I must go down to the sea again
by admin | Mar-24-2008
Last Thursday, PEN chose a rather grand location to announce the participants in the next World Voices Festival: that would be the Queen Mary 2, docked out in a shiny new Red Hook terminal. The ship is vast. Security is tight—this was probably the first literary soiree at which I had to sign a statement promising that I had experienced no diarrhea or vomiting in the last 48 hours. Once we were cleared for entry, we marched up an elaborate gangplank into what resembled a premiere shopping mall (and I mean that in the nicest possible way): lots of glass, indirect lighting, hardwood accents. Lots of stores, too, at least on the way to the auditorium. Inside, we sank into the comfy seats and were addressed by Bernard Warner, Commodore of the Cunard Fleet. This upright gentleman in his spotless uniform turned out to be a highly entertaining speaker. “We are not a cruise ship,” he assured the crowd, in case anybody had mistaken his resplendent vessel for some downmarket tub. What did the Queen Mary 2 have that a cruise ship didn’t have? “We have forty percent more steel,” Warner noted. “We have a long bow, a deep draft, and a gorgeous streamlined hull.”The fact soon came out that Salman Rushdie, who had been slated as ringmaster, was not present. He was in London, promoting his new novel. Luckily Francine Prose—introduced as “our ship’s captain”—was on hand to do the honors. We had already been presented with some imposing numbers, inspired, perhaps, by the commodore’s statistical snow job. The festival would boast 170 writers from 51 countries, speaking 23 different languages. But Prose went into more detail, listing the highlights of a mind-blowing schedule. It’s a truly dazzling roster: from AndrĂ© Aciman to Lila Azam Zanganeh, no authorial stone has been left unturned. Prose mentioned “The Three Musketeers Reunited: Umberto Eco, Salman Rushdie and Mario Vargas Llosa,” a May 2 recap of a 1995 event at London’s Royal Festival Hall. No doubt this venerable power trio will cause the walls to bulge at the 92nd Street Y. (But will they play “White Room”?) Me, I’m psyched for the May 3 tete-a-tete between Ian McEwan and Steve Pinker, or the Robert Walser tribute later that same day at the Morgan Library.
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