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Tone Clusters: the Joyce Carol Oates discussion group archive

Tuesday, September 21, 2004

Re: JCO: The Falls

Here's another very short interview about The Falls. The great thing about
it is that you can see how she answered the questions in her own
handwriting!

http://www.bookpage.com/0409bp/meet_joyce_carol_oates.html

Eric

>From:
>Reply-To: jco@usfca.edu
>To:
>Subject: Re: JCO: The Falls
>Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2004 09:21:10 -0500
>
>Here is a link to an interview with JCO on Harper Collins site, promoting
>The Falls.
>
>http://www.harpercollins.com/catalog/book_interview_xml.asp?isbn=0060722282
>
>She is speaking in November at the Chicago Humanities Festival. I'm looking
>forward to seeing her in person.
>
>Jane

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Re: JCO: The Falls

Here is a link to an interview with JCO on Harper Collins site, promoting The Falls.
 
 
She is speaking in November at the Chicago Humanities Festival. I'm looking forward to seeing her in person.
 
Jane

RE: JCO: The Falls

Hi Cyrano,
I find it so interesting that different people have such different reactions
to Oates's novels. I couldn't put MHLB down if I tried, but just recently,
for the now fourth time, I have abandoned Mysteries of Winterthurn. I just
cannot make it through this book, and I know there are people on this list
who consider it one of her best. Every time I start again I get a little
further, but then it loses me, which the other Gothics did not, so it's not
a matter of the language being too purple. I'm not even through "Honeymoon"
yet, so I have yet to meet the Woman in Black. I'm interested to see where
Oates is going with the whole damned/fallen thread she is setting up in this
first section.
--Chris

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-jco@usfca.edu [mailto:owner-jco@usfca.edu]On Behalf Of
Cyranomish@aol.com
Sent: Monday, September 20, 2004 5:01 PM
To: jco@usfca.edu
Subject: Re: JCO: The Falls

Hi, Chris. Ariah is a difficult heroine -- a real pain in the neck. And
she
gets less likeable as the novel goes on. She grows into something like
Loretta in THEM -- Loretta with an education and some money. But the
novel did
carry me along. I was never tempted to put it aside as I was with My Heart
Laid Bare. The Falls is not among my top 25 JCO books -- or even top 50.
But
I'm glad I read it. I'll be interested to know what you make of the Woman
in
Black. Is she a real figure or an Arnold Friend-like fantasy/myth?
Cyrano

In a message dated 9/20/2004 10:53:20 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
cpace@jupitermedia.com writes:

<< I'm about 60 pages into The Falls, and I am hooked. To be honest, though,
I
felt the first 20 or so pages were written by a different person. Much of
the language seems forced and contrived, and I was starting to wonder if
the
whole book was going to be like that, and then it seems to settle into its
rhythm and Oates's familiar voice shines through >>
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