AltWeeklies Wire

Mexico's Just Coffee Raises the Bar for Free Tradenew

The simple idea of Just Coffee was to help farmers in at least one Chiapas village make enough money so that they could stay on their land. Today, that idea is a success story; the community of Salvador Urbina is thriving rather than just surviving, and Just Coffee's concept promises to revolutionize the free-trade movement.
Tucson Weekly  |  Tim Vanderpool  |  04-16-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

A Private Journey: Mara Altman's Unusual Memoirnew

At 26, Altman had never had an orgasm, so she embarked on a yearlong search for satisfaction. Her personality improbably shape shifts through the various chest-thumpingly macho stereotypes of male adventure fiction.
New York Press  |  Mishka Shubaly  |  04-16-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

A Duke Historian Unearths a Motherlode of Forgotten Jazz Recordingsnew

Sam Stephenson has been studying W. Eugene Smith for 12 years. His second book, The Jazz Loft, is a massive oral history of Smith's former home in New York City.
INDY Week  |  Jesse Jarnow  |  03-26-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

He Survived the Pickup-Artist Scene, Now He Wants to Survive the Apocalypsenew

Neil Strauss' own press materials call him "the world's most legendary pickup artist," but his new game is all about learning to survive not dating disasters but actual life-threatening, end-days disasters, an obsession that brings plenty of its own worries.
L.A. Weekly  |  Gendy Alimurung  |  03-20-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Quincy Jones Can't Help But Look Back on His Life and Legacynew

Jones' mesmerizing coffee-table history is cobbled together from the scraps of a life collected by his sister-in-law Gloria and bookended by a Maya Angelou preface, a Clint Eastwood foreword, a Bono introduction and a Sidney Poitier afterword.
Dallas Observer  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  03-16-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

So Close to the Alamo, So Far from Godnew

Them vaunted Tennessee volunteers of our high-school Alamobotomies are Rachel Jennings' kin. And as kinfolk go, she knows that each time they "hem and haw" about their heroism, they're just covering up shit.
San Antonio Current  |  B.V. Olguin  |  03-04-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Zero Defex Bassist Says Zen Can Stop You From Being a Dicknew

Unlike Brad Warner's previous two published books (he’s also written three unpublished science-fiction novels, one of which he thinks is pretty good), Zen Wrapped in Karma is more a memoir than a spiritual manual. If you’re not into punk rock, meditation or Ultraman, it’s definitely the most accessible.
San Antonio Current  |  D.X. Ferris  |  02-25-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

An Author With a Major New Novel Rises Quietly From the Workaday Motor Citynew

Michael Zadoorian is a writer who has a true love of his hometown (as you'll read) and the kind of 24-7, "why not?" work ethic that has defined Detroit artists from Berry Gordy to Elmore Leonard, Glenn Barr to Eminem.
Metro Times  |  Chris Handyside  |  02-24-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Death Threats Be Damned, an Undercover Cop Isn't Running Anymorenew

At 47, his house gone from an arsonist's match, his family badly shaken by their 3 a.m. escape, undercover cop Jay Dobyns is watching his back against outlaws sworn to kill him.
Tucson Weekly  |  Leo W, Banks  |  02-05-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

How FreeDarko Saved the Sport of Basketballnew

The head of the FreeDarko collective, Bethlehem Shoals (the ridiculous nom de plume of Seattle resident Nathaniel Friedman), took time to discuss turning a blog into a book and the long-lost record collection of former Blazers/Sonics player -- and flattop enthusiast -- Detlef Schrempf.
The Portland Mercury  |  Ezra Ace Caraeff  |  02-05-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Liberals Drink Here: An Interview with Richard Lingemannew

About 10 years ago, Richard Lingeman, The Nation’s senior editor and longtime executive editor, came up with the idea of providing readers with a way to connect with the history of the left, as well as with other like-minded Americans.
Weekly Alibi  |  Erin Adair-Hodges  |  02-03-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Music, Myth and the Spiritual in the Poetry of Kim Hunternew

Detroiter Kim Hunter's new collection of poems, edge of the time zone, is a winding road lined with imagery, political thought and courageous dreaming. That beautiful stretch of imagination parallels a real-life journey.
Metro Times  |  Norene Smith  |  02-03-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Robert Zubrin Phones It in from Marsnew

President of the Mars Society, Robert Zubrin, born on New Plymouth, Mars in 2071, gives Earthlings tips for moving to the Red Planet.
Boulder Weekly  |  Dylan Otto Krider  |  01-15-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Steve Fainaru's New Book Gives the Mercenary in Iraq a Face and a Soulnew

Although mercenaries have a bad rap around the world, "I didn't really blame most of them," Fainaru recalls, "even though a lot of people did, demonizing them and calling them all kinds of names."
East Bay Express  |  Anneli Rufus  |  01-14-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

What's God Got To Do with It?: Ron Aronson and the Politics of Religionnew

The author of books on Marxism and the French existentialists now turns to the idea of an America that's been cowed by the religious right, but that is not, in fact, so religious as most of us have been led to believe.
Metro Times  |  W. Kim Heron and Curt Guyette  |  01-07-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

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