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Garrison Keillor's Podcast

The critic who lit up my week and more

Garrison Keillor's Podcast

Prairie Home Productions

Society & Culture, Fiction, Comedy Fiction, Improv, Comedy

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 8 June 2024

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

I’m still writing books but haven’t been reviewed by anybody in ages, maybe because I’m an Old White Male and our time is up, or maybe I’ve written too many books, and I’m okay with unreviewing — going way back to Veronica Geng’s caramel custard review of Lake Wobegon Days in the New York Times in 1985, the reviews have been warm and sweet, which is nice for the publisher but for me, the hardworking writer, are unremarkable, like a friend’s cat climbing into my lap: not the equivalent of good conversation. But O’Gieblyn’s essay is a brilliant and engaging piece of work and I feel honored that she went to so much trouble. It pleases me that she quotes funny lines from the book and not pretentious ones: she could easily have used my own words to make me look like a hack and a bore. She does use the word “schtick” in connection with my radio monologue, but I don’t mind: in stand-up, schtick is simply useful, like the handheld microphone. She says that my willful optimism seems somewhat strained at times, and she writes, “There is, alas, no shortage of holes in the book’s logic that could be exploited by an attentive critic”and she goes ahead and sticks her finger in some of them, but she also says, “It’s hard not to conclude that Keillor has reached the sunny equanimity of enlightenment.” (I’ve made it as hard as I could, Meghan.) And then she says, “The prose throughout the book is both sharp and buoyant, and often arrives, somewhat unexpectedly, at profundity.” I was aiming for buoyancy. Profundity is well above my pay grade; it’s Ms. Gieblyn’s territory, not mine. To me, this sentence from a writer so sharp as she is worth more than any prize given by a committee. “Sharp and buoyant” is a nice phrase for promotion, but what makes it meaningful to me is the brilliance of Meghan O’Gieblyn.

This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit garrisonkeillor.substack.com/subscribe

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

April was an awfully good month for me, so good that I've been walking around St. Paul, Minnesota, looking up into the branches of trees,

0:25.0

making sure there isn't an anvil, roosting in one of them that's waiting to fall and kill me and thereby serve the cause of justice.

0:36.4

I'm a happy old man in love with my wife

0:40.4

and in touch with good friends,

0:43.0

and I've been on the road doing good shows,

0:46.0

at which among other things the audience

0:49.0

sings beautifully,

0:52.0

songs they and I have known by heart since we were in grade school. And now, on

0:59.6

top of all this, my book entitled Cheerfulness in which I attempt to defend Cheerfulness

1:08.4

against our present age of dread and gloom has gotten a long brilliant review by Megan Ojibulin in

1:21.6

Middle West review of the spring issue,

1:25.2

only a fellow writer could know what this means.

1:30.5

It means a lot. I'm still writing books but I haven't been reviewed by anybody in

1:38.0

ages maybe because I'm an old white male and our time is up or maybe I've written too many books and I'm

1:46.4

okay with unrevelling. Going way back to Veronica Gang's custard review of Lake Wobegon days in the New York Times in 1985.

1:58.0

The reviews have been mostly warm and sweet, which is nice for the publisher but for me the hard-working writer are

2:06.6

unremarkable like a friend's cat climbing up into my lap. It's not the equivalent of conversation. But Ojibilin's

2:19.5

essay is a brilliant, engaging piece of work and I feel so honored that she went to so much trouble

2:28.1

it pleases me that she could

2:35.0

could easily have used my own words to make me look like a hack and a bore.

2:41.0

She does use the word stick in connection with my radio monologues, but I don't mind.

2:49.6

In stand-up, stick is simply useful like the handheld microphone. She says that my

...

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