José Vergara
@josevergara.bsky.social
290 followers 150 following 31 posts
Writes about things: Russian lit, Joycean links, prisons, PTA, weird books, Chornobyl, other passions (and whims). Teaches at Bryn Mawr College. Tends to ducks.
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josevergara.bsky.social
Your favorite examples of experimental literature? (Let's set aside debates about what that means for now. Just your favs.) Any genre, form, length, origin — as long as it's available in English translation.
A drawing of writer Georges Perec with a cat on his shoulder.
josevergara.bsky.social
One of the coolest books: Raymond Queneau‘s A Hundred Thousand Billion Poems.
josevergara.bsky.social
Seeing both The Brutalist’s intermission and Nickel Boys’ aspect ratio curtain masking this week made for special movie moments. The films are pretty great, too.
josevergara.bsky.social
Not normally the kind of book I’d read, probably, but the Alaskan setting & theme appealed. A fine novel on a clash of cultures & identities. The interstitial chapters on wolves add an intriguing element and complement the narrator’s association with nature, but it’s hard to escape the human POV.
josevergara.bsky.social
A novel-in-dialogue based on a summer of recorded conversations, Linda Rosenkrantz’s Talk highlighted for me how reading fiction is an inherently voyeuristic act by dialing up that element to the max. Sometimes it’s just fun to listen in on what others are saying.

@nyrb-imprints.bsky.social
josevergara.bsky.social
STATS! STATS! STATS!

A generally solid year of film.

Thanks, @letterboxd.social.
josevergara.bsky.social
Sorry to say Malina did not work for me. I appreciate what Bachmann is doing, and the way everything from the events (rather than “plot”) to the language to the protagonist seems to disassociate from itself, but ultimately, it was a slog through not particularly intriguing spaces and style.
josevergara.bsky.social
Just picked this up at the library the other day. 🙌
josevergara.bsky.social
Looking for fiction, stories, and essays about soccer. Poetry would also do. Not sports journalism or traditional memoirs, but, uh, good writing involving the sport in some way. Any favorites come to mind?
Pelé poses with a group of Muppets as if he’s their coach.
josevergara.bsky.social
The football (soccer) plot itself, the way life outside the games interrupts the narrative, and the ironic touches on set expressions all get at this bigger, existential level. An unexpectedly beautiful book for the beautiful game.
josevergara.bsky.social
Here, he documents a season of his favorite club, along with some other matches, the many disappointments and the exciting victories. What’s really at play, though, is meaning — what we invest with significance or devotion.
josevergara.bsky.social
Like his other works, Dmitry Danilov’s There Are Things More Important Than Football (Soccer) begins as an experiment but unfurls into more. Having gotten back to playing football (soccer) a year ago, I feel more in tune, maybe, with the thrills and bruises of the “novel” than I might otherwise.
Reposted by José Vergara
mookse.bsky.social
Want a signed book? How about two! Giveaway alert! Last year Europa Editions published Anne Berest's The Postcard, translated by Tina Korver. Next year they are publishing Gabriële, a novel Berest wrote with her sister Claire about their great-grandmother.
I have three signed sets to give away!
Holding two books in front of my shelves: Anne Berest’s The Postcard and Anne Berest and Claire Berest’s Gabriële. Stack of six books: three copies of Anne Berest’s The Postcard and three copies of Anne Berest and Claire Berest’s Gabriële to give away! A look at the signed title page: Gabriële, signed by Anne Berest
Reposted by José Vergara
exhaustdata.bsky.social
Here is my deranged merch proposal for a little tote bag (10 x 7 x 3) that holds Miss MacIntosh, My Darling (9.25 x 6.5 x 2) and NOTHING ELSE
josevergara.bsky.social
Unfortunately, the exhibition site with all the pieces, visual and textual, is no longer up; I’d like to find some other way to archive it and make it available…
josevergara.bsky.social
to touch what’s “out there” through their creations, and to be seen. It puts us in a disorienting position, that of the artist behind the wall who imagines his family home, and challenges that oft-used word “welcome.”
josevergara.bsky.social
The odd perspective, the swirl of colors, the bear-like cat in the window. The figures in the doorframe represent his children, though I probably wouldn’t have guessed that myself. “Welcome” speaks to Marking Time’s themes of incarcerated artists trying to make connections,
josevergara.bsky.social
after witnessing the art, music, prose, and poetry produced by the men there, I wanted to see whether we could share it with the broader community. One of those pieces, which I won in the silent auction we held, was “Welcome.” I didn’t know Kevin L., but I loved this painting.
josevergara.bsky.social
It’s also a productive example of scholarship that draws in personal experience and presents new modes of scholarship (much needed!). It has me thinking of the exhibition, Artists in Absentia, I curated—with help from man—in 2016. I was teaching at Oakhill Correctional Institution in Oregon, WI, and
josevergara.bsky.social
Nicole Fleetwood’s Marking Time is a brilliant exploration of the many contradictions of what we call “prison art.” What effects do those labels have on incarcerated people? What motivates interest in the subject?
josevergara.bsky.social
If this includes teachers/scholars/etc, too, I'd love to be part of it!
josevergara.bsky.social
Could I please be added? 🫡