Marc Delalangue

Marc Delalangue

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first registered 23.10.09

last online 582 days ago

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about me

Marc Delalangue was born in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois.

He did undergraduate work at Berkeley in English and Math. When he was a junior, The University bought his youthful novel, One Hand Clapping, for the $500 Eisner prize. It also financed a trip to the Rocky Mountain Writers Conference. Here he studied novel writing with James Hall (in one session Jim remarked, ‘If you’re really desperate, you can always rewrite Crime and Punishment as comedy.’); hung out with Donald Justice; and with the callowness of youth, basely groped a gentle, dark eyed poetess.

He earned his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago and professed English at the University of Kentucky. After that, he pursued many careers—licit, quasi and il—including: Yoga teacher, line worker in a cannery, advertising copywriter, production manager for direct mail campaigns, financial systems programmer, accounts receivable collector, and restaurateur.

After twenty plus years in Eugene, Oregon, he and his long suffering wife have returned to Chicago to care for his aging father and feast on Chicago’s cultural and culinary offerings.

They have a son who by turns makes them proud pursuing a post residency fellowship in Clinical Pharmacology, and punishes them for their sins by remorselessly parodying their bad habits.

Some years ago, this short verse inspired on an April bike ride along the Willamette River won him $600 worth of camping gear in a local radio station’s “Spring Fling” poetry contest:

Canada’s wind dispelling the southern mist reminds us,
In contrary Eugene, spring comes from the North.

favourite books

War and Peace,
Anna Karenina,
Magic Mountain,
The Joseph Books,
The Confessions of Felix Krull,
Lord of The Ring,
Lord Jim,
Under Western Eyes,
Nostromo,
Pride and Prejudice,
Heart of Midlothian,
and anything by LeCarre or Leguin.

my websites

    

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my books

The Story of E

Marc Delalangue

The comic rendering of a thirty year old dilettante’s kinky, criminal, scientific, and philosophic quest for the Name of God in the Twentieth Century.


Angry and disappointed because he has no job, he-who-will-be-E leaves his Ph.D. defense-of-thesis. A protest rally offers distraction. But when Aunt Hager interrupts and accuses Fyodor Leonovich Maslenikoff of stealing beets from her garden, the amusement ends.

As Fyodor collapses into a fit, he dares he-who-will-be-E to get arrested. He does and soon he meets Maslenikoff in jail.

Later that evening at his girl friend Poly’s, inspiration strikes: he’ll earn the tuition for Maslenikoff’s course in God’s name by turning two pounds of good Mexican into super grass.

Two months later, during a grueling forty eight hour workshop, Poly, guided by her mentor Phyllis, chastises the impatient, careless, and inconsiderate, egoist for tramping through her life to do his alchemy. Chains, electric shock, and the five basic exercises, re-educate E to a proper appreciation of the feminine.

As the workshop proceeds, E and Poly remember the week during which he was an alchemist.

As the ordeal winds down, she has E tell his adventures with Fyodor and recount Maslenikoff’s ‘ridiculous’ good news.

But his success making super grass has gotten him a job offer, and E must choose between his new appreciation of the feminine and masculine egoism.

 

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ndaye wrote 230 days ago

(rafica_4ndaye@yahoo.com) My name is rafica i saw your profile toda....

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annaweah55@yahoo.co.uk Hello, My name is anna i saw your profile at....

Daniel Delacy wrote 540 days ago

After one year on the site and over 700 reviews, I have accepted many....

Daniel Delacy wrote 657 days ago

Care to swap reads? :o)

soutexmex wrote 740 days ago

I commented/backed your book 160 days ago - though my book has been o....

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latest

I wrote 903 days ago

Notes: Hair and still with his … manner <> Hair and still moved with feline grace (a good verb gives greater vividness to the description.) Migraine began … eye <> Migraine began to build behind my right eye. (one prepositional phrase rather then two communicates the same image with less r... view book

I wrote 904 days ago

Notes: But the electrical current that seemed to run through his body … <> But the electrical current that ran through … (verbs of perception and cognition generally weaken focus by subordinating the strong active verb where, generally there is no need to; after all, if to his mind it’s seeming... view book

I wrote 904 days ago

What I find particularly impressive about this chapter is the felt density of the world it renders. You know where you're going and how you're going to get there, and you've visualized it all so that it passes vividly before me as I read. I'm pretty sure, too, I'm going to enjoy the relationship bet... view book

I wrote 904 days ago

Really fine! You have her voice down wonderfully, and the whole chapter flows with really intense, vivid energy that explodes in the end with the triumph of her getting out of that house. Only thing is, I'd still like to know how old she is. From the mention of her breasts, I'd guess 16. At any rate... view book

I wrote 905 days ago

Nice first chapter! You nicely exploit the courtroom scene to simultaneously exposit important information about your character while engaging the reader’s interest in an inherently taut situation that you bring to a surprising and intriguing end that make us want to find out what comes next. T... view book

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