AltWeeklies Wire

5 South Carolina Authors You Wish You’d Heard Ofnew

South Carolina earns its bad press from time to time, but we have at least one reason to hold our heads up: Our literary pedigree ain't half bad.
Charleston City Paper  |  Paul Bowers  |  03-07-2014  |  Books

Craigslist Poetry: Pirate Fairies and Churchgoersnew

The following are actual entries from the Missed Connections section of Charleston Craigslist, divided into lines and stanzas and presented without embellishment. You just can’t make this stuff up.
Charleston City Paper  |  Paul Bowers  |  12-18-2012  |  Poetry

Titty Twisternew

Journalist Florence Williams is enthralled by Breasts.
Charleston City Paper  |  Susan Cohen  |  10-31-2012  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Eating Animals author Jonathan Safran Foer wins convertsnew

Looking at author Jonathan Safran Foer's body of work, one is struck by how heavy his topics of choice are. His first novel, Everything is Illuminated, was set in the charred landscape of a Holocaust-terrorized Jewish village. His second, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, deals with a boy who lost his father on 9/11.
Charleston City Paper  |  Elizabeth Pandolfi  |  10-17-2012  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Arcadia's Latest Book Offers an Illustrated Look at the Start of the Civil Warnew

One of the more colorful and historically specific releases of their Images of America series, Arcadia Publishing's latest Charleston-based book The First Shot is an impressive, military-themed history lesson and collection of images.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  04-12-2011  |  Nonfiction

If Only Bush Had Taken Bong Hits with Harold and Kumarnew

The most shocking revelation in Decision Points by George W. Bush is not one that you've read about already.
Charleston City Paper  |  Chris Haire  |  11-17-2010  |  Nonfiction

Archiving Anarchy in the U.K.new

Between 1988 and 1990, Jon Savage spoke extensively to the Sex Pistols, the late Malcolm McLaren, the late Joe Strummer, Chrissie Hynde, Siouxsie Sioux, and many others in the British punk scene. The England's Dreaming Tapes features full interviews with those who were there.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  10-07-2010  |  Nonfiction

The Problem with the Prosperity Gospelnew

Karen Spears Zacharias' latest book, Will Jesus Buy Me a Double-Wide? ('Cause I need more room for my plasma TV), is chock full of stories, beautifully written thumbnail sketches of lives lost and found. These tales are framed by a critique of the all-too-modern, all-too-American idea of the prosperity gospel.
Charleston City Paper  |  Jason A. Zwiker  |  04-21-2010  |  Nonfiction

Memoir 'Traveling with Pomegranates' Offers European Reflectionsnew

Pomegranates goes back 11 years, when Sue Monk Kidd was contemplating trying fiction for the first time. Ann Kidd Taylor had just graduated college, suffering from depression with no clear picture for her life.
Charleston City Paper  |  Jonathan Sanchez  |  09-09-2009  |  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

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

Novelist James Kelman Captures Boyhood Just Rightnew

This story thrives in the specificity of its place and time, yet it is a childhood tale that will seem universal to the modern reader.
Charleston City Paper  |  Michael Lucero  |  02-11-2009  |  Fiction

The Dread Zone: It's the Only Thing We Have to Fearnew

Despite years of religious instruction by well-meaning priests, nuns, and lay ministers, as well as my own family, on that dark night of the soul long ago, it occurred to me that as nice a story as that made, it was a bit far-fetched. I realized that not only was death absolutely real and directly applicable to me, but that death most probably meant, well, death. As in lights out. Game over. It meant you no longer were.
Charleston City Paper  |  Jason A. Zwiker  |  12-21-2008  |  Books

'Death with Interruptions' Looks at the Cost of Immortalitynew

Descriptions of Jose Saramago's literary voice might sound dull and heavy-handed, and his pages might look more like a chore than a pleasure. Yet when you sit to read Death with Interruptions, you feel you are cutting through all the unnecessary formalities, and getting to the real meat of the story.
Charleston City Paper  |  Michael Lucero  |  12-21-2008  |  Fiction

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