AltWeeklies Wire

'The Ten Year Nap': You Snooze, You Losenew

Meg Wolitzer explores the "Opt-Out Revolution" in novel form.
New Haven Advocate  |  Jolisa Gracewood  |  04-01-2008  |  Fiction

Stoned in the '60snew

This is a novel about true outsiders who went too far outside and could only come back in after being airlifted out of Altamont, while their creations turned out to be the stuff of fallen angels.
Shepherd Express  |  Martin Jack Rosenblum  |  03-28-2008  |  Fiction

Too Proud for a Negronew

It begins in the South in the 1950s, a time when protagonist Henry Walker is the resident "negro magician" at Jeremiah Musgrove's Chinese Circus.
Jackson Free Press  |  Lindsey Maddox  |  03-28-2008  |  Fiction

Edward Docx Could Take a Load Off, Chillaxnew

Pravda (or Self Help, as it is known in the UK) was long-listed for the 2007 Man Booker Prize, and I suppose it's understandable -- it's certainly not the sort of book I like reading, but it's enjoyable enough once you get past its wordy temper tantrums.
The Portland Mercury  |  Courtney Ferguson  |  03-27-2008  |  Fiction

It's Easy to Read Because It's Badnew

Even the most distracted bus rider won't fail to notice that The English American isn't easy to read because it's frivolous; it's easy to read because it's bad. Larkin's sentences unfold with such hackneyed predictability that reading each one in its entirety hardly seems necessary.
The Portland Mercury  |  Alison Hallett  |  03-27-2008  |  Fiction

Things Come Togethernew

Chinua Achebe's masterpiece is still the centerpiece of contemporary African literature.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Joel Tannenbaum  |  03-25-2008  |  Fiction

Joseph Ferris' Novel Doesn't Live Up to the Hypenew

Make no mistake, Then We Came to the End is not without its merits -- but that's also part of its undoing.
The Portland Mercury  |  Courtney Ferguson  |  03-20-2008  |  Fiction

Ambition Achievednew

Richard Price betrays his cellular familiarity with the Lower East Side in Lush Life, his riveting eighth novel, without once sounding like he's broken a sweat.
The Portland Mercury  |  Chas Bowie  |  03-20-2008  |  Fiction

All 'Greek' to Younew

Collins' dry wit is explained by his influences, Anthony Trollope and Evelyn Waugh. He is sometimes compared to Jane Austen, with whom he shares insight into the mating rituals of the upper class.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Elizabeth McCullough  |  03-19-2008  |  Fiction

Scott Heim's Demonsnew

It's weird to imagine that a fucked-up novel like We Disappear could be partly autobiographical. The parts about holding a boy captive in the basement are not, thankfully.
The Portland Mercury  |  Kevin Sampsell  |  03-13-2008  |  Fiction

Hipsters Add John Brandon to Your Reading Listnew

His first book, Arkansas, has just been released by the McSweeney's Rectangulars imprint.
The Portland Mercury  |  Alison Hallett  |  03-13-2008  |  Fiction

Reviewing a Life with Spiritnew

Zanger is a noted basket weaver who has published instructional books and over fifty patterns for weaving.
Metro Spirit  |  Jason E Sumerau  |  03-12-2008  |  Fiction

Dan Kennedy Nails the Music Industrynew

The former mid-level marketing executive's bitter and very funny account of his experience at a fast-dying music label zeros in on everything that's wrong with the old music biz.
NOW Magazine  |  Susan G. Cole  |  03-10-2008  |  Fiction

Southern Discomfortnew

Phillips' atmospheric first novel is full of love and depth, as are her characters.
Eugene Weekly  |  Molly Templeton  |  03-06-2008  |  Fiction

For the Love of Moneynew

Lydia Millet's sixth novel, How the Dead Dream, opens with an unforgettable image: A young boy named T. is so entranced by money that he purses coins in his mouth, as if to absorb the currency's mysterious power.
The Portland Mercury  |  Chas Bowie  |  03-06-2008  |  Fiction

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