BY MOST METRICS, the author Lev Grossman's life appeared >> to change irrevocably in 2009. After publishing two books in relative obscurity, he released The Magicians, a novel about troubled kids who get invited to a magic school and fall backward into financial center of the book world. By 2016, he was happily married with three children and had at last quit his magazine job to write full time. Grossman also announced he was feeling confident about his newest novel. It would revisit King Arthur's England.
Eight years later, that book, The Bright Sword, is finally here. "Books, they fight dirty," Grossman tells me at one of his old haunts, Greenlight Bookstore in Fort Greene, in late June. "You never know where the resistance is coming from." He's in the U.S. with his family on a promotion tour and victory lap (they live in Australia). They've rented out their house in Clinton Hill, but fortunately the tenants are away for the summer, handily leaving it furnished for them.
Grossman left the city, his home of 26 years, in September 2022. "I think I burned out a little on New York and Brooklyn," he says. He moved for a variety of reasons-raising children is difficult here, and his wife, an English professor who was at Princeton, is Australian (she's now teaching at the University of Sydney).
"It would probably be incorrect to say that I moved to Sydney because I was really stuck on my novel, but it was in there a little bit," he says. "A little bit like, I've tried everything else; now we will change hemispheres and see if it gets any better."" He's used to a certain degree of struggle when it comes to his writing. "Keep in mind that The Magicians was my first hit, and that came when I was 40," Grossman says. "I previously had two flops. If I had then two more flops? I've got three kids; they've got to eat. I had to sort of bet on myself. But it took a lot of sidestepping before I finally did."
هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة July 15-28, 2024 من New York magazine.
ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 9,000 مجلة وصحيفة.
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هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة July 15-28, 2024 من New York magazine.
ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 9,000 مجلة وصحيفة.
بالفعل مشترك? تسجيل الدخول
Art Fall Preview - World in Motion - An Alvin Ailey retrospective sets the tone for an array of eclectic offerings from the art world this fall.
An Alvin Ailey retrospective sets the tone for an array of eclectic offerings from the art world this fall. A gust of fresh air is blowing through the art world. A brand-new outfit called Ruby/Dakota has opened on the supercool strip of East 2nd Street. A whole new scene has formed around 56 Henry's two gallery spaces in Chinatown, and solo shows there by Laurie Simmons and Richard Tinkler promise to scintillate. Just north of the Whitney, Fort Gansevoort Gallery regularly showcases undiscovered artists, including, in September, 84-year-old quilt-maker extraordinaire Yvonne Wells. A gaggle of established artists are also exhibiting-Kara Walker, Simone Leigh, Nick Cave, and the still under-known Denzil Forrester among them. And the museums will have their fair share of thrilling exhibitions, too: The Whitney will feature American national treasure Alvin Ailey, MoMA will peer deep into its own brilliant bellybutton in a show about the woman who helped make the museum, and the Brooklyn Museum will give us an enormous show of artists based in its borough.
Kamala's Party - Producing Chicago The DNC covered nearly impossible ground to raise up Harris as the new hero.
Producing Chicago The DNC covered nearly impossible ground to raise up Harris as the new hero. At a political convention, power is rendered as geography. The rank and file are stuck in the rafters of the arena; the delegates jostle on the floor. Donors and VIPs are positioned up in a ring of luxury suites, their status-conferring badges and passes flapping from their many lanyards. The staffers toil down in the bowels, harried and molelike, their eyes on their phones. But at last week’s Democratic National Convention in Chicago, maybe the most important piece of real estate was a narrow space up metal gangway stairs at the back of the United Center, where Ricky Kirshner worked in front of a bank of a half-dozen flat-screens. The Democrats in the hall were extras in a televised event, and Kirshner was producing the show.
THE REHEARSAL
Ten performers days before their big fall shows.
Garth Greenwell's Grand Romance
The author explores the tender side of long-term partnership amid a health crisis in his best novel yet.
Josh Rivera Takes the Lead
The actor plays the tortured football player Aaron Hernandez in a Ryan Murphy-produced series.
Kaytranada Owns His Influence
Once modern dance music's best-kept secret, the Canadian DJ-producer is ready to go bigger.
The Perks of Not Being a Wallflower
Actor Adam Pearson has his biggest role to date in a dark comedy inspired by his upbeat personality.
Nicole Scherzinger Never Stopped Dreaming
The former Pussycat Doll stages a comeback.
Having a Ball Living in a Former Ballroom
Jack Shainman and Carlos Vega's apartment had to have space for \"big art.\"
THE ASTEROID-IN-SPRING HYPOTHESIS
It took ten days for two young paleontologists to turn on each other, each claiming to have found new evidence of the worst day in the history of life on Earth.