Tag Archive for: Liam Callanan|Medium

A new essay by faculty member Liam Callanan appears online in Medium:

In Paris, tracing the path of ‘The Red Balloon’

Seconds into my first attempt to play Hangman with my then-young daughter, I suddenly saw the game’s gruesome stakes for what they were: guess wrong, and see your dad draw a man’s neck snapping. So on the fly, I invented the game of Sleeping Man, his gallows now a reading lamp, the whole of him slowly obscured as incorrect guesses led to sheets, a blanket, a pillow, slippers. Years later, my daughter found the real game in an activity book, and then she found me. Dad, she said, eyes wide, our game? He doesn’t sleep—he dies.

Continue reading online. 

Faculty member Liam Callanan’s essay is online at Medium:

 

 

Free Fall

Serving as a judge on a Chinese reality show watched by more people than the Super Bowl was very funny. Until it wasn’t.

I am hilarious. Stand-up funny. Everyone says. Like at the very first reading for my very first novel, which is super serious, set in wartime, characters die, the narrator is possibly eaten, it’s ambiguous, and so too the presence, at the reading, front row, stage right, of my very first girlfriend, from high school, who came early and brought the Secret Service agent she married (great guy, shorter than me, less hair, armed?) and the minister who married them, and I still get everyone laughing, really rolling during the Q&A, until we’re way off topic, until my former boss raises his hand and asks his question, which isn’t one, but “you should be on TV, do stand-up.”