AltWeeklies Wire

Hollis Gillespie Disdains Shame With Recovering Slutnew

Gillespie's second book covers some of her early adventures in motherhood, including bullet-proofing the baby's bedroom with cake pans and getting diverted from a Nicaraguan brothel by the case of her daughter Mae's missing mittens.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  06-28-2005  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Monkeys With Typewritersnew

A book of work by spoken-word poets at Atlanta's Java Monkey has corny confessions and ego-overblown self-expressions. But it doesn't hold up to the silent treatment it's given on the page.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  06-16-2005  |  Poetry

Author Doesn't Apologize for Wal-Martnew

John Dicker is refreshing for his willingness to hold everyone's feet to the fire -- CEOs, customers and critics alike. He calls Wal-Mart "a macro-sized microcosm of many of America's biggest socioeconomic clusterfucks."
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  06-09-2005  |  Nonfiction

Author Writes Admiringly About Americanew

Verso has come out with an updated edition of V.G. Kiernan's multidisciplinary history of America, from colonial days forward.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  06-02-2005  |  Nonfiction

Book Has Plenty of Requisite Wild Flourishesnew

The People of Paper's dispelling of magic realism is plenty funny and as exhilaratingly freeform as the best of the McSweeney's canon.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  05-26-2005  |  Fiction

Author Suggests God Didn't Write Biblenew

Calling for the people of all faiths to "lift up what is our most precious gift," John Shelby Spong finds God alive and free -- and very much overlooked by those who keep their faith bound in a book.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  05-12-2005  |  Original Work

Novel Has Deep Shadows and Sharp Edgesnew

Novelist Joshilyn Jackson explains how she developed her odd blend of Southern humor and violence.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  05-05-2005  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Warm Springs Made Him What He Wasnew

The implicit contention of Warm Springs is that Franklin D. Roosevelt would not have become the great leader we remember today without the time he spent in Warm Springs.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  04-28-2005  |  TV

Good Read for a Day of Not Doing Muchnew

Atlanta author Patti Callahan Henry's novel is the story of a middle-aged Buckhead woman who suddenly realizes that she's faking her way through life and rushes off to find her true unedited self at ... the beach!
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  04-28-2005  |  Fiction

Ode to the Insurance Salesmannew

In his best moments, Ted Kooser inspires a kind of voluptuous rumination. He is an exquisite miniaturist of daily life and Delight & Shadows is his junk shop elegy. You'll recognize what's on sale and how it smells.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  04-21-2005  |  Poetry

Author Steve Almond Chows Down Againnew

Steve Almond's new collection includes an entire family of yacht-club-credentialed Republicans, convinced they have all been abducted and implanted with "cartridges" by our alien caretakers; an analysis of the meaning of Michael Jackson's dick; and the pleasures of equine and eye socket sex.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  04-07-2005  |  Fiction

How America Almost Destroyed the Vineyards of Europenew

The Americans (probably) didn't do it on purpose, though you hardly could have blamed them given all the nasty things the Europeans were saying about New World wines and the American palate.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  03-31-2005  |  Nonfiction

Message Offers Good Plan for Revival in Big Tentnew

In her funny, vulnerable meditations on living a meaningful life in the midst of trials and sorrows -- many of which she blames on Dubya Bush and his disciples -- Anne Lamott is not afraid to reference a wise word or two from Rumi, the Dali Lama, or the Catholic vision of the Virgin Mary.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  03-17-2005  |  Nonfiction

Travelogue Mixes Pocket Histories With Political Riffsnew

Its focus is the Sahel, a 2,600-mile swath of African desert and badlands that stretches from Ethiopia to the Atlantic coast, and is home to some of the most impoverished, corrupt and - Sudan notwithstanding - ignored countries on the planet.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  03-10-2005  |  Nonfiction

Atlanta's Lost Boys, Nearly Four Years Laternew

As Mark Bixler tells it in his new book, The Lost Boys of Sudan, the story most of us have heard is true for some of the Lost Boys. For many of them it is not, but it's still the story they tell, having learned (or been coached) that Americans would only help them if their story was simple, dramatic and morally unambiguous.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  03-10-2005  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

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