this week in literature

METAMORPHOSIS

Iceland’s Vesterport Theatre returns to the Next Wave Festival with the U.S. premiere of METAMORPHOSIS (photo by Eddi Jonsson)

Brooklyn Academy of Music
BAM Harvey Theater
651 Fulton St. between Ashland & Rockwell Pl.
November 30 – December 5, $25-$65
718-636-4100
www.bam.org

In 2008, Iceland’s Vesterport Theatre, under the leadership of director and star Gísli Örn Gardarsson, made its U.S. debut with their visually arresting production of WOYZECK, and they are returning to BAM’s Next Wave Festival this week for a multimedia interpretation of Franz Kafka’s creepy short story METAMORPHOSIS. Billed as “a six-legged nightmare,” the show, directed and adapted by Gardarsson and David Farr, will once again feature a score composed by Australian madman Nick Cave and his longtime Bad Seed Warren Ellis, with set design by Börkur Jónsson, lighting design by Björn Helgason, costumes by Brenda Murphy, and sound design by Nick Manning. Gardarsson and some of his collaborators will participate in an artist talk following the December 2 performance.

THE PIGLET PARTY

David Tanis cookbook has made it past the first two rounds

92YTribeca
200 Hudson St. at Canal St.
Tuesday, November 30, $38, 7:00
212-415-5500
www.92ytribeca.org
www.brownpapertickets.com/event/136148

The blog explosion has led to a surfeit of sites dedicated to food and drink, for everyone from elegant gourmet groupies to just plain meat-and-potatoes burger-lovin’ folk. One such site, food52, run by Amanda Hesser and Merrill Stubbs, focuses on home cooking. “We love spending time in the kitchen,” they explain online, “and we believe that memorable cooking doesn’t have to be complicated or precious.” On November 30, Hesser and Stubbs will be joined by food writer Charlotte Druckman as hosts of the Piglet Party, celebrating the second annual Tournament of Cookbooks. Since November 9, sixteen cookbooks have been battling it out in a bracketed competition judged by such experts as Ezra Klein, Peter Kaminsky, Ree Drummond, Susan Orlean, Francis Lam, and Mario Batali. In round one, Bill Yosses and Melissa Clark’s THE PERFECT FINISH beat Kate Moses’s CAKEWALK before losing to Kim Boyce and Amy Scattergood’s GOOD TO THE GRAIN in round two, while David Tanis’s HEART OF THE ARTICHOKE has made it past Katie Caldesi’s COOK ITALY and Frank Falcinelli, Frank Castronovo, and Peter Meehan’s FRANKIES. Also surviving the first two rounds is Dorie Greenspan’s AROUND MY FRENCH TABLE, having disposed of Darnia Allen’s FORGOTTEN SKILLS OF COOKING and Sarah Marx Feldner’s A COOK’S JOURNEY. Winners are announced every Wednesday, with the champion being crowned on December 1, so everyone will party at 92YTribeca the night before, with food supplied by such local vendors as Van Leeuwen, June Taylor, Mexicue, Liddabit Sweets, Rick’s Picks, and Theo Peck, wine from Hanna Winery, and beer from Kelso of Brooklyn. And Frank Bruni, Chris Cosentino, Ben Leventhal, and Falcinelli will participate in a panel discussion on food porn. Tickets are $38, with $5 going to the nonprofit organization Wellness in the Schools.

WINTER’S EVE AT LINCOLN SQUARE 2010

Broadway from 59th to 66th Sts.
Monday, November 29, 5:30
Admission: free but please bring can of food to Dante Park for City Harvest
www.winterseve.org

