The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, November 8, 2007 - 3B Support your local literature When I first started this column, my editors suggested I local- ize it as much as possible. didn't know if it would work - I figured it wouldn't be long until I started spouting purple prose and abstract analogies on how Gabriel Garcia Mar- quez's village of Macondo ' was Ann Arbor and points of its rise and fall corresponded KIMBERLY to administra- CHOU tive goings-on, or the 1960s barbershop depres- sion. But it'S not yet time to start wor- rying about that nasty Caribbean windstorm. Turns out that beyond the Shaman Drum Bookshop poet- ry events and reserve-shelf trea- sures, our college town also serves as inspirational literary backdrop. I'm not just talking about short- story collections from local writers aboutcromps in the Arb, e-mailed to indie publishers from Caf Ambro- sia, however poignant they some- times are. There are a number of works of fiction set in Ann Arbor that you might not know about but can find with relative ease via local bookshop sages and, surprisingly, Wikipedia's "Culture inAnnArbor, Michigan" page. Perhaps most prominent on public radar at the moment is "The Feast of Love" by Charles Baxter, a long-time head of the University's Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program. (The also excel- lent Peter Ho Davies - who was longlistedfortheManBookerPrize last year for his first novel, "The Welsh Girl" - currently directs the creative writing program. Hope- fully he'll immortalize Ann Arbor at some point, too.) "The Feast of Love" revolves around many lives and loves - and drama, lots of it. Director Robert Benton's film adaptation, starring an ensemble cast led by Morgan Freeman and Greg Kinnear, transfers the quiltcof stories to a small town in Oregon, but I believe it's still generating a fair amount of "Ohmygod, no way. Really? No way" responses from fans who have bought the book and realized Baxter's characters are doing all that living and loving in Treetown. Pick up a copy of the 2000 National Book Award finalist and guess who and what inspired its central coffee shop, Jitters, the cafe's punk romantics or the mel- ancholy philosophy professor. Then there's the stuff that evokes HOSPITAL ART From page 1B Mullen's program includes a mandatory curriculum for medi- cal students at the University of Florida, where they access their creative side through reflective writing classes. The members of AHA are suc- cessfully integrating the arts into health care every day. They work constantly to maintain funding through grants and donations. Their success establishes arts pro- the amazing, musty little corners of campus - 20 years ago. Bharati Mukherjee's "Jasmine" is perhaps one of the most detailed and only short stories I've read that paints A as an equal parts hot-sweat sexy academic wonderland. In it, the tit- ular character moves from Detroit to Ann Arbor after slippinginto the United States from "Port-of-Spain, by way of Canada ... in the back of a gray van loaded with mattresses and box springs." Jasmine finds out that "Ann Arbor is a magic word." Tired of housekeeping for family friends, she takes that trip down I-94 with her new friends to the West Indian Student Associa- tion fall bash and ends up staying for good. There's a sleepover on a couch in the Michigan Union and an alluringyet predatory molecular bio professor; it's a coming-of-age story set in Ann Arbor that doesn't read like the average college girl's first semester, having great lines like "This Ann Arbor, girl, they don't just take you off the street. It cost like hell." Speaking of great lines, look no further than Dean Bakopoulos's "Please Don't Come Back from the Moon," another coming-of-age novel. "A newcomer's guide to Ann Arbor" that's full of them. "Do not, do fucking not... under any circum- stances, fall in love with a woman Taking it from the streets of A2 in Ann Arbor," advises a character named Nick. "Do not wake up in their sunny apartments the next morning, in their messy rooms full of books and black-and-white pho- tography, in their warm narrow beds that smell of beer and salt and sweat, and say that you're in love. You're not in love. You're an out- sider ... She won't miss you." New York, San Francisco and London may be more popular choices for scenic inspiration and the backdrops for some of the best stories ever told. But sometimes it's nice, too, to see how someone else elucidates where you're spending these four years. A lot more people will get a reference