Tao Lin
Guest Posting 20 July – 24 July 2009
Tao Lin is the author of five books of fiction and poetry including Eeeee eee eeee (Melville House, 2007) and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (Melville House, 2008). His next book, Shoplifting from American Apparel, will be published by Melville House in September 2009 in the U.S. and October 2009 in the UK. The Brooklyn based writer that has a wit and style that is so personal and matter of fact that you can’t help but be seduced by his words.
What have you got planned this week?
Walking around with my girlfriend eating meals, sitting in the library typing emails, maybe seeing a movie in a movie theatre.
What do your parents think you do?
Maybe “lay around” feeling bored and sometimes doing Pilates or writing poetry.
Who do you look like?
No known celebrities look like me, based on what I know.
What’s your favourite sense?
Maybe hearing.
Tell us something people don’t know about you…
I “pooped my pants” at my girlfriend’s house then later “almost did it again” in a Starbucks bathroom in Pittsburgh recently.
Did your education count?
I feel that either “everything counts” or “nothing counts” but am not sure what either of those imply in terms of a person’s life. Might “just” be “a matter of semantics.”
What word can’t you spell?
Maybe words with two consecutive r’s.
Tell us a good fact
I feel at this point in my life unable to “comfortably” answer questions with “good” in them without knowing a context and a goal for “good.” I think I started feeling this way in early-2006. Not sure what exactly caused me to be like this, was probably a gradual shift.
What’s Next?
A "steady stream” of gimmicks culminating perhaps in “steady cash flow” resulting in a healthier lifestyle in terms of getting new contact lenses, eating more organic food, living in a clean environment, and seeing a doctor sometimes.
What’’s your ‘Plan B’?
I feel I have no “other” plan because I feel it’s “not possible” to “fail” at what I am doing. Financially it seems difficult to “fail” at this point, because I seem to have “thrived” in what seems to have been “a state of failure” the past four to seven years; artistically it seems I “cannot fail” because of my “there is no good or bad in art” view of art.