The Lincoln Square Business Improvement District’s eleventh annual Winter’s Eve party takes place on Monday, November 29, featuring live performances, food tastings, children’s activities, ice sculptures, street musicians, holiday singalongs, and much more. The festivities begin at 5:30 in Dante Park with the tree-lighting ceremony, with John Pizzarelli handling the honors this year. Chia’s Dance Party will get booties shaking in Dante Park at 6:00, 7:00, and 8:00, the Brazilian percussion ensemble Harlem Samba will do the same in Richard Tucker Park at the same times, violinist supreme Eileen Ivers and Immigrant Soul will be playing in the Winter’s Eve Dance Tent at 6:15 and 7:30, the Anat Cohen Quartet with Avishai Cohen will be joined by Pizzarelli for shows at 6:45 and 7:45 at the American Folk Art Museum, the David Rubenstein Atrium will host a Holiday Bhangra Party featuring Red Baraat at 7:00, Jane Seymour will sign copies of AMONG ANGELS at the Borders in the Time Warner Center at 7:00, Naturally 7 will highlight a cappella holiday songs at the Apple Store at 7:00, the Rose Rutledge Trio will play in the Time Warner Center at 7:30, and the Alice Farley Dance Theater will create site-specific pieces in front of Alice Tully Hall all night long, in addition to performances by the Hungry March Band, Mariachi Real de Mexico, Arm-of-the-Sea, the Raya Brass Band, the West Side Y’s Kids, the Youth Pride Chorus, and others. And the New York Institute of Technology will present the multimedia Festival of Lights in its auditorium. All events are free, although the food tastings will require small payments; however, the Lincoln Square BID asks that everyone bring a can of food to donate to City Harvest in exchange for all of the free fun.

CHERRY VANILLA: LICK ME

Barnes & Noble Lincoln Triangle
1972 Broadway at 66th St.
Monday, November 22, free, 7:30
212-595-6859
www.barnesandnoble.com
www.cherry-vanilla.com

Poet, actress, songwriter, publicist, Mad woman, and all-around good-time girl Cherry Vanilla holds nothing back in her free-wheeling memoir, LICK ME: HOW I BECAME CHERRY VANILLA (Chicago Review Press, November 2010, $24.95). Born Kathleen Anne Dorritie in 1943 and raised in Queens, Vanilla tells of a life filled with lots of sex, lots of drugs, and lots of rock & roll. A chronic bedwetter as a child, she later developed OCD, picking at cuts and blemishes all over her body. She dreamed of being in show business, first working at Madison Ave. advertising firms before getting involved in the burgeoning downtown arts scene, hanging out at the hottest clubs and enjoying a never-ending stream of lovers. She starred in Warhol’s off-Broadway show PORK and went from groupie to music publicist to poet and performer; her stories about working with David Bowie just as he was trying to break through in the States are intimate and revealing — and might come as quite a surprise for longtime Bowie fans. She talks in-depth about her desire to bed such men as Kris Kristofferson, Warren Beatty, Leon Russell, and Bowie — but you’ll have to read the book to find out which attempts were successful. Among the many celebrities she meets in her ever-evolving career, some who became close friends, others just passing through her wild life, are Mick Jagger, Patti Smith, Joel Schumacher, Debbie Harry, Helmut Newton, Joni Mitchell, Don Johnson, Melanie Griffith, Sting, Candy Darling, Ringo Starr, Angie Bowie, Rudolf Nureyev, May Pang, and Mick Ronson, and she shares some very interesting details about many of them. But Vanilla never comes off as needlessly gossipy or self-aggrandizing; instead, LICK ME is an honest portrait of a woman who knew what she wanted and went after it. The book also includes excerpts from her 1970s diaries and a sixteen-page black-and-white insert that features several shots of her in two of her favorite positions, either partially or fully unclothed. Cherry Vanilla will be at the Lincoln Triangle Barnes & Noble on November 22, discussing her outrageous life and signing copies of the book.

A TRIBUTE TO JIM CARROLL

Barnes & Noble Union Square
33 East 17th St.
Thursday, November 18, free, 7:00
212-253-0810
www.barnesandnoble.com

On September 11, 2009, poet, musician, and famed heroin addict Jim Carroll died at the age of sixty. In celebration of the publication of his posthumous novel THE PETTING ZOO (Viking, November 2010, $25.95), a group of his friends, led by 2010 National Book Award winner Patti Smith and guitarist Lenny Kaye, will gather together tonight at the Union Square Barnes & Noble to pay tribute to the BASKETBALL DIARIES author, who also released such fine albums as CATHOLIC BOY and DRY DREAMS.

