AltWeeklies Wire

How Conservatives are Dismantling the Federal Governmentnew

Fresh off listening to Republican presidential nominee John McCain's acceptance speech last week, it was cathartic to visit with Thomas Frank's The Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule.
INDY Week  |  Bob Geary  |  09-11-2008  |  Nonfiction

Martin Amis Favors Language Over Logic to Make Sense of 9/11new

It's not surprising that a writer known more for his turns of phrase than his political acumen turned in The Second Plane, an aesthetically pleasing work of weak analysis.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Stacy J. Willis  |  09-11-2008  |  Nonfiction

'High Life' Surfs Waves of Bloody 'Gorno'new

A reprint edition of High Life is belatedly securing Matthew Stokoe's rank as either a literary assassin or putrid gore hound.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Erik Morse  |  09-11-2008  |  Fiction

Thomas Frank's Populist Polemic Doesn't Really Understandnew

If attacking the crimes of contemporary conservatism were an Olympic sport, Thomas Frank would be Michael Phelps.
Charleston City Paper  |  Dylan Hales  |  09-10-2008  |  Nonfiction

New Collection Shows Uncollected Pieces of Bukowski's 'Protean Creativity'new

Many readers only recognize the late Charles Bukowski as the Dirty Old Man — a lecherous, wasted old poet scrawling doggerel across the backs of bar napkins. The sordid details of his personal life did little to diminish such characterizations, but Bukowski was first and foremost a serious writer dedicated to his craft.
Charleston City Paper  |  ERIC LIEBETRAU  |  09-10-2008  |  Nonfiction

'Machiaveli's Shadow' Shows the Emperor's Architect Has No Clothesnew

Machiaveli's Shadow: The Rise and Fall of Karl Rove tells, for the first time, the story of how George W. Bush fired the adviser who had been with him since before he defeated Texas Gov. Ann Richards in 1994.
The Texas Observer  |  Louis Dubose  |  09-10-2008  |  Nonfiction

'The Porn Trap' Tells the Stories of a Wide Range of Porn Addictsnew

Here we finally have a book that I believe will prove a great resource for individuals struggling with excessive use of pornography.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Annette Owens  |  09-10-2008  |  Nonfiction

An Excerpt From 'The Possible City' by Nathanial Popkinnew

Popkin is writer-in-residence at Philadelphia University. This is excerpted from his new book, The Possible City: Exercises in Dreaming Philadelphia, published by Camino Books in August 2008.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Nathaniel Popkin  |  09-09-2008  |  Excerpts

Novelist Megan Abbott is the New Queen of Noirnew

The Detroit writer hits Hollywood paydirt and turns on James Ellroy.
Metro Times  |  Norene Cashen  |  09-09-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

'What Happened to Anna K.' Reimagines Tolstoy's Heroine in Contemporary Queensnew

Irina Reyn, who teaches creative writing at the University of Pittsburgh, has taken the plot of Anna Karenina, based it in Queens, and turned it into a considerably shorter novel very much dependent on its present-day setting.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Adam Colman  |  09-08-2008  |  Fiction

Paul Auster's New Novel Ruminates on Post-9/11 Family Schismsnew

Auster's new novel ruminates on the fault lines and schisms within a marriage, a family and the landscape of post-9/11 America.
NOW Magazine  |  David Jager  |  09-08-2008  |  Fiction

Count Dante Recounts His Seven Years in an Incredibly Strange Fight Clubnew

In his new memoir Beer, Blood, and Cornmeal, Bob Calhoun describes a moment where wrestling grappled with surrealism, and surrealism won out with a suplex powerslam.
Chicago Reader  |  Dan Kelly  |  09-08-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

'How to Live Single' Feels Like a 'Sex and the City' Knock Offnew

Liz Tuccillo's "fiction" lacks originality in characters and plot-but also appears to mirror her life. After a disastrous ladies' night out, Julie, who works for a publishing company, pitches the idea of writing a book on how to be single.
Shepherd Express  |  Kenya C. Evans  |  09-05-2008  |  Fiction

Melanie Saxer Johnston's New Book Preserves Her Father's Memories of Liberating Buchenwaldnew

Although he spoke little to others about the worst of what he saw, Johnston is grateful that he shared those details with her. It allowed her to empathize with victims of all kinds.
East Bay Express  |  Anneli Rufus  |  09-04-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Debut Novel Depicts Chuck Klosterman's Former Small Town Lifenew

Downtown Owl is Klosterman’s first novel. Though he manages to name-drop ZZ Top, the Rolling Stones, and The Price is Right, he mostly offers a fictional supplement to his debut book, Fargo Rock City: Owl is a small North Dakota town of 800 in the early 1980s, devoid of pop culture.
Charleston City Paper  |  Susan Cohen  |  09-04-2008  |  Fiction

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