29 April 10 | Chad W. Post

This past Monday we celebrated the third year of Open Letter with a very special event at which ten different University of Rochester faculty members, deans, and students read short bits from ten different Open Letter books. One of the most entertaining, rapid, enjoyable events we’ve ever hosted. And in contrast to some of the others—all of which have been really amazing—I think this might be the most watchable one online. The breaks between readers are natural places to pause if you need to do something, the topic keeps shifting every 5 minutes or so, everyone who read did an amazing job, people actually laughed at some of the jokes . . .

Anyway, for anyone who couldn’t be there, here’s a link to the video:


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Basti
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Christa Wolf’s newly-translated City of Angels is a novel of atonement, and in this way the work of art that it resembles most to me is not another book, but the 2003 Sophia Coppola film Lost in Translation. Like that. . .

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French author—philosopher, poet, novelist—de Roblès writes something approaching the Great (Latin) American Novel, about Brazilian characters, one of whom is steeped in the life of the seventeenth century polymath (but almost always erroneous) Jesuit Athanasius Kircher. Eleazard von Wogau, a. . .

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