THE NIB & PICK SOCIETY: FISTICUFFS!

92YTribeca
200 Hudson St. at Canal St.
Thursday, November 18, $15, 9:00
212-415-5500
www.92y.org

Everyone seems to want to get into the ring these days, as chefs, architects, filmmakers, artists, musicians, comedians, and others battle it out for professional supremacy, so why not a bunch of cartoonists? On Thursday night, seven cartoonists will compete in a draw-off at 92YTribeca, with the audience supplying the topics, creating an improv-type environment. The diverse group of contestants include David Sipress, Michael Kupperman, Emily Flake, Paul Noth, Matthew Diffee, Zach Kanin, and Drew Dernavich. Unleash the pencils!

PAUL AUSTER: SUNSET PARK

Wednesday, November 17, Barnes & Noble Union Square, 33 East 17th St., free, 212-253-0810, 7:00
Thursday, November 18, Book Court, 163 Court St., free, 718-875-3677, 7:00
www.macmillan.com/sunsetpark

Ho hum; another year, another Paul Auster novel that deals with books, baseball, and Brooklyn. But before you dismiss the Newark-born author’s latest, SUNSET PARK (Henry Holt, November 2010, $25), you should also know that it is one of the best works of fiction of this young century. For more than twenty-five years, Auster has been one of America’s most distinguished novelists, having written such superb books as THE NEW YORK TRILOGY (1985-87), THE MUSIC OF CHANCE (1990), LEVIATHAN (1992), and THE BROOKLYN FOLLIES (2005), all of which feature unusual characters caught up in unusual situations often propelled by coincidence. But as good as Auster has been over the course of his career, he has taken a giant leap forward with SUNSET PARK, a marvelously crafted tale that is about a lot more than just books, baseball, and Brooklyn.

Miles Heller is an Ivy League dropout who is still trying to deal with the tragic death of his teenage brother and has fallen in love with a high school student, Pilar Sanchez, who is wise beyond her years but under the thumb of one of her older sisters. Heller hasn’t seen or talked to his long-divorced parents since he suddenly left Brown seven years earlier; his father, Morris, is an independent publisher of highly regarded literary fiction, while his mother, Mary-Lee Swann, is a world-famous Hollywood actress about to take on the challenging lead role in Samuel Beckett’s HAPPY DAYS on Broadway. With nowhere to turn after his personal safety is threatened by Pilar’s sister, Miles, who had been working in South Florida for a realty company, rummaging through houses for valuable items after the bank had evicted the owners, heads back to Brooklyn, where he moves into a squatter’s house across the street from Green-Wood Cemetery, joining his college friend Bing Nathan, who runs the Hospital for Broken Things; Ellen Brice, a lonely painter damaged by a complicated affair; and Alice Bergstrom, a Scandinavian woman with a brutish boyfriend and self-esteem problems who is toiling away on her dissertation, which focuses on William Wyler’s classic 1946 film, THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES, while also working at the PEN American Center, which is trying to gain the release of imprisoned Chinese writer Liu Xiaobo (who actually was just honored with the Nobel Peace Prize in real life). Each of these characters could be the subject of their own book, as Auster fleshes them out wonderfully, getting into their psyche, not unlike how Wyler does in his award-winning movie about the effects WWII had on the American family.

Auster’s writing has always been cinematic — he has written several screenplays and directed films as well — but it’s particularly so in SUNSET PARK, as the longtime Brooklyn resident delves deep into each person’s past, bringing their fears and desires, their successes and failures, to life in long, brilliant passages that don’t want to end; the run-on sentences of the beginning soon flow into breathless narratives, one of which goes on for two and a half pages and some seven hundred words before a disappointing period finally appears. SUNSET PARK is a supremely beautiful book by one of Brooklyn’s best. Auster will be reading from and signing copies of SUNSET PARK on November 17 at the Union Square Barnes & Noble and November 18 at Book Court in Park Slope.