AltWeeklies Wire

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

'Famous Writers School' Offers Chucklesnew

Steven Carter's novel zooms in on the fictional correspondence between an inept Famous Writers teacher and his three ragtag pupils.
The Portland Mercury  |  Chas Bowie  |  11-08-2007  |  Fiction

Ha Jin's American Dreamsnew

In his mammoth new novel, A Free Life, he deploys the elements of his own powerful journey in an epic tale about a young couple at sea in America in the early '90s.
Weekly Alibi  |  John Freeman  |  11-06-2007  |  Fiction

Civil Soulsnew

Michael White's new novel brings interracial romance to a slave-catching saga.
New Haven Advocate  |  Christopher Arnott  |  11-06-2007  |  Fiction

'The Dangerous Book for Boys' Strolls Down Memory Lanenew

Authors/brothers Conn and Hal Iggulden have created what can only be described as a young boy's companion guide to, well, basically everything of interest to listless and/or adventurous young men. But it's also a treat for a nostalgic adult.
NOW Magazine  |  Evan Davies  |  11-05-2007  |  Fiction

'McSweeney's 24': Gorgeous, As Alwaysnew

One half of the new McSweeney's consists entirely of a tribute to the postmodern master of short fiction, the late, great Donald Barthelme, with recollections by friends, colleagues, and admirers such as George Saunders, Ann Beattie, Robert Coover, and Lawrence Weschler.
The Portland Mercury  |  Chas Bowie  |  11-01-2007  |  Fiction

Jeanne M. Leiby Debuts with her Childhood Detroitnew

One thing Downriver, the debut short story collection by Jeanne M. Leiby, will certainly not make you want to do is to move south of Detroit, the setting of most of her stories.
INDY Week  |  Adam Sobsey  |  11-01-2007  |  Fiction

'The Sabotage Cafe': A Falling-Down Lifenew

This debut novel by New York's Joshua Furst, which is insider enough to name-check Cometbus, is probably the best book about the agony of being a gutter punk.
Metro Silicon Valley  |  Richard von Busack  |  11-01-2007  |  Fiction

'The Black Lizard Big Book of Pulps' Packs the Big Gunsnew

No false advertising here -- The Big Book is big, roughly the size of the San Francisco yellow pages, and it offers up nothing but the purest in pulp mystery fiction.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  John Marr  |  10-31-2007  |  Fiction

Anne Enright's 'Buried Memories' is Bleak and Sexualnew

The Irish wake has become such a familiar trope in films and popular culture it takes a fiercely unsentimental novel like Anne Enright's The Gathering, recent winner of the prestigious Man Booker Prize, to club the blarney out of it.
Weekly Alibi  |  John Freeman  |  10-30-2007  |  Fiction

The Key to 'Vibrator' Isn't Scandalnew

The explicitness of the sex and the frankness with which Rei -- the narrator -- expresses her desires and confusions are striking. But it's the skill Mari Akasaka brings to her narration that allows the pain of Rei's existence to be soothed by the journey.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Justin Bauer  |  10-30-2007  |  Fiction

'Long Story Short' is Willfully Bent & Instinctually Wittynew

Like science experiments, these six high-concept short stories drop their misfit characters into cruelly ironic fantasies or harsh hyper-realities.
The Georgia Straight  |  Patty Jones  |  10-29-2007  |  Fiction

'Friend of the Devil' Banks on Itnew

A fan for years of Canadian crime writer Peter Robinson's sturdy Yorkshire-based mysteries, I couldn't wait for the new Inspector Banks novel to hit the shelves -- and 17 books into the series, Friend Of The Devil is as fresh and compelling as the first.
NOW Magazine  |  Lesley M Allister  |  10-26-2007  |  Fiction

'The Frozen Thames': Frozen Ghostsnew

If, instead of giving us a full-fledged novel with an emotional narrative arc, Helen Humphreys wants to write a series of flash fictions short-short stories with lush language representing each of the 40 occasions that the Thames River froze over, that should be fine with any of her fans.
NOW Magazine  |  Susan G. Cole  |  10-26-2007  |  Fiction

Author Michael Pritchett Gets Lost Between Lewis Past and Presentnew

Pritchett's first novel requires readers to follow a similarly delicate navigation with two pieces of fiction in the same book.
Willamette Week  |  Henry Stern  |  10-24-2007  |  Fiction

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