video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_xkqYDNGuw

Wow! Watching Stephen Crane in some sort of outerspace war video game was rich & exotic even for our seasoned Crane palates! We had to investigate further, so we checked out the YouTube profile of the person who posted the video, one Dustin Hensley of Ashley, Indiana.

His profile read in part, "My name is Dustin Hensley. I am currently a high school graduate, planning on some sort of college education. I plan to attend FullSail University and study to become a Film Director. My life has recently become a crazy mess, and I have begun this new blog entitled "Deeper." I am becoming more and more focused on my films and will be creating several every month in order to train myself."

We then decided to create a YouTube account so we could contact Dustin for an interview...

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Pat: Who are you and what do you do?

Dustin: I'm currently a high school grad who is trying to figure out what the purpose of my life will be, aside from pursuing my ambition of a career in film direction.

Pat: What inspired you to put Stephen Crane in a futuristic war video game?

Dustin: It was my junior year of high school, and a friend was doing a book report on The Red Badge of Courage. We had originally intended this to be much longer and more in depth, but failed miserably.

Pat: Are you on drugs of any kind?

Dustin: I have some allergy meds, and asthma meds, but I dont take them. Does caffeine count?

Pat: Which would you say is more awesome, Halo video games or the works of Stephen Crane?

Dustin: Halo 3. Hands down. Not the most spectacular story line, but the best gameplay of any on the current market. Now Halo:CE's story line: the SHIZZ.

Pat: This video is a good start, but are you willing to devote the rest of your life to spreading the word about Stephen Crane?

Dustin: I'm not positive about any more Stephen Crane films in the near future, but I suppose one day I could rearrange my priorities. For now, I'm trying to just save money and woo a very special girl.

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We of the Crane Crusaders are quite pleased that the youth of America are being taught Crane in their skools. Bringing him forward into the age of computer games is an even more spectacular thing akin to the goals of the Crane Crusaders. It also fits that given Crane's journalistic pursuit of battlefronts, he might very well have wound up in this Halo scenario.

Tip of the helmet to Dustin for creating this video, and for not ruling out the possibility that he might someday devote his life to the advancement of Stephen Crane's legacy.

Happy New Year everyone!