to Little Star in the Mission District than Casa Dominick's on Monroe Street, and it's a good thing. It's like you're in this secret Ann Arbor reading club. - Stop her before she gets weepy. E-mail Chou at kimberch@umich.edu. grams as essential for hospitals, just as Elaine Sims has here with Gifts of Art. Regardless of whether you are a patient seeking a few peaceful moments in the Friends Medita- tion Garden or you're simply a visi- tor enjoyingavolunteer playingthe baby grand in the lobby, Gifts of Art is doing its best to ensure the arts are an integral part of health care at UMHS. "The arts are a clear need in a person - they better the quality of life," Sims said. "It's a hunger; art feeds the patients." e remember the direc- tors with flashy, dis- tinct styles, with artful and innovative techniques. Paul Thomas Anderson employs a con- stantly moving camera. Oliver Stone depends on rhythmic, if not rapid, editing. Christopher Nolan reinvents non-chronological sto- rytelling, and Quentin Tarantino's voracious dialogue has become a commodity. But there is one director whose signature is not a specific use of the lens or a particular brand of soundtrack. Instead, Peter Weir stands apart because of the scripts he chooses to write and direct: He makes films about microcosms. They come in different forms. "The Last Wave" (1977) tells of a European lawyer caught up in a For Peter Weir, it's the sfory, not the style.. By Mitchell Askelrad I Daily Arts Writer murder involving the underground society of Australian Aboriginals. They live by the order of a religion older than any Western conception. Weir's first American film, "Wit- ness" (1985), reveals the Amish country of Pennsylvania, expos- ing its special rules and traditions through the eyes of a Philadelphia cop played by Harrison Ford. "The Mosquito Coast" (1986), also star- ring Ford in one of his most unique roles as an eccentric, emotionally abusive inventor, tells of an entirely new microcosm: Ford's Allie Fox takes his family to the jungles of Honduras to build an ice factory and creates a dystopia functioning on self-reliance, innbvation and fear. After that came the grade-school touchstone "Dead Poet's Soci- ety" (1989), in which the boarding school the main characters attend is as important a character as Robin Williams's Mr. Keating. Weir's last two films, "The Truman Show" (1998) and "Master and Com- mander: The Far Side of the World" (2003), continue the auteur's fas- cination. They pit characters in situations of which viewers have only dreamed. The latter depicts in excruciating detail life aboard an early 19th-century naval ship, the former a world based in imagina- tive genius. More than'just a great idea conceived by screenwriter Andrew Niccol, "The Truman Show" tapped into the narcissistic fantasies of its audience by suppos- ing the existence of a community that revolves around one man. To reveal something about our world, it helps to capture and observe smaller versions of it. After all, even though we might have never attended a boarding school for boys in 1950s New Eng- land, "Dead Poets Society" teaches its audience more about how to See WEIR, Page4B So. You want one good reason to earn a pharmacy degree from the University of Michigan? Here are 12 good reasons, for starters: 1. Respect: 50 percent of the students admitted to our professional degree (PharmD) program are cross-campus transfers - many from LSA 2. Unparalleled career choices 3. Financial support unequalled by any other U.S. pharmacy school 4. Continuous growth potential 5. Outstanding pay 6. Job security in economically uncertain times 7. The power to apply medical knowledge at the forefront of technological innovation 8. Life and career mobility 9. Membership in an influential alumni network spanning the globe 10. The prestige of owning a degree from one of US News & World Report's top-ranked pharmacy schools 11. Unlimited opportunities to improve people's lives 12. One-to-one learning with world-renowned faculty If you've had health-care patient experience, and if you've taken Chemistry 130, 210, 215, or 260; Biology 171, 172, 173, or 305; Physics 125, 126, 140, or 240; or Calculus 115 or 116, you're already, on your way to a pharmacy degree at U-M. To learn more about the PharmD program at the University of Michigan, visit the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy Web site at www.umich.edu/-pharmacy. Or contact Assistant Dean Valener Perry at 734-764-5550 or by e-mail at vlperry@umich.edu. Your future never looked brighter. _ a A r i