AltWeeklies Wire

'MAD' Men: 'The Wolverton Bible' and 'Humbug'new

Two new books published by Fantagraphics capture sides of artists that went unexposed under the auspices of Alfred E. Neuman, which makes them all the more appealing.
San Antonio Current  |  John Defore  |  03-18-2009  |  Nonfiction

Exhaustive Book Tells Us How a Group of TV Innovators Got to 'Sesame Street'new

Michael Davis' Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street is broad in scope yet exercises a meticulous attention to detail. This meticulousness turns out to be essential because of the number of story threads that are un-teased to paint Davis’ picture.
San Antonio Current  |  Molly O'Donnell  |  03-04-2009  |  Nonfiction

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Unlike Brad Warner's previous two published books (he’s also written three unpublished science-fiction novels, one of which he thinks is pretty good), Zen Wrapped in Karma is more a memoir than a spiritual manual.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

Tripping through the 'Twilight Zone'new

Not merely a puff piece, Rod Serling and the Twilight Zone portrays a complex view of the famed auteur.
San Antonio Current  |  Rick Klaw  |  02-04-2009  |  Nonfiction

'The Oxford Project' Uses Photography as a Kind of Time Machinenew

Ultimately, The Oxford Project is an homage to Americana, a photographic record of small-town America and the story of intertwined lives. It is about history, personal and collective, and that ubiquitous force: change. This book, like the facets of human features, is so intriguing, it is nearly impossible to put down.
San Antonio Current  |  Lyle Rosdahl  |  11-13-2008  |  Nonfiction

'The Whiskey Rebels' is Solid Yet Slightly Different Historical Fictionnew

I had some assumptions about historical fiction before I even picked up a copy of The Whiskey Rebels -- and some of them, it turns out, were not unfounded.
San Antonio Current  |  Lyle Rosdahl  |  10-22-2008  |  Fiction

Speechless: 'Many More Splendid Sundays!'new

Many More Splendid Sundays! is the follow-up to a book that only dreamers could have believed wouldn’t be a financial failure: a gargantuan, $125 tome of hundred-year-old Little Nemo strips.
San Antonio Current  |  John DeFore  |  09-17-2008  |  Original Work

'What Men Call Treasure': Postmodern Goldnew

The book, nonfiction, relies heavily on fictional techniques for its success.
San Antonio Current  |  Lyle Rosdahl  |  09-17-2008  |  Nonfiction

'Kaleidoscope': Public Freaks and Private Dicksnew

Get your SAT vocabulary flash cards ready, 'cause Darryl Wimberley has a mystery for you to solve -- one involving a "caravanserai" and a "pan of loam."
San Antonio Current  |  Jeremy Martin  |  08-27-2008  |  Fiction

Fast Furious Free Downloadable Book Series Delivers Sketchy Materialnew

Jury: Welcome to the Special Power and Lil' Craze Going on in South America, the first two books released in the Magic Propaganda Mill's new series, are "written, researched, illustrated, designed and published" in less than two weeks.
San Antonio Current  |  Jeremy Martin  |  08-20-2008  |  Original Work

Graham Vickers Examines the Causes and Consequences of 'Lolita'new

Less concerned with text than context, Vickers provides a lively account of the climate in which the novel was produced and received.
San Antonio Current  |  Steven G. Kellman  |  08-13-2008  |  Nonfiction

'What It Is' Mixes Workbook, Memoir, and Zen Koansnew

Cartoonist Lynda Barry has adapted some of her “Unthinkable” wisdom for a book called What It Is -- and it is an odd little creature.
San Antonio Current  |  John DeFore  |  05-28-2008  |  Original Work

Siblings Different as Apples and Orangesnew

In Apples and Oranges, a memoir of sibling discord within her own family, Marie Brenner applies her skills as an investigative reporter to trying to fathom and repair her strained relationship with Carl. Jumping about in space and time, her memoir challenges the reader to find design amid absences and missed connections.
San Antonio Current  |  Steven G. Kellman  |  05-28-2008  |  Nonfiction

Digging a Poet-gardenernew

Jesse Castro likes to refer to himself as a poet-gardener, which is why it comes as no surprise that his latest work, I Have Walked This Path Before, is a collection of poems worn by real people.
San Antonio Current  |  Sonya Harvey  |  04-09-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

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