AltWeeklies Wire

Ten Years of Pulitzer Prize Winners, And What They Say About Usnew

We are a nation of many religions and races, but we're only recently comfortable with that (and sometimes, not so much). We are serious and sober and value hard work, but we also like comic books. At the end of the day, all we'd like to do is go home and have a slice of pie.
Weekly Alibi  |  Erin Adair-Hodges  |  01-12-2010  |  Books

New Anthology 'Love Is a Four-Letter Word' Examines Relief, Regret and Repentancenew

This anthology of "true stories of breakups, bad relationships and broken hearts" included stories from well-known writers like Junot Diaz, Gary Shteyngart, George Singleton, Lynda Barry and well-linked lit blogger Maud Newton. The book's epigraph, from Oscar Wilde, captures the complexities of the book's tone nicely; the heart, the Irish satirist tells us, was made to be broken.
INDY Week  |  Gerry Canavan  |  08-21-2009  |  Nonfiction

A Brief and Wondrous Interview with Junot Diaznew

Diaz is the "It Kid" in literature today. The author of the 1996 short story collection Drown, he was awarded this year's Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his first novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.
Weekly Alibi  |  Erin Adair-Hodges  |  09-23-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Novelist Junot Diaz on the Reader as Immigrantnew

Diaz's own tales of generations of families stretch across the Caribbean, from the Dominican Republic to New York and New Jersey.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Melissa Meinzer  |  03-31-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Curse of the Fukunew

Junot Diaz's first novel is a wondrous but brief account of a Dominican growing up in Jersey.
Montreal Mirror  |  Juliet Waters  |  11-12-2007  |  Fiction

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