AltWeeklies Wire

Ivor Davis Rereleases Definitive Tome on the Manson Family & Remembers the 1969 Murdersnew

Many have credited Davis' 1970 book Five to Die, co-authored with the late Jerry LeBlanc, as the tool that helped Vincent Bugliosi prosecute Manson, long before the legendary attorney produced his own memoirs of the trial.
Ventura County Reporter  |  Paul Sisolak  |  08-10-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

The Shadowy Panels of 'You Have Killed Me'new

You Have Killed Me is a graphic novel in the hyper-stylized tradition of film noir.
The Portland Mercury  |  Alison Hallett  |  08-06-2009  |  Original Work

Ole Joe Kennedy's Dirty Hollywoodnew

In Beauchamp's semi-biographic novel of his life, Joe Kennedy is portrayed as having an almost superhuman ability to charm the pants off the ladies and strip the assets from the fellas, greedily seeking and sucking up more money and power under the pretense of "helping" others.
Metro Times  |  Christa Buchanan  |  08-04-2009  |  Nonfiction

Madison Author Offers Guidebook to "Heavenly" Foodnew

UW-Madison grad Madeline Scherb has assembled 'A Taste of Heaven,' a guide to monasteries with food operations that's part travel guide, part journalism, part cookbook.
Isthmus  |  Linda Falkenstein  |  08-04-2009  |  Nonfiction

'The East, the West, and Sex': Orientalism Unleashednew

The East, the West, and Sex, which is organized both by time period and by country, examines the idea of masculine Western colonization creating an idealistic portrayal of Asian culture, particularly those aspects dealing with heterosexual eroticism.
Sacramento News & Review  |  Kathleen Jercich  |  07-30-2009  |  Nonfiction

Louis Maistros Weaves a Luring Tale from New Orleans in 'The Sound of Building Coffins'new

To risk stating the obvious, the Big Easy has a long and complicated relationship with water, both its redemptive and destructive qualities. The two go hand-in-hand, to judge from reading the gritty and sometimes surreal second novel from Louis Maistros.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Joab Jackson  |  07-28-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Eduardo Galeano's 'Mirrors' Rewrites Human Historynew

It's hard to think of another living author who would have the nerve to consider writing a book like Mirrors: Stories of Almost Everyone. But for Uruguay's Eduardo Galeano, this collection of vignettes, covering the breadth of human history, was a natural fit.
The Georgia Straight  |  Derrick O'Keefe  |  07-27-2009  |  Nonfiction

'Crazy for the Storm' is a Wild-Hearted Story of Risk and Survivalnew

How to capture the spirit of a father and son’s relationship? Norman Ollestad, the son in this equation, does it grippingly and gorgeously in Crazy for the Storm: A Memoir of Survival.
The Georgia Straight  |  Patty Jones  |  07-27-2009  |  Nonfiction

'Breadline USA' Examines the Reality of Hunger in Americanew

America's No. 1 health problem, the media relentlessly tell us, is obesity. Americans eat too much and we're the fattest people in the world. Except that, according to Sasha Abramsky, many Americans go hungry on a regular basis. And even many of those who aren’t hungry today suffer from what experts have taken to calling "food insecurity."
Sacramento News & Review  |  Kel Munger  |  07-23-2009  |  Nonfiction

Woodstock Co-creator Michael Lang Shares His Memoriesnew

Four decades of nostalgia, hallucinogens, and box sets make us forget that the Woodstock Music & Art Fair didn't descend from a sky of positive vibes and land softly atop a field of dancing hippies. Michael Lang, co-creator of the festival, returns to the scene of the grime in his new book The Road to Woodstock.
Boston Phoenix  |  Rob Turbovsky  |  07-23-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

New Romance Novel Subgenre: Gay Love & Lust, Written by Women for Womennew

A new subgenre has emerged in the escapist realm of romance novels: stories where you have two strapping, broad chests instead of one. We take a gander at two recent offerings: False Colors by Alex Beecroft and Transgressions by Erastes.
Charleston City Paper  |  Greg Hambrick  |  07-22-2009  |  Books

'Tattoo Machine' Explores the Secret World of Inknew

More gossip rag than technical primer, Tattoo Machine owes as much of its existence to the author's skill with a needle as it does to his storytelling chops. While Johnson's penchant for philosophical diatribe grates, the man has both great stories and the writerly candor to tell them.
Willamette Week  |  Caitlin McCarthy  |  07-22-2009  |  Nonfiction

Why Beach Books Suck ... and How to Avoid Themnew

Forget playing in the surf or baking in the sun. The best thing to do at the beach is to kick back and spend the afternoon lost in a book. But don't make the mistake of buying a novel that has a picture of an actual beach on the cover. Those books are not for you.
Charleston City Paper  |  Stephanie Barna  |  07-22-2009  |  Books

Author Mary Alice Monroe Loves the Great Outdoorsnew

After The Beach House, researching environmental topics became a central part of Monroe's creative process, an approach she used for novels such as Skyward and Sweetgrass. In her most recent novel, some readers might come away from the book feeling as if they too have felt the sting of salt spray while standing at the bow of a shrimping troller.
Charleston City Paper  |  Cara Kelly  |  07-22-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

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