AltWeeklies Wire

Public Library Takes the Reins of the Arkansas Literary Festivalnew

For book geeks, spring in Little Rock has gained a whole new appeal in the last few years. That's because of the Arkansas Literary Festival.
Arkansas Times  |  David Koon  |  04-16-2009  |  Books

Twitter Novels Include 140 Characters at a Timenew

Fast on the thumbs of cell-phone-novel-writing Japanese schoolgirls, Twitter novels beg the question: Why?
North Bay Bohemian  |  Hannah Smith  |  04-09-2009  |  Books

Will Your Favorite Indie Book Store Survive or Be Swallowed Whole?new

More than a decade deep into Amazon, Borders and Barnes & Noble's ravenous gangbang of all things mom-and-pop, local bookstores are now staring down the barrel of Depression 2.0.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Jakob Dorof  |  03-24-2009  |  Books

California's Indie Booksellers Take On Amazon.comnew

Berkeley Assemblywoman Nancy Skinner wants the giant online retailers to stop cheating both California and independent booksellers.
East Bay Express  |  Robert Gammon  |  03-04-2009  |  Books

PM Press Goes Beyond Anarchynew

Twenty-five years after launching AK Press, Ramsey Kanaan took his democracy elsewhere.
East Bay Express  |  Rachel Swan  |  02-18-2009  |  Books

The Post-Modern 'Art' of Twitter Fictionnew

Twitter technology lets you write a novel 140 characters at a time. And you want to do this why?
Boston Phoenix  |  Mike Miliard  |  01-16-2009  |  Books

Oprah's Book Club is Dumbing Down Readers and Rewarding Mediocrity

Readers who rely on popular hype to choose books often come away disappointed. A few may decide to deep deeper, but most won't. Burned readers become non-readers.
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  01-12-2009  |  Books

What's So Funny About Cancer?new

Breast cancer memoirists all seem to agree that laughter is pretty good medicine.
Chicago Reader  |  S.L. Wisenberg  |  01-12-2009  |  Books

The Year in Reading About Foodnew

When I look over at the nightstand, taking quick inventory of what I've been reading over the last few months, the pile is depressingly salted with books on the death and dying of the ocean.
L.A. Weekly  |  Jonathan Gold  |  12-19-2008  |  Books

Winter Reading: 58 Reasons to Be Anti-socialnew

What we squeeze into Winter Reading each year is not a best-of list, exactly, though we do strive to include those books we want to recommend to friends, parents, anyone with a pair of eyes. It's more of a case for reading, for sharing the wonders of a good story.
Eugene Weekly  |  Staff and freelancers  |  12-16-2008  |  Books

Lush Lit: Five Great Wine Books for the Holidaysnew

A wise person once said that talking about music is like dancing about architecture. The same could perhaps be said in regards to talking about wine, an exercise so absurd it's regularly mocked on novelty napkins. Writing about wine, however, is another thing entirely. Wine is an especially literary liquid; no other nutrient gets its own section in the bookstore.
C-Ville Weekly  |  J. Tobias Beard  |  12-10-2008  |  Books

Seven False Starts About the Death of David Foster Wallacenew

By now you may have heard. The most influential and innovative fiction stylist of his generation, the smartest, funniest, strangest, most endearing and (let's just say it) the greatest writer under 50 in America, killed himself at his Claremont home on Sept. 12.
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Cornel Bonca  |  12-05-2008  |  Books

Two Boston Poets Use Their Art for the Good of the Tribenew

What if a poem were a social force? Boston poets Rafael Campo and Franz Wright have laid bare a live wire between poetry and isolation.
Boston Phoenix  |  James Parker  |  11-26-2008  |  Books

Small-Press Books: Reading for Real Peoplenew

As the unemployment rate rises and your friends find themselves out of work, why not comfort them with some small-press books this holiday season?
Tucson Weekly  |  Jarret Keene  |  11-20-2008  |  Books

Remembering Jim Crumley, the Last Good Detective Writernew

When the Texas-born novelist James Crumley died at age 68 on September 17, newspaper obituaries in Los Angeles, Washington, New York, and London all mentioned one of his sentences. The sentence was not the only notable string of words this fine writer composed, but devotees of his work often point to it as a landmark in modern detective fiction.
The Texas Observer  |  Dick Holland  |  11-19-2008  |  Books

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